2016年4月5日 星期二

曹文軒得安徒生獎;Maya Lin 談幾本書

【兒童文學就一定要讓孩子快樂嗎?】http://bit.ly/1RL9A23
昨日,素有「諾貝爾兒童文學獎」之稱的安徒生獎將本屆獎項頒給了中國作家曹文軒,他的作品《草房子》描寫了主人公桑桑在6年小學生活中痛苦的成長歷程,很多人認為兒童文學應該讓兒童快樂,然而曹文軒卻不這麼認為……http://bit.ly/1RL9A23
【從愛心飯盒引發的「人撐人」大行動】http://bit.ly/1LJ10Uu⋯⋯
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兒童文學家曹文軒獲安徒生獎 曾提倡「苦難閲讀」 2016-04-05 分享文章 Facebook Twitter 微信 新浪微博…
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LIVING


IN MY LIBRARY

In My Library: Maya Lin

In 1981, Maya Lin was a 21-year-old Yale student when she won a public design competition for the Vietnam Veterans Memorial. Her conception — a black stone wall carved with the names of more than 57,000 fallen soldiers — suggests that their loss wounded the earth itself. “The common thread that runs through all of my work is the love and respect I have for the natural world,” the mother of two writes in “Maya Lin: Topologies,” a monograph covering more than 30 years of her art and architecture. Fresh from a family trip that included roaming a forest in Panama and a mountain climb in Italy, Lin will speak at LIVE from the New York Public Library on April 6. Here are four books that have become part of the brick and mortar of her life.
In Praise of Shadows by Junichiro Tanizaki  陰鬱禮讚
I read this when I was studying architecture. It talks about the nuanced beauty hidden in spaces that are not much seen in bright daylight. It also talks about how, in Japanese culture, there’s beauty to be found in everyday, often overlooked objects and how things of humble origin can [yield] aesthetic delight.
Seeing is Forgetting the Name of the Thing One Sees by Lawrence Weschler
Robert Irwin is a conceptual artist who often uses our perception of subtle differences in light to create paintings, installations and sculptures that play with our ability to experience subtle edges of visual experiences. Weschler’s book [shows] the way in which art can bring you to a point of pure empathetic connection.
A Field Guide to Getting Lost by Rebecca Solnit
A beautiful wander in which Solnit describes the many ways in which one can lose oneself — and in so doing begin to find something you may not know about the world and yourself. The nature of experience should require the art of letting go to find part of yourself you do not know.
The Sixth Extinction by Elizabeth Kolbert
This is about the current mass species extinction this planet is experiencing. Since I’m so focused on this subject as part of my last memorial, What Is Missing?, I found Kolbert’s book a brilliant and moving account both of the nature of extinction and firsthand, specific accounts by scientists about this worldwide biodiversity crisis.

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