Nothingness.org
Nothing is something. Nothingness.org, ironically, is rife with interesting
material, yielding thought-provoking intensity on every page. It's brilliantly
composed in concept, layout and content. Near and dear to my own heart,
Nothingness.org will provide entertaining, informative and intelligent ideas
for a diverse range of people. It is a renaissance of art, politics, design,
history, and ubiquitous web paraphernalia (links, resources, etc.).
The site's creator presents a perspective of social anarchism, highlighting
institutions that have continuously flowed through free thought's wake:
Dadaism, Situationism, and other various sociopolitical movements. Each
section accurately and cogently outlines itself. For example, the Situationist
Archive page opens up with a search engine and a detailed, well-organized
list of everything contained in the area: text, journals, biographies of
key figures Guy Debord and Raol Vaneigem, and lists of related resources.
All the articles include by-lines and dates, so it's easy to find material
by your favorite thinkers. Kudos to the site's creators for offering this
information - a simple amenity that most sites rarely include. Nothingness.org
also offers a French language option. This should help to search information
on the Situationists, whose movement exploded in France. By far my favorite
section is the poetry area, which, as far as I can tell, is written solely
by the site's creator. It's outstanding. When I last counted, there were
36 of these creations, some flowing with rhythmic, seductive dance, and
others shouting jarring political revelations. It's fitting the author is
such a wonderful writer. Check out his reading list, which is hyperlinked
to many of the full texts. (It's masked as "word" in the open-book
icon on the front page.)
In an e-mail interview, the creator, who goes by the name Spud, wrote, "I
have always advocated copyright-free texts, the dissemination of information,
and the virtues of mostly unknown political and art movements. The D.I.Y.
attitude of punk rock is the cornerstone of Nothingness.org, and the walls
are made of all the paper I have time to build with." And build he
does, as a freelance graphic designer for his own company, Dada Typographics;
as a moderator of the Graphics mail list; as a 9-to-5 day job drone; and
as a Web site maintainer.
Given all these distractions, Nothingness.org is an accomplishment in triplicate.
This site displays a genuine "commitment to cause," and everything
linked here, displayed here, and sporting the Nothingness.org domain is
part of a unified perspective. -SK
A
Bjorn
Christensson Philosophers Guide
It's time for a game: Poke-the-Philosopher-in-the-Nose! This page features
graphics of 25 European philosophers which, when poked, deliver us to short
biographies of the pokees, along with several links to their works (if extant
on the net). All the usual suspects are here: Kant, Hegel, Plato, et all.
But be prepared to wait, wait, wait: Display of all 25 portraits takes several
minutes, even with a fast modem. -TG
C
Buber's
Basque Page
Many of us were given a choice of languages to study in high school: French,
Italian, and Spanish. From this list, one would think that all European
languages are similar. A visit to Buber's Basque Page puts a quick end to
this assumption. The most striking thing about this site is that much of
the information is in the Basque language itself. (Basque is a consonant-filled
language, unrelated to Indo-European languages.) Dozens of links detail
Basque games (like jai alai), as well as food and politics. There's even
a link to a Basque lesbian and gay organization. Spelling, however, is spotty
- though I'm sure they're spelling my language far better than I'd spell
theirs. Kaixo, Lagunak!-TG
B
Chorus
Reviews & Resources for Real World Computing
Visiting the Chorus site is like walking into the party of a graduate school
dean: There are dozens of conversations going on, all about wildly diverse,
scholarly subjects. For that reason, it's hard to get a take on this site.
Is it about computer-assisted language learning? No, but there's lots of
stuff about that. Is it about Bible analysis? Software reviews? Well...
no... The pages are pretty, but that teeny-tiny-italic-type-against-a-pebbled-background
effect will make you go blind. -TG
B-
Cultronix
While this could just as easily fit into the media category, as it features
articles, graphics, audio and video clips (as any high ranking e-zine might
), its focus is almost exclusively within the lofty realm of humanities:
philosophy, arts, and, of course, culture studies. With multi-syllable paper
titles - "Wallowing in the Quagmire of Language" and "Delusional
Circuitry" - Cultronix is sure to win the hearts of intellectuals worldwide.
Load up this page in your local cybercafe, and you're sure to be a hit.-SK
A-
Deconstruction
23
Small. Insightful. Philosophical. Intellectual. Creative. Insightful. Small.
Philosophical. Creative. Intellectual. Insightful. Small. Links and Strong
Graphics. But Small and Insightful. Outstanding Layout and Organization.
Deconstruction 23 is a movement of creativity and philosophical merit brought
to the Web with essays, stories, links and a nice layout. Insightful. But
Small. I want more. More. MORE!-SK
B+
Diotima
Women & Gender in the Ancient World
Complete with essays, bibliographies, and miles of links and images, this
is an extraordinary collection of resources that should educate the Internet
community about women in ancient times. There is as much local content as
off-site pointers, so Diotima serves as both a source and database. Layout
is well-executed, especially considering the amazing amount of content.
From Semonides to Sappho, there's a lot of info here.-SK
A-
Eighteenth-Century
Studies
The entire English server at Carnegie Mellon University is amazing, and
the 18th Century history archive is just another wonderful piece of the
whole. It's slightly sad, however, that subjects of such extremely high
interest potential - Rousseau and Locke, The history of Lady Julia Manderville,
and Rare Maps from Revolutionary America, to name a few - are bestowed with
dull and unimpressive layouts. Does this treatment endorse the philosophy
that such pristine literature and classical brilliance needs to remain far,
far away from Internet technology, or does this site merely lack someone
to do the HTML dirty work?-SK
B
Existential
Home Page
I've searched high and low for an existential home page. I'm therefore discouraged
that I must settle for gray backgrounds, and rather mediocre jaunts through
my favorite philosophical movement and collection of personalities because
there is little else available online. This site is a classic example of
a big fish in a very small pond. It's a nice introduction to the movement,
but will most likely be repetitious for anyone who has taken an introductory
philosophy class.-SK
C
Exploring
Ancient World Cultures
If anybody needs exposure to world cultures, it's the people of Indiana.
Fortunately, the University of Evansville (located in Indiana) requires
first-year students to take World Culture 101, and has made it exceptionally
easy for them to follow course curriculum by putting it on the Web. An unintended
bonus is that we too can follow along at home. Evansville students are required
to use this page, but the rest of us will want to visit just because it's
so compelling.-TG
A-
History of the
United States of America
Well, well, well. Another graduate student has discovered the World Wide
Web, and has built a site of some of his studies. I sure hope, though, that
this isn't all that Charles Winslow has learned about U.S. History. Of the
dozens of links, only three seem to work at the time of this writing: those
leading to the inaugural addresses of John Adams, Thomas Jefferson, and
James Monroe. Whoops! That's not James Monroe's address. It's Thomas Jefferson's
again, incorrectly linked. It would be charitable to believe Mr. Winslow's
"under construction" signs, but let's face it: The site is long
dead, and it reeks like Monroe's corpse. Or is that Jefferson's?-TG
F
Humanities
External Degree Catalog Index
Earn a humanities Masters degree from California State University, Dominguez
Hill, entirely online. At $120 per unit, students can make use of the Internet
to study philosophy, art, literature, history and music. You'll communicate
with professors via e-mail, and use the Web, if you please, to receive assignments
and participate in online courses. From the surface, this looks like an
interesting program. Register and get started from this Web site.-SK
B
I-Channel
Ellis Island
Ellis Island: the gateway to America's gold-paved streets of opportunity.
Ack. Ack. Now all those discombobulated immigrants have some online evidence
to show for their tedious waits in line, sometimes 10,000 hungry, sea-sick
people thick. The Ellis Island pages in fact offer a very informative and
interesting perspective of arrivals to the "New World." There
are plenty of pictures, historical accounts and general facts to pique interest
and awareness, and it's all organized fairly well.-SK
A-
Inda
Introduction
Inventing and using imaginary languages has been a popular intellectual
and artistic exercise for decades: Tolkien gave his creatures their own
tongue, and "Star Trek" fans have Klinzhai. Now Gregory Higley,
a 26-year-old amateur linguist, has thrown his complex creation, Inda, into
the ring. The site gives a peek into Inda constructs with sample phrases
ranging all the way from "hello" to "The matter is finished.
I resolved to wait no longer for the king. I would take my revenge at my
leisure." Pity there's no vocabulary list. Inda is an impressive feat,
deserving its place among other ersatz tongues of the universe.-TG
B-
Kong
Zi - Confucius
"Confucius say" Years ago, this was the introduction to many
a joke on TV's "Laugh-In." But how many people have any idea of
what Confucius really *did* say? Well sit yersef down, cause Jimmy Tucker,
a good ol' boy from Lincoln County, Kentucky, is here to enlighten y'all.
Jimmy provides a nice, short, enlightening (and 100 percent plagiarized)
description of Kong Fu Zi, along with links to five of his works.It's a
pity there's so little here, because it looks like an attractive beginning.-TG
D+
Special Collections:
The Siege and Commune of Paris
A revolutionary's dream come true. View 1,200 images - landscapes, portraits,
political caricatures and architecture - from the siege and commune of Paris,
1870 to 1871. The site is heavily armed with an accurate search engine,
but is also "browsable" for those who aren't so certain of what
they hope to find. It's a wonderful collection for any curious historian.
The overall layout is dry, gray and boring, but the images of battles and
burning buildings certainly make up for an otherwise dreary blandness.-SK
B
Stephen
Loughlin's HomePage - Aquinas
Stephen Loughlin, a doctoral candidate in medieval philosophy at the University
of Toronto, obviously has a love for his field of study. In particular,
he has a thing for Saint Thomas Aquinas, a Dominican theologian of the 13th
century. Loughlin's home page for the saint - who says you have to be alive
to have a home page? - features a short bio and all the scholarly stuff
you'd expect from a doctoral candidate, such as a bibliography and a guide
to his research. The tech level is low, but who needs tech when you've got
love?-TG
C+
The
Darmok Dictionary
I can understand a life dedicated to studying the subtleties of the "Star
Trek" universe. But to a single episode? That's the premise behind
The Darmok Dictionary, an exegesis of the allegorical language used in the
brilliant "Next Generation" episode "Darmok." The site's
author picks apart linguistics with the assiduousness of a doctoral candidate,
using sound clips, references to other episodes, storytelling techniques,
Asian languages, and comments posted in the Fidonet Trek forum. There's
really not much to this site besides text, but it engaged me from beginning
to end.-TG
B+
The
International Philosophical Preprint Exchange
As far as I can tell, this started as an admirable archiving project for
philosophy studies in progress. But it seems the project ran out of steam:
You'll find journals and articles galore from 1993 and 1994, though very
few from 1995 and later. Information is presented in eye-popping ugliness
- graphics too big for your screen and text too small to read (if formatted
at all). Worth a stop if you're a serious academic, but better references
are available elsewhere.-TG
D
World History
to 1500
If this Web site is a faithful representative of class curriculum, then
David Grandy's "World History to 1500" college course is a full
but uneven hodgepodge of facts and opinions. The site is almost entirely
composed of links - and lots of 'em! - to external documents, sans commentary
or guidance. For his students at Brigham Young University, that's fine,
as they have Mr. Grandy in the flesh to shepherd them from source to source.
For the rest of us, however, there's only wandering and wondering, wandering
and wondering.-TG
B-
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