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Monday, September 26, 2005

Got all the reviews for the Teaching Media-Savvy Students kit on Friday, so I finished the revisions today. It's off for the finally proofreading by the editors tomorrow. Should be in the online store by the end of the month. And no, I don't get royalties, but I'm eager to see it finished and for sale.

Also wrote my Ideas section for Inbox, but I'm not telling you what it's about so that you have to come back tomorrow to find out.

I'm still suffering from the acid reflux. I'm trying to eat really, really bland things until it straightens out again. I'm remembering that I ate some honey mustard last week. Maybe that was part of the problem. Whatever it was, it's accompanied now by a side order of major back pain. I didn't do anything improper, so I'm dumbfounded by the back issue. All I can think is that it's the changes in my bed. My sister and I raised it so the top is elevated 8 inches, as all the acid reflux information advises. Maybe it's causing me to sleep differently and I've caused the muscles to tighten up or something? I'm sitting with an ice pack tonight and that seems to help some.

Thanks to John's comments yesterday, I realized that I needed those Circa notebooks too.

I have spent days looking for a notebook that I liked. I'm surprised that I didn't get thrown out of Pages for all the testing I was doing—trying to decide if it would lie on the desk properly, would stand up to wear and tear, had pages that turned easily, etc. I finally decided that I was just going to have to settle for something that I was only lukewarm about and make do. It's a cute flowered spiral journal, but not really perfect. Not what I wanted.

I never understood those Circa notebooks, so they didn't seem like an option. A former employee at NCTE swore by them and had all the employees she managed using them; but they just seemed pricey with no real benefit. I thought they were silly. After all I can tear paper out of my notebook now, why do I need a fancy system. John's explanation suddenly made it make sense. Especially given the standard stuff that I have to just copy over and the running lists that I need to keep. As I understand the Circa system, these notebooks will simplify things for me.

I got the shipping confirmation this evening so it's on its way—one junior notebook and a pack of dividers. I decided to buy the cheapest basics to start with just to make sure I like it.

Even though I like the idea of being able to arrange the pages and whatnot, there's this manuscript lover's voice in my head that is hesitant. Naturally, nothing I put in a notebook will matter in the long run. No one is going to study my papers. Still, I have this feeling that it's just wrong to rearrange pages in a journal. It kills me to remove a page from a notebook—especially the bound kind where you have to cut out a page for some reason. It's like some crime against humanity to take a page out of its original place. Very paper-based and linear of me really. I'm trying to convince myself to get over it. After all, my notebook left the FEDEX ramp in Fort Lauderdale at 21:52:00.



Comments:
But it's manuscript culture that had no problem sewing and unsewing and resewing gatherings into new books. It's print culture that requires a fixed text.


Fr. Ong had a two-volume comb-bound survey of English literature that I think he got while preparing for his Ph.D. exams at Harvard (the old kind where you were expected to know everything, though, of course, everything was much more limited than today). He's added multiple pages into these two books: hand-written notes, typed-up quotes from journal articles, and even pages cut out of journals like Notes and Queries and Explicator. If he inserted something at page 45, he labeled it 45a. If he used both sides, it was 45a and b. He also liked to add to indexes, including adding in his own key words. When I realized he was doing all this, adding his own pages and adding to indexes, I just had to grin. As one of the first people to seriously explore the logic of print culture, he certainly wasn't tyrannized by it.
 
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