And now, for a quick spot of live site editing

Post­ing this prob­a­bly means the RSS users are going to come crawl­ing out in force to watch as I break stuff, but what­ever. I don’t really mind, enjoy, if you get kicks out of that kind of thing. I’m play­ing with styles/my tem­plate for a lit­tle bit, because I’m bored of it and ridicu­lously sick of how slow Fire­fox ren­ders position:fixed and my Google ads (and you can say it’s because Google ads markup sucks all you want, but the fact is Fire­fox is the only browser that has any sig­nif­i­cant problem(/s) with it). Mostly because I’m bored of it and am putting off work on… a hand­ful of other sites. Oh, and study, but that doesn’t matter/count coz my next exam is still over a week away.

Think of it as CSS Reboot a day or two late. Or what­ever. I’ve actu­ally had the base of the stylesheet ready for a while, but it was ini­tially designed as a print ver­sion. Then I decided it was sim­ple (which is what I’m aim­ing for a lot lately) and looked niceish. I think I was sub­con­sciously (or maybe not? I dunno) tak­ing off Anne’s now-not-so-recent site redesign, which basi­cally involved revert­ing to a sin­gle col­umn with clear read­able text and dis­abling com­ments more often. I’m not so keen on the lat­ter as last time I tried to do that peo­ple got annoyed, and it was mostly just because (I think) I was post­ing dumb angsty stuff I didn’t really want peo­ple reply­ing to. Maybe. Or not. That might’ve been the time before… I can’t remem­ber, too long ago. I’m also not so keen on big rants about hard­core markup stuff. I could deal with liv­ing in Scan­de­navia, though, because those coun­tries are cool. I don’t really know why. I told Tori this today and she gave me weird looks like I’m stalk­ing Hen­rik Ibsen. I’m not. I just think he’s a cool play­wright, and am appre­cia­tive of his char­ac­ters and ide­olo­gies. Heh, on more triv­ial mat­ters, I like the idea of extended char­ac­ter sets because it gives me an excuse to use UTF-8 more often.

Any­way. What­ever. Before I start mak­ing changes, mostly for his­tor­i­cal pur­poses, this design involves large expanses of white, a fixed-width lay­out (so I can think about wor­ry­ing about pho­tos less), and none of the larger graph­i­cal ele­ments from SC500 are being retained. I’ll prob­a­bly find it bor­ing around Feb­ru­ary, (I’d say sooner, but I’m going to be AFK for nearly a month, so that extends its nov­elty value some­what fur­ther) at which point I’ll prob­a­bly go with some­thing complex(-er).

Hav­ing said that, my present design (the one I’m about to start imple­ment­ing) could grad­u­ally evolve to a more com­plex beast, in which case I’ll get sick of its evolved com­plex­ity and go back to some­thing sim­ple again. Ah, design. It’s cyclic.

I also have some inter­est­ing ideas for livesearch/navigation, loosely based on Shaun Inman’s present site and Matthom’s recent com­ments on search. Which I want to imple­ment quickly to beat him to it ;-) Basi­cally it’s fig­ur­ing out a lay­out that intu­itively com­bines search, whilst remain­ing “blog-like” (because I value that, see my com­ment on Matthom’s orig­i­nal post) and visu­ally simple.

Some texts for people I’m no longer worried about competing with

For Eng­lish Advanced Mod­ule C, Telling the Truth, con­sider:

In no par­tic­u­lar order. Some are, how­ever, bet­ter than oth­ers. All except Net­work are avail­able online (via their own web­site of pub­li­ca­tion or Project Guten­berg).

Oh, and before any­one says they can get Net­work from P2P, I’ll wish you good luck. It’s avail­able on DVD, but only just, and it’s hardly a pop­u­lar film any­more. I rented it out, watched and took notes, then a few days later wanted to check some­thing. I couldn’t find any­thing online, so… I wouldn’t waste your time.

These are all relatively/very obscure, so it’s unlikely many peo­ple will use them. Unless of course lots of peo­ple are search­ing for mod­ule C/telling the truth texts online and find this post. At any rate, enjoy.

Extension 1 presentation

At least one of these has to work okay with the school’s tech­nol­ogy…
Native OpenOf­fice
MS Pow­er­point

Macro­me­dia Flash
Adobe PDF

*Josh really really really hopes fonts embed­ding works properly*

Aaaannnddd the Flash ver­sion worked great, fonts and all! Thankyou, OpenOffice!

Full­text of the pre­sen­ta­tion, with slide cues, as promised. PDF, file­size: stu­pidly large (280KB). Don’t know what hap­pened there!

As for the con­tent of the thing, no jokes are required about me being unable to write an essay/speech with­out ref­er­ence to acces­si­bil­ity! It’s purely inci­den­tal, I promise! On a slightly more seri­ous note, if some of the sen­tences utterly suck, chances are I didn’t speak them that way… my paper ver­sion had a few pencilled-in cor­rec­tions, and then there was the inevitable “read but speak dif­fer­ently” fac­tor. The end.

Read on for a HTML ver­sion of the same. Read the rest of this entry »

Depicting the plight of the individual

A crit­i­cal essay: How do nine­teenth cen­tury com­posers bring the plight of the indi­vid­ual to the con­scious­ness of their responders?

Because I haven’t got time to come up with con­tent solely for this web­site at the minute. 1645 words.

Nine­teenth cen­tury com­posers bring the plight of the indi­vid­ual to the responder’s aware­ness through their por­trayal of such char­ac­ters in a way that appeals to the respon­der either through the use of empa­thy, or, in the case of other works, through the use of a rising/falling con­flict model in con­junc­tion with elu­cida­tory dia­logue to elicit a response from the responder.

Hen­rik Ibsen’s play Ghosts uses the lat­ter model, mak­ing use of clever expo­si­tions pre­sented by char­ac­ter in order to force read­ers to ques­tion the soci­ety in which they find them­selves, and their roles as indi­vid­u­als within that frame­work. An encom­pass­ing work, Ghosts has been crit­i­cised as being “a lit­tle bare, hard, aus­tere”, in which Ibsen has con­formed too much to the pro­saic ideal and sti­fled his poetic nature – and, in this, become an author who “cares more for ideas and doc­trine than for human beings.” Iron­i­cally, it is this por­trayal of such ideas and doc­trine that, for many, makes this work one of over­whelm­ing humanity.

The model employed by Ibsen here ren­ders char­ac­ter­i­sa­tion super­flu­ous – his char­ac­ters are not bound to a sin­gle per­son, to a sin­gle indi­vid­ual, but are seen to rep­re­sent any num­ber of peo­ple indi­vid­u­ally within human­ity. Hav­ing said this, Ibsen’s works do not gen­er­ally sup­port the notion of a uni­ver­sal com­mon human­ity in which beliefs are shared, draw­ing a dis­tinc­tion between the “out­posts”, the rul­ing classes, and the “com­pact majority” – and there is no rea­son to sup­pose he devi­ates from this under­stand­ing in Ghosts.

Rather than being a character-driven book, in which empa­thy is used to endear a pro­tag­o­nist to the respon­der, Ibsen’s char­ac­ters are some­what flat and unde­vel­oped, although in their behav­iours, estab­lished through dia­logue and stage direc­tions, as well as their inter­ac­tions, they are por­trayed as being in con­flict. Pas­tor Man­ders embod­ies the oppres­sive, hyp­o­crit­i­cal nature of reli­gion – he is more con­cerned for the appease­ment of those who would crit­i­cise his lack of faith than he is for the prac­ti­cal­ity of insur­ance – a prac­ti­cal­ity he recog­nises, but advises against for “the attacks that would assuredly be made upon me in cer­tain papers and periodicals”.

The gulli­bil­ity of this char­ac­ter with regard to Jacob Engstrand’s nature is not sim­ply that, but rather a reflec­tion of the blind­ness of reli­gion to many aspects of indi­vid­ual natures within soci­ety as a whole – Ibsen com­ments on the irrel­e­vance of reli­gion in the lim­ited char­ac­ter­i­sa­tion of Man­ders, and then fur­ther delin­eates this irrel­e­vance through the con­flict intro­duced between var­i­ous char­ac­ters and this figure.

Yet Man­ders is not sim­ply the rep­re­sen­ta­tive of the church. Within Ibsen’s model of soci­ety, Man­ders wields a rul­ing influ­ence from which the “com­pact major­ity” draw their val­ues and belief sys­tems. The cri­tique is not only one of the reli­gious estab­lish­ment, but is inclu­sive of the state and legal sys­tems – some­thing reflected in the injus­tices por­trayed in A Doll’s House. The accu­sa­tion levied against such insti­tu­tions is one of aloof­ness – Ibsen pro­poses such insti­tu­tions are dis­tant from the indi­vid­ual, and can­not ade­quately com­pre­hend their needs. The epit­ome of this is his sup­port of euthana­sia in the clos­ing scene of the play – a some­thing wholly unac­cept­able within that soci­ety, and sim­i­larly open to ques­tion in this age. Ibsen argues in favour of this, the clos­ing scene of the play being emo­tive in its stark nature and elo­quent stage direc­tions. The work con­cludes almost poet­i­cally, with Oswald mind­lessly repeat­ing a phrase, as his mother, Mrs. Alv­ing, grows hys­ter­i­cal at what he has asked her to do – and the respon­der can empathise with both fig­ures, nei­ther of which have been under­stood by the estab­lish­ment. In estab­lish­ing such a dichotomy between the state and the indi­vid­ual, the plight of the indi­vid­ual in a col­lec­tive sense – that is, human­ity as a col­lec­tion of indi­vid­u­als – is brought to the con­scious­ness of the responder.

Empa­thy is lim­ited as a result of (delib­er­ately) restricted char­ac­ter­i­sa­tion, but Ibsen’s pur­pose is still achieved in this work, though per­haps with­out the nuance of his other works. An Enemy of the Peo­ple, also by Ibsen, draws a dis­tinc­tion not between the state and the indi­vid­ual, but rather between those on the “out­posts” and the com­mon peo­ple. It is not, how­ever, solely a work of philo­soph­i­cal self-gratification.

In this instance, the denun­ci­a­tion is instead of the fail­ure of soci­ety as a whole to hear any mes­sage con­tra­dic­tory to its desires, irre­spec­tive of what evils this may require, and sim­i­larly with­out regard for the sus­tain­abil­ity of such a stance. The pol­lu­tion, Dr. Thomas Stock­mann argues, is not sim­ply of the baths, but of soci­ety. He declares at a pub­lic meet­ing that he has dis­cov­ered “all the sources of our moral life are poi­soned and that the whole fab­ric of our civic com­mu­nity is founded on the pes­tif­er­ous soil of falsehood.”

Such bla­tancy is not wholly unchar­ac­ter­is­tic of Ibsen, his career being one of the more con­tro­ver­sial of the great nine­teenth cen­tury play­wrights – undoubt­edly also as a result of his pop­u­lar­ity. Yet the point remains as an ostracised indi­vid­ual shouts his dis­il­lu­sion­ment and cha­grin with soci­ety in this play, a point com­mon to each of his five prose plays, com­posed from 1877, and termed by Ibsen the “drama of ideas”.

The con­text in which it was writ­ten must also be con­sid­ered, quite apart from the period in time in which these works were com­posed. Ibsen’s plays were per­formed to audi­ences all across Europe, and resis­tance to these works var­ied from active cen­sor­ship in Prus­sia (uni­fied Ger­many) and Eng­land, to pas­sive cen­sor­ship – the play was eigh­teen months old before a the­atre agreed to pro­duce it – to pub­lic and media crit­i­cism. Ibsen’s plays attacked many aspects of the estab­lish­ment, and, by his own acknowl­edge­ment, point to nihilism as an inher­ent human con­di­tion for many peo­ple, lead­ing to their tur­moil dur­ing the play, and sub­se­quent social demise (or, more opti­misti­cally, their eman­ci­pa­tion) at its conclusion.

France was per­haps one of the more lib­eral nations in Europe at this time, with the Enlight­en­ment of the eigh­teenth cen­tury per­haps hav­ing the most effect upon their state. The sub­se­quent rev­o­lu­tions that had swept across France had cre­ated a per­va­sive pro­gres­sive mood, but there remained a soci­etal struc­ture rather in accor­dance with Ibsen’s por­trayal of it, albeit with the addi­tion of a mid­dle class sup­port­ive of more lib­eral ideals. This notion of ‘class’ was, for many of the French peo­ple, a rem­nant of a time past which numer­ous rev­o­lu­tions had failed to abol­ish – or, more accu­rately, class dis­tinc­tions. Artists such as Gus­tave Courbet crit­i­cised this con­tin­u­ing soci­etal rift towards the mid­dle of the cen­tury, through the por­trayal of alms-giving. His work was not unique in this theme, with other artists such as Bon­vin and Pils cre­at­ing works depict­ing the same action in the same year, but Courbet’s The Vil­lage Maid­ens Giv­ing Alms to a Guardian of Cat­tle (or The Vil­lage Maid­ens, 1852.) is unique in the man­ner it por­trays such an act. The work is “an unvar­nished, enor­mous and most unwel­come reminder of class dis­tinc­tions in the provinces – a reminder that all was not smil­ing peas­antry and reas­sur­ing folk­lore in Franche-Comté, but that there too, the petty bour­geoisie was set­ting itself apart from the, now threat­en­ing, pro­le­tariat – and fur­ther­more, with the artist’s own sis­ters, clad in con­tem­po­rary bon­nets and dresses, rather than regional folk cos­tume, play­ing the role of mon­eyed ben­e­fi­cience.”1 This was, for the middle-classes of Paris, a rather unwel­come reflec­tion of them­selves that they sought to avoid recog­ni­tion of.

The theme of such char­ity is con­tin­ued in another of Courbet’s works, Beggar’s Alms (1868), which por­trays a beg­gar grant­ing a young boy a coin – sig­nif­i­cant, rel­a­tive to the beggar’s means. The plight of the indi­vid­ual in both these works is por­trayed as being of lit­tle con­se­quence in an uncar­ing soci­ety – the poor are required to care for the poor, as an indif­fer­ent bour­geoisie con­tin­ues life unburdened.

Bur­den­ing of the indi­vid­ual is another theme com­mon to many works of the nine­teenth cen­tury crit­i­cal of soci­ety, a key exam­ple of this being Hardy’s Tess of the d’Urbervilles. The pro­tag­o­nist of this text, Tess Durbey­field (or d’Urberville), bears the sin of a man who goes on unhin­dered by his act, unaware of its con­se­quence, until he again meets Tess some years later, lead­ing to his demise. Her mar­riage to Angel Clare is an unqual­i­fied fail­ure, despite her con­tin­u­ing devo­tion to him until, finally, under the weight of her des­per­a­tion, hope of his return elapses and she is com­pelled to reside with Alec d’Urberville in order to sup­port her mother and siblings.

With­out a hus­band, Tess d’Urberville is ‘incomplete’ – she is inca­pable, in the soci­ety in which she finds her­self, of liv­ing inde­pen­dently, as a result of the expec­ta­tions placed upon her. Soci­ety has caused this cir­cum­stance through the patri­ar­chal expec­ta­tion of ‘purity’ falling solely upon a woman with no means of recourse – Alec d’Urberville may be viewed as a motif of oppres­sion rather than an actual char­ac­ter, as his per­sona is devel­oped by its ele­ments, rather than explicit char­ac­ter­i­sa­tion. Con­versely, Angel Clare is exten­sively devel­oped so he is endeared in the mind of the respon­der, such that he exists as an indi­vid­ual as does Tess – his indi­vid­ual actions being guided by his own fail­ure to meet society’s expec­ta­tions (his lack of reli­gious con­vic­tions), but he remains in con­flict with this as he leaves Tess whom it is quite clear he loves from his uncon­scious actions on the first night of their marriage.

Ulti­mately, Hardy’s protagonist’s plight is the tragic con­se­quence of a sin against her held by soci­ety to be a fault of her own. The respon­der is brought to value the pro­tag­o­nist as an indi­vid­ual in such a con­flict through Hardy’s endear­ing por­trayal of her in accor­dance with the first model out­lined at the begin­ning of this crit­i­cal essay, and it is thus that an aware­ness of her plight is raised.

1 Nochlin, L. Real­ism. Pen­guin, 1971. Page 124.

Overview: Socio-economic context of the nineteenth century

An essay, exam­in­ing the nature of the nine­teenth cen­tury, and iden­ti­fy­ing (some) shap­ing influ­ences per­tain­ing to this. 1142 words

The nine­teenth cen­tury was a period of com­par­a­tive oppres­sion when jux­ta­posed against today’s more lib­eral soci­ety, espe­cially in terms of soci­etal expec­ta­tions of behav­iour. This encom­passes gen­der roles, polit­i­cal view­points, opin­ions of estab­lished insti­tu­tions, and the accep­tance of soci­etal hier­ar­chy, amongst other things.

Gen­der roles fell increas­ingly under scrutiny towards the end of the nine­teenth cen­tury, as authors became more and more open in their crit­i­cism of the plight of the indi­vid­ual in soci­ety, par­tic­u­larly in terms of the req­ui­site adher­ence to estab­lished roles within the home. A rul­ing class dom­i­nated by male fig­ures demon­strated lit­tle regard for the auton­omy of females within soci­ety; this was reflected both explic­itly, in the form of pol­icy enshrined in the legal sys­tem of the time, as is evi­dent in the plight of Nora in A Doll’s House, and implic­itly, as is demon­strated by Thomas Hardy in the char­ac­ter of Tess in Tess of the d’Urbervilles as she lives apart from her hus­band at his request.

The notion of gen­der equal­ity was a pre­vail­ing con­cern of both these works, which may, per­haps, be con­sid­ered icon­o­clas­tic to the con­cerns of the soci­ety that they were pub­lished in. Both are, amongst many other works, ‘guilty’ of bring­ing to light the hypocrisy of the period in its treat­ment of women, par­tic­u­larly – although this is not their sole con­cern. Hardy’s work, from its very sub­ti­tle (“A Pure Woman”), crit­i­cises a soci­ety in which a pro­tag­o­nist is made to bear the con­se­quences of a sin against her, whilst the offender, Alec d’Urberville, can go on to achieve a (short-lived) sal­va­tion which Tess her­self rejects in her blind devo­tion to her hus­band. In this soci­ety, authors argued, a person’s inher­ent nature was incon­se­quen­tial in the face of prej­u­dice and soci­etal expec­ta­tions forced upon people.

The only way such require­ments could be cir­cum­vented, as por­trayed in lit­er­a­ture of the period, was through suf­fi­cient sta­tus cre­ated by wealth – some­thing reflected in Henry James’ The Por­trait of a Lady, in which Mrs. Touchett claims “You can do a great many things if you’re rich which would be severely crit­i­cized if you were poor,” which is sim­i­larly echoed in sen­ti­ment albeit not as explic­itly, in Hardy’s Far From the Mad­den­ing Crowd, in which his pro­tag­o­nist rules over an estate even when she is unmar­ried in a notably assertive man­ner. She is, to an extent, androg­y­nous in nature; this char­ac­ter is por­trayed as hav­ing typ­i­cally ‘mas­cu­line’ qual­i­ties, whilst Hardy actively devel­ops her fem­i­nine nature – Bethsheba’s attrac­tion of no fewer than three suit­ors, and par­tic­u­larly her flir­ta­tions with Bold­wood, all serve to rein­force this in face of her assertive qual­i­ties. The propo­si­tion that a woman was capa­ble of such lead­er­ship would gen­er­ally be rejected in the soci­ety of the time, but, through grant­ing her an inher­i­tance, her sta­tus was assured by eco­nomic means.

There is a dual com­ment in this – the first of which iden­ti­fies a pre­vail­ing inequal­ity in terms of soci­etal expec­ta­tions, and sec­ondly on the class dis­tinc­tions which existed within that soci­ety. Artists of this period were revolt­ing against the estab­lish­ment in their work, and not accept­ing the ‘lim­i­ta­tions’ soci­ety imposed upon them. Brontë, for exam­ple, could never have enjoyed suc­cess but for her use of a male pseu­do­nym to pub­lish her works in the ear­lier part of the 19th cen­tury. This obser­va­tion is made irre­spec­tive of the mes­sage present in her works – the notable act in this instance is not the con­tent pub­lished, but rather the means by which she achieved this. Class dis­tinc­tions had, to an extent, dimin­ished towards the mid­dle of the 19th cen­tury, at least in urban cen­tres – this made works such as Courbet’s The Vil­lage Maid­ens all the more con­tro­ver­sial, as they were an unwel­come reminder of con­tin­u­ing class dis­tinc­tions in provin­cial France.

Rejec­tion of such lim­i­ta­tions was not restricted to the realms of gen­der inequal­ity and class. As has already been sug­gested, com­posers such as Hardy were crit­i­cis­ing other aspects of the estab­lish­ment – and reli­gion was not excluded from this. Tess of the d’Urbervilles was one such text, in which the ‘purity’ of a woman was based on some­thing out­side of her con­trol, and the hypocrisy of the per­vad­ing reli­gion of the time was exposed in this. Sim­i­larly, Ibsen’s play Ghosts com­ments on a wide range of per­ceived soci­etal prob­lems, com­ment­ing also on reli­gious hypocrisy through Pas­tor Man­ders’ con­cerns of social per­cep­tion, and extend­ing so far as to pro­pose euthana­sia as right, much to the cha­grin of audiences.

Such overt crit­i­cisms may be attrib­uted to new sci­en­tific obser­va­tions, such as Darwin’s the­ory of evo­lu­tion halfway through the cen­tury, and the phi­los­o­phy of the late Enlight­en­ment (specif­i­cally the writ­ings of Kant and Rousseau) bore heavy influ­ence upon many of the thinkers of the nine­teenth cen­tury. Socially, a belief in absolute val­ues dic­tated by a deity con­tin­ued to be per­va­sive, but the artists of the period bore the scep­ti­cism of the pre­vi­ous cen­tury, instead adopt­ing a belief sys­tem based around extreme rel­a­tivism – and, in the case of some philoso­phers, a belief sys­tem based around the inver­sion of Judeo/Christian moral­ity, a promi­nent exam­ple being the writ­ings of Niet­zsche, whose ide­ol­ogy focussed on the bet­ter­ment of soci­ety through what­ever means nec­es­sary, reject­ing the con­ven­tional notion of ‘sin’.

The rise of social­ism is also influ­en­tial on the writ­ings of many Euro­pean authors, par­tic­u­larly in light of the indus­trial rev­o­lu­tion, which resulted in the emer­gence of a ‘pro­le­tariat’ viewed by observers as the vic­tims of an unreg­u­lated mar­ket­place. Marx and Engels’ Com­mu­nist Man­i­festo (extrap­o­lat­ing their the­ory of ‘sci­en­tific social­ism’) pro­posed that social jus­tice could only be brought about by means of a rev­o­lu­tion, although this was by no means the only pro­posed solu­tion. Fig­ures such as John Stu­art Mill pro­posed lib­er­al­ism as a solu­tion – an enlight­ened bour­geoisie whose action would reform cap­i­tal­ism to achieve social jus­tice whilst pre­serv­ing the notion of own­er­ship. Social­ism was a per­va­sive force in the lit­er­a­ture of the nine­teenth cen­tury, and, towards its end, of grow­ing rel­e­vance to the gen­eral populace.

The lit­er­a­ture of the nine­teenth cen­tury was char­ac­terised by the emer­gence of these new philo­soph­i­cal and polit­i­cal ide­olo­gies, as well as the decline of absolute value sys­tems man­dated by reli­gious belief sys­tems. Towards the end of the cen­tury, indi­vid­u­al­ism was an emer­gent force, and, as the fem­i­nist move­ment began to gain sup­port, com­po­si­tions of the period came to reflect that also.

Despite the changes in phi­los­o­phy seen to have taken place in lit­er­ary cir­cles, oppres­sion of free expres­sion by artists con­tin­ued through­out the cen­tury – but this is not reflected in the lit­er­a­ture cre­ated so much as cir­cum­stances and cor­re­spon­dence regard­ing it. The work of more con­tro­ver­sial com­posers such as Hen­rik Ibsen, Richard Wag­ner and Émile Zola, amongst oth­ers, was all sub­ject to much crit­i­cism, as the views com­mu­ni­cated in their work, as with that of innu­mer­able other artists, clashed with a soci­ety still reluc­tant to accept their lib­er­ated ideals.

Essay: Act 1, A Doll’s House

An essay. 1992 words. My stan­dard Cre­ative Com­mons license applies — this means attri­bu­tion is required, and you aren’t legally per­mit­ted to repub­lish this as your own work (yes, even for non-commercial rea­sons such as school). Read the rest of this entry »

Another missing day

I would have posted yes­ter­day, but for the fact that I’d been screw­ing with DNS stuff (fool­ishly on my www record) yes­ter­day, and it was most unfor­giv­ing come time to change it back. Whilst I’d nor­mally see changes fairly quickly, this time around my ISP’s DNS servers (and pre­sum­ably what­ever ISP I’m using as my sec­ondary) were excru­ci­at­ingly slow to update. So, I haven’t been able to login to my admin panel, hence the lack of posting!

Hmm. Aside from that, of course, other things have been hap­pen­ing. Yes­ter­day was my brother’s 8th birth­day — I would say happy birth­day, but he doesn’t read this, so there we go. :P We went out to Juanita’s, a great Mex­i­can restaru­ant in Kens­ing­ton, and… umm… ate food. As you do.

The rest yes­ter­day was spent on a vari­ety of things, from fran­ti­cally edit­ing CSS and the occa­sional graphic (all visual design work, thank­fully — I’ve decided that I shouldn’t make a habit of pro­gram­ming, as it’s some­thing I reg­u­larly fall flat on my face try­ing!) for an upcom­ing web­site, to read­ing Hen­rik Ibsen’s 1877 play, A Doll’s House. Read the rest of this entry »

# by Josh on October 11th, 2004 Tags: , , , , , , ,
| 2 Comments »