There will be a live video stream from MDM20!
Check the Whaling Museum's MDM20 page—you'll find a link to the stream player page. For access from other devices, there is a link on that page to download the "Livestream app."
Of course, we here urge you to join the party at the museum. There is so much more to an MDM than just listening to readers.
BTW, it looks like the stream player gives a preview of this year's signature graphic...
The New Bedford Whaling Museum's Moby-Dick Marathon is an annual non-stop reading of Herman Melville's literary masterpiece. The multi-day program of entertaining activities and events is presented every January. Admission to the Marathon is free.
Thursday, December 31, 2015
Tuesday, December 22, 2015
MDM20 on the horizon
MDM20 is now less than three weeks away. Here are some bits of info that have leaked out:
ex Wikipedia |
- Author Nathaniel Philbrick will be the first reader this year. He is well known for In the Heart of the Sea, the story of the whaleship Essex on which M-D is based (since rendered in film).
- There might be a live video stream of the marathon. (The museum's MDM page has a currently non-active link to a "livestream.")
- The bulk of the reading will take place in the museum's new Harbor View Gallery. (I wonder where we all-night folks will spread our sleeping bags?)
Thursday, December 10, 2015
News to me...
Just catching up with Hershel Parker's blog—there were several items of note in his post of November 10:
- He just turned 80. (Congratulations!)
- He's "revising the 1967 Norton Critical Edition of Moby-Dick." (I assume/hope this will be a third edition from Norton. The first two editions are both essential.)
- He's about to give his personal "Melville Collection" to Lamar University, his undergrad alma mater.
Saturday, August 1, 2015
Herman's 196th Today
Today is the 196th anniversary of the birth of Herman Melville. (His 200th will be here before we know it!)
Visit the Melville collection at gutenberg.org and honor him with a read.
Visit the Melville collection at gutenberg.org and honor him with a read.
Tuesday, July 28, 2015
Mystic MDM This Weekend!
Mystic Seaport, "the nation's leading maritime museum," holds its Moby-Dick Marathon this Friday-Saturday, July 31-August 1.
This MDM is unique in that it is held aboard an actual whaleship, the Charles W. Morgan—"the last wooden whaleship in the world."
The 2015 Mystic MDM will be their 30th. (Yes, they've got ten years on New Bedford!) That, plus this being their first marathon aboard the completely restored Morgan, should result in an exceptional reading. Here's a clip from 2011.
This MDM is unique in that it is held aboard an actual whaleship, the Charles W. Morgan—"the last wooden whaleship in the world."
The 2015 Mystic MDM will be their 30th. (Yes, they've got ten years on New Bedford!) That, plus this being their first marathon aboard the completely restored Morgan, should result in an exceptional reading. Here's a clip from 2011.
Saturday, June 6, 2015
Bloomsday is on its way to Worcester
Attention all lit-marathoners in the New England states:
The Bloomsday Ramble is a marathon reading of (sections of) James Joyce's Ulysses. The Ramble makes a number of stops around downtown Worcester, running from 8:00 AM to about 10:00 PM. Come and go as you please.
I've blogged about this before. It's a small, low-key marathon—everyone reads, everyone is friendly, everyone has fun.
Bring a copy of Ulyssess, if possible, and a lawn chair or blanket.
The Worcester County Poetry Association has scheduled their twentieth "Bloomsday Ramble," Tuesday, June 16.
The Bloomsday Ramble is a marathon reading of (sections of) James Joyce's Ulysses. The Ramble makes a number of stops around downtown Worcester, running from 8:00 AM to about 10:00 PM. Come and go as you please.
I've blogged about this before. It's a small, low-key marathon—everyone reads, everyone is friendly, everyone has fun.
Bring a copy of Ulyssess, if possible, and a lawn chair or blanket.
It's official...
The 2016 Moby-Dick Marathon will run from Friday, Jan. 8, through Sunday, Jan. 10. This will be the twentieth MDM—we can expect something special from the the dedicated and talented staff of the Whaling Museum.
Mark your calendars and prepare!
Mark your calendars and prepare!
Tuesday, February 3, 2015
Frederick Douglass reading Sunday!
[click to see full-size] |
If you haven't been to this reading, make an effort to attend. Bring your children. Sign up to read.
This post from last year's event will give you a taste.
Sunday, January 25, 2015
Captain Ahab and Admiral Nelson
Thomas Hardy (Bain News Service, publisher, public domain, via Wikimedia Commons) |
My cursory research has not turned up any evidence that Hardy read or was aware of Moby-Dick. (The Oxford Reader's Companion to Hardy [2000], for example, contains no entry for either Melville or Moby-Dick.) All the same, in volume one of The Dynasts—in Part First, Act Fifth, Scene IV, to be exact—Hardy puts a very Ahab-like speech in the mouth of Admiral Nelson. In the scene, set aboard the Victory at the battle of Trafalgar, Nelson lies dying from a gun shot to his spine. He gives the order "to anchor" to the officers standing nearby, and one officer asks him if he wishes Admiral Collingwood to be instructed to "take full on him the conduct of affairs." Nelson says no, that he will continue in command himself:
Give Collingwood my order. Anchor all.
... By God, if but our carpenterBy way of comparison, here's a taste of Ahab:
Could rig me up a jury-backbone now,
To last one hour—until the battle's done,
I'd see to it! But here I am—stove in—
Broken—all logged and done for! Done, ay done!
Carpenter, when he's through with that buckle, tell him [the blacksmith] to forge a pair of steel shoulder-blades; there's a pedlar aboard with a crushing pack. ...
Hold; while Prometheus is about it, I'll order a complete man after a desirable pattern. Imprimis, fifty feet high in his socks; then, chest modelled after the Thames Tunnel; then, legs with roots to 'em, to stay in one place; then, arms three feet through the wrist; no heart at all, brass forehead, and about a quarter of an acre of fine brains; and let me see—shall I order eyes to see outwards? No, but put a sky-light on top of his head to illuminate inwards. There, take the order, and away.(From Chapter CVIII, "Ahab and the Carpenter.")
Wednesday, January 14, 2015
How audio recordings saved the whales
photo: wikimedia.org |
Audio stream and transcript here.
Friday, January 9, 2015
Other MDM19 coverage
- By first-timer, Boston book-lover Jessica A. Kent
- In the local paper, South Coast Today
- Another in South Coast Today
- Twitter treasury of #MDM19 tweets
Wednesday, January 7, 2015
MDM19 "post-mortemising"
First, mark your calendar: The 20th New Bedford Moby-Dick Marathon (MDM20) will be January 8-10, 2016.
Now to MDM19, just past. Here is a draught of a draught...
No surprise, MDM19 was much like MDM18, MDM17, MDM16, MDM15, MDM14, and MDM13. There were some great readers and some who labored, good sidebar discussions, and quick catch-ups with "marathon friends" old and new.
The museum staff and volunteers, again headed by indefatigable Bob Rocha, kept things moving without a hitch.
"Stump the Scholars" on Saturday morning is always a fun prologue to the actual reading. I wish there were an archive of (Senior Maritime Historian) Michael Dyer's intros for this "game show"—they're a hoot. The line-up of scholars this year was:
You have to dig deep if you want to stump this crew. Still, Michael was unusually liberal awarding "I Stumped the Scholars" buttons—four this year. ...and The Clams (Mary, Brad, Chris) won by 1 point.
On to the Lagoda Room for the actual reading. For remote observers, streaming this year was audio-only. (Anybody out there want to sponsor a video stream?) The audio archive is online; Museum President James Russell opens the reading at 37:30 in the first clip. Philip Hoare gave a spirited reading of the start of Loomings, but did not tether himself to the podium so his audio level is uneven. New Bedford mayor Jon Mitchell read Chapter 6 ("...in New Bedford, actual cannibals stand chatting at street corners...")—nice touch.
If it's true that every MDM has a slightly different character, this year's seemed to have a large contingent of first-timers. Folks laughed at all the little jokes in the early chapters, and the crowd just felt "shiny and new." That said, it looked like there were fewer people than the crush of recent years. Was this somehow the result of New Year's Day on Thursday, despite the weekend's fair weather?
A new Father Mapple was in the Seamen's Bethel, Rev. David Lima. It was amusing to see him fiddle with his digital tablet while enacting a 19th-century preacher.
Back at the museum some nice t-shirts were spotted:
got whales?
What would Queequeg do?
I would prefer not to.
Call me [front] Ishmael [back]
One big disappointment—I clean forgot about Saturday's "Chat with a Melville Scholar." Apparently a major topic of discussion was Ahab's psychology. Bummer!
The "Children's Mini-Marathon" was new this year. Youngsters read from an abridged M-D in a separate gallery. Whatever they may have taken from the story, the few readers I heard did a fine job.
Now to MDM19, just past. Here is a draught of a draught...
No surprise, MDM19 was much like MDM18, MDM17, MDM16, MDM15, MDM14, and MDM13. There were some great readers and some who labored, good sidebar discussions, and quick catch-ups with "marathon friends" old and new.
The museum staff and volunteers, again headed by indefatigable Bob Rocha, kept things moving without a hitch.
- Mary K. Bercaw Edwards (Mystic Seaport, Univ. of Connecticut)
- Bradley King (Univ. of Texas PhD [dissertation])
- Chris Sten (George Washington U.)
- Philip Hoare (author, Friday night's speaker, co-curator of The Moby Dick Big Read)
- Wyn Kelley (M.I.T)
- Robert Wallace (Univ. of Kentucky)
You have to dig deep if you want to stump this crew. Still, Michael was unusually liberal awarding "I Stumped the Scholars" buttons—four this year. ...and The Clams (Mary, Brad, Chris) won by 1 point.
On to the Lagoda Room for the actual reading. For remote observers, streaming this year was audio-only. (Anybody out there want to sponsor a video stream?) The audio archive is online; Museum President James Russell opens the reading at 37:30 in the first clip. Philip Hoare gave a spirited reading of the start of Loomings, but did not tether himself to the podium so his audio level is uneven. New Bedford mayor Jon Mitchell read Chapter 6 ("...in New Bedford, actual cannibals stand chatting at street corners...")—nice touch.
Off to the Bethel |
A new Father Mapple was in the Seamen's Bethel, Rev. David Lima. It was amusing to see him fiddle with his digital tablet while enacting a 19th-century preacher.
Back at the museum some nice t-shirts were spotted:
got whales?
What would Queequeg do?
I would prefer not to.
Call me [front] Ishmael [back]
One big disappointment—I clean forgot about Saturday's "Chat with a Melville Scholar." Apparently a major topic of discussion was Ahab's psychology. Bummer!
The "Children's Mini-Marathon" was new this year. Youngsters read from an abridged M-D in a separate gallery. Whatever they may have taken from the story, the few readers I heard did a fine job.
Although attendance seemed (to me) down this year, the balcony was more crowded with sleepers than ever. Not having a sleeping bag or pad to define "my" space, three times I returned from a coffee- or bio-break to find someone sacked-out where I had been! We're going to need bunks up there!
Miscellany
- The Mystic Seaport Moby-Dick Marathon is July 31-August 1. Watch their website for details. It usually takes place onboard the Charles W. Morgan.
- The documentary Into the Deep was recommended by a fellow marathoner. It's on youTube.
- Two people from the D.C. Public Library were reportedly at MDM19 to get ideas for their marathon reading of 1984 on Jan. 21. Details and reader sign-up here.
- MDM sponsor The Pour Farm Tavern has great beer.
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