Academician in Training

Chronicling the Adventures, Exploits, and Random Musings of Lady Sparks

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A Haunting Southern Murder Ballad

Posted by ladysparks on May 2, 2008

Over the last few years I’ve expanded my musical listening repertoire to include a growing array of Roots, folk, and bluegrass offerings. I admit to generally preferring female artists in these genres on the whole, so when I recently stumbled across Caroline Herring‘s new album Lantana while browsing my local indie music store I was immediately intrigued. As an impulse purchase, this one was right on the money.

Although Herring’s underlying Christian faith figures prominently in certain songs (such as the gospel tune “Lay my Burden Down”), the album does not come across as preachy which was a relief to the very firmly agnostic Lady Sparks. Herring, originally from Mississippi, digs deep into her Southern roots and creates an atmosphere throughout the album that is at times nostalgic and bittersweet, at others refreshingly insightful and contemplative.

The real gem on this album, however, is the haunting murder ballad “Paper Gown.” Few people in America, and most specifically those from the South, can forget the horrifying real-life case of Susan Smith–the white South Carolina woman who drowned her two young children in her car and then tried to blame a black man for the crime. “Paper Gown” has an eerie Southern Gothic edge (think shades of Flannery O’Connor) as it recounts this tragic tale and examines the political dimensions of gender and race that circulated around the Smith case. What makes it more disturbing, in many respects, is the fact that it’s told from Smith’s perspective. Herring provides a provocative interrogation of gendered heteronormative ideals, specifically the feminine domestication of women, and the tragic misguided lengths to which a woman might go to escape such circumstances. The refrain which repeats throughout the song, speaks to this in a very powerful and disturbing way: “Long ago I used to be/ a little girl on my daddy’s knee/ dreams lie like diamond rings/ babies and pretty things.” At the same time, Herring subtly confronts the politics of white womanhood in the South and a long history of racist fear and antagonism toward black men.

Although the song is in some ways sympathetic to Smith, casting her in a tragically naive light, it certainly doesn’t attempt to excuse her of the crime. Rather, it provides a disturbing perspective into the motivations and fantasies that seemingly led her to commit such a horrifying murder.

This song will haunt you long after one listen.  The album as a whole is fantastic and I definitely encourage any Roots and folk music fans to buy it.

I’m going to see Caroline Herring perform this Saturday as she lives here in Atlanta in the suburb of Decatur and will be playing at Eddie’s Attic. I can’t wait!

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Sports and yet another Reason why I Love Japanese Manga

Posted by ladysparks on April 22, 2008

As many of Lady Sparks’ nearest and dearest know, I have never been a sports fan. I don’t watch professional or amateur sports of any kind, as I find they do not hold my interest in the least. I don’t play sports either, as anything that requires running or physical coordination in general is not likely to bring out my best abilities.

I wholeheartedly admit that I am naturally and hopelessly spastic. In elementary school I was always the last kid picked for teams. Nobody wants the super-spaz girl who dribbles the ball to the wrong hoop or inadvertently beans people in the head with her bat. Less still does anyone want the kid who can’t seem to follow moves that require synchronization or multiple steps for execution. Needless to say, PE was the class I loathed most passionately from K-12.

The one exception to all of this, however, was badminton. Some may call it tennis’ limp-wristed cousin, but badminton is the kind of sport that appealed to my physically inept self. It doesn’t really have any hard and fast rules–the primary goal is to hit the birdie (aka the “shuttlecock”–hee-hee) and rally until someone misses. The birdie is light enough that the player does not need to exert a great deal of strength in order to lob it, unlike tennis. Similarly, players don’t need to learn or perfect particular swings or footwork, at least not at the “amateur” level. (Is there even pro badminton? )

Thus, whenever those nets would come out at the beginning of a random PE class like a gift from unknown deities, I would send out a fervent prayer of thanks because it was a brief respite from the other horrible physical exercises in humiliation that I consistently had to endure in front of my peers. When playing badminton, I at least came across as moderately capable, as with many things in life, what I lacked for in talent I made up for in enthusiasm.  Consequently, I’ve always harbored a fondness for badminton in my heart.

Imagine my wonder and excitement the other day when I was trolling around MangaUpdates and I spotted a manga all about…BADMINTON!  You may think I jest but, gentle reader, I do not.

Smash!

Smash! is a sports manga (Japanese comic) about kids experiencing the passion and the pain of….badminton!  From what I can gather thus far, as I’ve only managed to read the first volume in scanlated form, the narrative revolves around childhood friends Shouta and Miwa.  The latter is a girl who has earned a badminton scholarship to a prestigious high school where she will become a first year member of their famous badminton team.  Miwa has been playing badminton with her friend Shouta for years, but he has never taken it very seriously.  She, however, really wants him to go to the same high school with her so they can continue playing badminton together.  Much to her consternation though, the catalyst to inspire Shouta at badminton turns out to be a mysterious “new” girl who appears at their local gym one day.  In typical Japanese manga fashion, we enter the realm of semi-ridiculous when it is revealed that the mystery girl is not only a badminton whiz, but also mute.  That’s right, mute.  Uh….not entirely sure how or why this is the case yet.  But of course, it intrigues Shouta who immediately develops a crush on her and decides he’s going to aim for super-elite-badminton-school in the hopes of being near said girl and/or getting to play her again.  He gets in just barely, but has to do a lot of grunt work for the team as he is nowhere near the level of becoming a player just yet.  Nonetheless, Shouta is inspired by luurvvvve and so begins what looks to be a cheesy but wonderfully campy manga series full of hokey love triangles, badminton challenges with high school heroes and villains alike, and lots of wacky Japanese humor.  I’m almost inspired to join a badminton team myself!

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April is Anime Month!

Posted by ladysparks on April 8, 2008

Ah, sweet April…month of my birth, host to blooming flora and fauna, the end of the spring academic semester (woot!) AND the beginning of the new anime season in Japan! Seriously folks, this has me doing fangirl cartwheels. Let me explain why.

First of all, as most of my close friends know, I am addicted to serialized narratives. When it comes to anime and manga, which take this to all kinds of zany extremes, I’m like a crack ‘ho trying to get my next fix. Thus, with a bevy of new series starting all at once I am already falling into geeky raptures.

Although there are several shows I am particularly looking forward to this season, I have decided to blog about only one of them today. A die-hard fan of the manga, I nearly had a stroke when I found out it was being turned into an anime series. I am counting down the days and sending prayers of sweet love and gratitude well in advance to the wonderful folks at aarinfantasy who will no doubt be fansubbing all 24 glorious episodes for the rabid fangirls (and boys) like myself.

Junjou Romantica, by Nakamura Shungiku, is a boys’ love series that is still ongoing in Japan (and being translated far too slowly by Tokyopop’s Blu division, curses!). Focusing on three main relationships, this manga manages to achieve a successful balance of humor, romance, and super hawt man/man smexiness. Nakamura-sensei’s art style adheres to the androgynous conventions of male beauty that are hallmarks of the genre but sets itself apart in several ways. Firstly, she has a real gift for depicting emotions in characters’ facial expressions at crucial moments in the narrative that can leave the reader dumbfounded and breathless with awe. Secondly, she is able to create a fluidity of progression in some of her panels that feels wonderfully cinematic. Her mise-en-scène at these moments can be utterly minimalist (although not to the same degree of say Fumi Yoshinaga) and yet hauntingly powerful. There is this one sequence in volume three of the manga (which I wasn’t able to scan because my printer is misbehaving) that I’ve returned to several times because it is just so beautifully done. I’ll try to post it later if I can find my printer driver disc…

In the meantime, here’s a quick promo video for the animated version of the series, which will begin airing on April 10th (happy early birthday present to me!):

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Like a Phoenix from the flames, Sparks Rises Again!

Posted by ladysparks on April 7, 2008

After a wonderful phone chat with Monkey last night I realized that I had not been active in the blogosphere for over a year. Granted, I have been busy in the meantime. I moved to a new city, started a new job, and began a new phase of my life in general. It’s been a good transition and now that I’m feeling more firmly ensconced within the hallowed walls of the Ivory Tower I figure it’s the perfect time to to reconnect with everyone on the Internets.

I’ll be back later today with another post, but for now, please enjoy this song from an indie Canadian band I recently discovered:

Jane Vain and the Dark Matter “C’mon Baby Say Bang Bang”

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