Showing posts with label maps. Show all posts
Showing posts with label maps. Show all posts

Thursday, July 31, 2025

Spain 2025

First trip to Europe in seven years complete! Over eleven days, putting down anchors in Ansó in the far west Pyrenees, Zaragoza and Sant Cugat in the outskirts of Barcelona, we saw a lot. My already ambitious plan was to cross paths at least with legacies Roman and Islamic, romanesque and gothic, baroque and modernismo, but we got even more - starting with neolithic dolmens and ending with a still-growing sci-fi cathedral. And a plan for high mountains and plains grew to include several waves of Pyrenees, Montserrat and a short trip to seaside Sitges, too! 

What impressed itself on me also was that no spot (with the possible exception of the Castillo de Loarre) belonged to just one era. Why should it? Even as empires and their dominant religions change, most people stay, useful and powerful sites remain useful and powerful, and many building materials lend themselves to reuse. But of course the story is more complicated than this irenic description would suggest.

Take Zaragoza, which today celebrates its "four cultures" - Iberian, Roman, Muslim and Christian. These exquisite arches are part of the 11th century core of one of its marvels, the Aljaferia, highlight of the UNESCO World Heritage Mudejar Architecture of Aragon, reconstructed after half a millennium's absence. These "cultures," while doubtless at every point more cosmopolitan than cultural nationalists today can imagine, really name chronological eras, each of which coopts or effaces its predecessors in its story.

Zaragoza's lovely cathedral La Seo sits on the site of the city's main mosque, which in turn replaced the central temple of the Roman city of Caesaraugusta - which surely built on something yet older. Today's it's presented as an almost teleological sequence. The "mudejar" brickwork of part of the cathedral, constructed by Muslim artists who stayed (what the 19th century neologism mudejar means) when the Christian era began, makes it seem an almost friendly transition. But its prominent chapel for Saint James, patron saint of the Reconquista, is framed by huge 17th century statues of Moorish-looking prisoners writhing in chains. 

None of this is new, or should be surprising. What I needed to return to Europe to remember is that, for all the violence of historical conflict and usurpation, there is a sense of historical depth in which the older constellations remain in some obscure way present, whether acknowledged or not. Call it karma, or just history? To me the four huge towers at the corners of Zaragoza's enormous baroque Basilica de Nuestra Señora del Pilar (the towers constructed only in the last century or so) make it look mosque-like, though that was certainly nobody's intention. This would be a pleasing irony for a place which, as the site where Jesus' mother Mary is said to have appeared to the apostle James in 40 CE, has asserted Christianity's special claim to Spain from before there even was an Islam - or Christianity!

Reflecting on it now, this all seems interesting but unsurprising. I tell students stories all the time about the enduring effects of historical and cultural context and about the constructedness of historical narratives pretending to transcend this messiness. Surprising is the touristic naivete of which it made me aware. How could I have thought one could dip into distinct centuries in distinct places? Any old cathedral presents you with the cohabitation of many centuries at once! Yet it took me a while to get over irritation that each of the places we visited had been built and rebuilt multiple times, to accept and enjoy that there was never one authentic form for any of these significant places.

This holds even for the Sagrada Familia in Barcelona, which is celebrated as the work of Antoni Gaudí but is less and more than that. Gaudí took over a project already underway (now the crypt) and developed a concept for the new edifice which went through several iterations during the decades he devoted to it. But he knew cathedrals take a long time, and that only part of it could be completed in his lifetime. (The current plan is to complete the work by next year, the centennial of Gaudí's death.) Would he have approved of the expressionist sculptures Josep Maria Subirachs - working with Gaudí's original sketches - carved for the Passion Gate in the 1990s? Or Joan Vila Grau's luminous tapestries of stained glass, even more recent? I'm pretty sure he'd be psyched that there's a 3-D printer in use in the workshop, helping make the remaining towers even more diaphanous.

I wonder what will happen once the construction finishes, fifty or one or two hundred years after that. As a living thing, Gaudí wouldn't want his cathedral to be preserved in amber, would he? The karmic residues of distant and half-forgotten pasts, encountered in the built environment all around, make the future here a more complicated and less foreign prospect than it seems in the ahistorical presentism of the "new" world.

Friday, May 02, 2025

Transfer

The new MTA map (though based on an older design), caught in the act in the subway! It takes the place of a little-changed predecessor which looked a little more geographically accurate. Its main virtue is that it makes transfers easier to see - though one still needs to pay attention to announcements about trains misbehaving, the 1 "running express to Chambers Street" or 2 "making local stops and running on the 5 line"!

Saturday, March 08, 2025

CDMX-ward

It's spring break, and time for a second visit to Mexico City! Yet leaving the country feels a little selfish at this moment. Flying across the Gulf of Mexico feels like fleeing the scene of an ongoing crime.

Sunday, January 19, 2025

Snap to cold

This was most of yesterday's nearly 24-hour trip back from China; Detroit layover was a little under three hours, and the connecting flight to LGA arrived early.

Some friends from Columbus stayed at our place last week, and were driving west as we flew east. "We reached Columbus late last night," they report, "ahead of the polar temps. On the eve of Jan 20, it seems we’re entering an ice age." 

Traveling far away I've managed to keep awareness of the impending storm on the back burner, except as the lingering question "how will I start a class the day the deportation razzias begin?"

Sunday, December 15, 2024

No man is an island

And back to California for the holidays! The movie player on the seat in front of me wasn't working so I had a chance to delve into Dharma Rain: Sources of Buddhist Environmentalism (2000) - just what I needed to start pondering my upcoming spring "Religion and Ecology" class, which I've promised will center "Buddhist perspectives." One very happy discovery, a short work by Japanese monk and visionary 明恵 Myōe (1173-1232) entitled "Letter to an Island," enacts the nonduality of animate and inanimate, Buddha and the rest, by addressing an island (conveniently if coincidentally called Karma) Myoen knows from childhood. 

Dear Mr. Island, it begins, How have you been since the last time I saw you? After I returned from visiting you, I have neither received any message from you, nor have I sent any greetings to you. then swiftly moves into preaching: I think about your physical form as something tied to the world of desire, a kind of concrete manifestation, an object visible to the eye, a condition perceivable by the faculty of sight, and a substance composed of earth, air, fire, and water that can be experienced as color, smell, taste, and touch. Since the nature of physical form is identical to wisdom, there is nothing that is not enlightened. Since the nature of wisdom is identical to the underlying principle of the universe, there is no place it does not reach. 

So Mr. Island isn't distant or even really an island, but assuredly a friend! After a little more learned disquisition, Myōe becomes personal again. 

Even as I speak to you in this way, tears fill my eyes. Though so much time has passed since I saw you so long ago, I can never forget the memory of how much fun I had playing on your island shores. I am filled with a great longing for you in my heart, and I take no delight in passing time without having the time to see you.

And then there is the large cherry tree that I remember so fondly. There are times when I so want to send a letter to the tree to ask how it is doing, but I am afraid that people will say that I am crazy to send a letter to a tree that cannot speak. Though I think of doing it, I refrain in deference to the custom of this irrational world. But really, those who think that a letter to a tree is crazy are not our friends. ...

This would make a nice bridge from "Religion of Trees"!

Myoe, "Letter to the Island," trans. George J. Tanabe, Jr., in Dharma Rain: Sources of Buddhist Environmentalism ed. Stephanie Kaza and Kenneth Kraft (Boston and London: Shambalah, 2000), 63-65; portrait of Myōe in a tree from Kōsanji, Kyoto

Saturday, December 07, 2024

Time slices

Not sure where this originated, but this time zone map is trippy indeed! Can you find where you are? Without Argentina and India I'd be lost.

Friday, November 29, 2024

Round trip

And back to New York again, along an unusually southerly route, but we'll be bouncing back to California again in sixteen days!

Friday, November 22, 2024

Aloft (from the plane)

San Diego, here we come! AAR, Torrey pines and Thanksgiving!

Monday, November 11, 2024

Still purple

I've been exasperated by the way presidential election results, focused on the Electoral College, are shown for a long time. We're a purple country and have been as long as I can remember - and teetering along the fifty-fifty line for a long time too. Folks need to see this map! (And more detailed ones, when they come in, showing county-level results and, crucially, population rather than geography.) On this website you can compare the flushes of slightly redder or bluer purple across the last dozen presidential elections. We've been bluer, and redder (though my friend M points out that the red wasn't as red in tooth in claw before.) We're like someone who shifts their weight from one leg to the other. 

What's the point of mentioning this? Another razor-thin election! There is nothing like a mandate for the hostile takeover of the levers of government the victors are planning - not that that will stop them (alas!). And no, he doesn't "get" us. We're a sick puppy of a nation, barely living in the same reality, but we don't "deserve" to be got, especially as the we who will suffer most aren't the ones who voted for him. Saying so invites the demon into your heart.

Wednesday, November 06, 2024

Howl

A map showing a rightward shift from sea to shining sea. However bamboozled by right-wing media about the economy, the 2020 election, crime, etc., many of my fellow citizens are cool with the cruel.

Friday, September 13, 2024

PRRI

The latest PRRI American Values Atlas is out, with 2023 figures, charts and maps on religious diversity in the US.

 
It confirms the three big stories: that the US is becoming ever more religiously diverse, that the religiously unaffiliated continue to grow, especially among younger people, and that our politics is held hostage by an ever smaller group, white Evangelical Christians: just 13.4%?!

Monday, August 12, 2024

Lasso

Startlingly satisfying mountain, forest, lake and back country destinations so close to our ocean-facing base! You could see them in a day, I suppose, but we took three. Some late summer gleanings...


 

 


 

 

 
 
 
 

 
 

 



 
 
 


 
 
 

Thursday, June 27, 2024

Is geography destiny?

It's really shocking how many maps of different things (this one's from here) wind up looking the same...

Wednesday, May 29, 2024

Global heating


Could it be the same story?