Talk:Lipton’s Journal
Entry Dates
December 1, 1954
# | NM# | First Words | x-Refs | Cut | Notes |
---|---|---|---|---|---|
1 | 1 | Perhaps the artist is less | |||
2 | 2 | Lipton's seems to open one | |||
3 | 3 | Fucking is perhaps an approach | |||
4 | 4 | In relation to (1) | L1 | Note. | |
5 | 5 | The concentration camp novel | x | Note. Unclear x-ref # in note. | |
6 | 6 | One should always listen attentively | Note. | ||
7 | 7 | Herbert A[ptheker]. said of Lipton’s | Note. | ||
8 | 8 | In modern jazz, one feels | Note. | ||
9 | 9 | Thoreau’s beautiful remark | Note. | ||
10 | 10 | I upset Herbert [Aptheker] by saying | |||
11 | 11 | In a short novel | x | Note. |
December 8, 1954
# | NM# | First Words | x-Refs | Cut | Notes |
---|---|---|---|---|---|
12 | 12 | One should always try to | x | ||
13 | 13 | It seems to me that | |||
14 | 14 | It is possible that many | Note. Handwritten at end by NM: “That is a skin may be capable of all sexual enjoyment, but the one of laying conquering hands whom a woman’s nudity.” | ||
15 | 15 | All of my life with Adele | |||
16 | 16 | If there is that other world | |||
17 | 17 | Listening to a child | |||
18 | 18 | I advertise to everyone | |||
19 | 19 | Six and Four are close | |||
20 | 20 | Knowledge is systematized ignorance | |||
21 | 21 | A novel is slowly emerging | |||
22 | 22 | It may be that the | |||
23 | 23 | In the conc. camp novel | L17 | ||
24 | 24 | There may actually be such | |||
25 | 25 | Every word sets up | L24 | Note. | |
26 | 26 | Television may have some extraordinary | Note. | ||
27 | 27 | Possibly the spasmodic nervous system | |||
28 | 28 | Vomiting may be the orgasm | |||
29 | 29 | No saint can be a teacher | |||
30 | 30 | Infants may be enormously wise | |||
31 | 31 | The saint and the psychopath | Note. | ||
32 | 32 | No one is more unreligious | |||
33 | 33 | Medicine may be witchcraft | end: [and] its emphasis on progress. | ||
34 | 34 | The aggressive instinct | |||
35 | 35 | Psychoanalysis, liberalism, etc. etc. | |||
36 | 36 | I have learned more from | |||
37 | 37 | In The Deer Park after the | Note. | ||
38 | 38 | If the more saintly people | |||
39 | 39 | In a Collier’s article | Note. | ||
40 | 40 | Words are not entirely bad | |||
41 | 41 | Death may be the price | |||
42 | 42 | I know nothing about semantics | |||
43 | 43 | Talk with Rhoda L. | Note. |
- December 17, 1954
- December 28, 1954
- December 29, 1954
- December 31, 1954
- January 3, 1955
- January 20, 1955
- January 24, 1955
- January 25, 1955
- January 26, 1955
- January 27, 1955
- January 31, 1955
- February 1, 1955
- February 2, 1955
- February 7, 1955
- February 10, 1955
- February 14, 1955
- February 21, 1955
- February 22, 1955
- March 4, 1955
Questions
- What do we want to do with omitted entry numbers? Just skip them? Or should they be included in the digital version but not the printed?
- Are the numbers on Donna’s transcript the new, correct numbers? (I know Mike said that Mailer mis-numbered some entries.)
- Should each entry date have its own index page? Perhaps each numbered entry could be summarized here?
- Should each numbered entry should have its own (sub)page? I think yes.
- Should each numbered entry have a title other than a number? Each could have a shortcut, so if the title is
Lipton’s Journal/December 1, 1954/1
, the shortcut could beLJ1
or justL1
. - Should we categorize numbered entries? Thematically? Style of entry?