Fading Memories

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Ramblings about books and other things that will soon fade from my memory.

Boudewijn Rempt

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    2006-12-20

    Photoshop LAB Color

    Dan Margulis

    Buy this book.

    Larry Marso wrote to the KImageShop mailing list in January 2006 about this book (two chapters are freely available). It deals with the LAB colorspace and the ways LAB makes it easy to completely mess up, I mean, fix, your photographs. Larry wrote us because just then we had added a 16 bit/channel LAB color colorspace to Krita, more because we needed it as an intermediary than because we knew what people would actually do with it.

    Now, about a year later, I decided it was time to get the whole text and see whether Krita can Do This, too, already. I haven't started with that yet, for two reasons: first, I was in hospital, second: the demo files that come with the book are not in nice application-independent TIFF (or OpenRaster...), but in PSD, PSD > version 6, to be exact. I have to hope that Cyrille Berger hurries up with his libpsd (which he's developing together with the Scribus people).

    Until that's done, I'll just have to content myself with reading the book. There's no doubt that there is a lot of interesting and good information in it. I really want to give Margulis' recipes a try with Krita, and improve Krita where necessary. But at the same time -- oh my gosh! Margulis is a crashing bore. He's self-important, self-congratulatory, wordy -- in short, nearly unreadable. Still, I'll probably wrestle my way through most of it.


    2005-12-15

    The Septuaginta, Scribes and Scholars

    I am reading An Introduction to the Old Testament in Greek. Additional Notes by Hennry Swete. The Grand Rapids seminary (mildly famous in the Netherlands because they revere our Kuyper, while we have almost forgotten about Abraham de Geweldige) have scanned the 1914 edition of this massive book, tagged it using something called "theological xml markup" and prepared a public domain pdf. With all the Greek, Hebrew and everything intact. It's really a great read, and I wish I had a similar book about the Hebrew old testament and another one on the New Testament, with a final volume on the apocrypha.

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    2005-01-13

    Een kleine geschiedenis van wijn

    Rod Phillips

    Buy this book (in English...)

    A cheapo find in the local bookshop, Praamstra, at only 6,50 euros for a hard-back. Most books about wine are quite pretentious (like the old Het Book van den Wijn) and seldom deal exhaustively with history. This book is true to its title: a short history of wine.

    As such, it's quite a success. Possibly the English has lost something in translation as the prose is not uniformly rivetting, but it is serviceable enough even in pedestrian Dutch. The author know what he's writing about: a professor in the history of alcohol in Canada.

    Anyway, despite (or perhaps because of) it's being a bit dry for it's subject, it made me long for a glassful of the best, the reddest wine I could get when I was reading it. A good glass of something Italian, that's the ticket...


    Oosterse christenen binnen de wereld van de islam

    Herman Teule en Anton Wessels (editors)

    This book is 438-page collection of small papers about the history of Christian churches in countries controlled by the Islam, and about the present-day situation. Seeing that my Patriarch resides in Constantinople, Istanbul for those buying a plane ticket, and that he still isn't allowed to re-open his theological university on Halki Island, this topic is pretty interesting to me.

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    2004-12-29

    Inheemse Erfenis, Continuïteit en Discontinuïteit in de Geschiedenis

    Ineke Strouken en Olivier Rieter

    Irina brought this book from the library; it's a publication by the Nederlands Centrum voor Volkscultuur, the Dutch Centre for Popular Culture. The various papers in the book investigate the difference between popular perception of traditions and the real history of traditions.

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    2004-12-28

    De Bloei van het Oosters Christendom

    Olivier Clement

    The Orthodox Theologisch Vormingscentrum de Heilige Johannes de Theoloog has already translated many courses and books originally published by l'Institut de Théologie Orthodoxe Saint-Serge. However, being chronically understaffed and overworked, the translations are given to the students as soon as the actual translation has finished. There's no time for proofing, and no time for an accurate colofon either. So I don't know to which of Olivier Clements numerous works the book I just finished belongs -- the English translation of the Dutch translation or interpretation of the French title is, more or less, "The Heyday of Oriental Christianity", and it's Church history, not a contemporary sermon. Not that oriental Christianity isn't flourishing, because it is, at least in the occidental Netherlands, where we're looking for a bigger church building again, because we simply don't fit in the building we own now.

    Anyway, apart from the forgiveable typoes and the rather flowery style -- Olivier Clement is a French intellectual from the twentieth century -- this book is the goods. It is a thorough investigation of the history of theological thought in the Orthodox Church, in particular as influenced by the Western Church during the century preceding and following the Great Schism.

    Clement must be a gifted writer, and the translator has done his or her level best, because even in the hasty translation into Dutch, Clement manages to make the particular issues surrounding the filioque and other thorny theological issues quite clear, often in a single paragraph or even in a well-put sentence.

    It's refreshing enough to get something to read that shows the Orthodox vision of the Great Schism, but it is admirable that the author doesn't get bogged down in a defensive (or offensive) position, but manages to show where both sides were right, and where they were wrong in an objective way, while at the same time not falling into the trap of considering everything through the distortion of a contemporary set of values, nor through an anemic impartiality where no longer any moral decision is possible.

    It's a pity that the Dutch translation is apparently incomplete -- the footnotes are indicated as missing, but I also fear that there are rather more than the 100 pages we were given... Next time I'm in Brussels I should ask for the French title, so I can acquire it.


    The Orthodox Churches and the West

    Volume 13 of Studies in Church History, edited by Derek Baker

    Being temporarily outwitted by some hairy coding problems in Krita, I'm trying to clear some square metres of floor space by doing Fading Memory entries on books I've read in December, when I didn't have time to write anything. And Fading Memories was, after all intended to be a faithful log of my reading so I wouldn't forget what I had already read before. So, without further ado, a few notes on this curious book I borrowed from the Church library. (Which I'm librarian of for the Western section, with Julia doing the Cyrillic section. Not that I cannot read the Cyrillic script, if there's one thing that has always come easily to me it's been learning scripts, but my Russian has really detoriated since 1992, when I spent a year learning the language well enough to read a grammar of Tangut published in Leningrad.)

    Anyway, this book, published Blackwell in Oxford in 1976, is typical of its kind: a regular series where scholars in a particular discipline can publish their papers, somewhat thematically ordered, but not too much, most of them read at one particular conference. The kind of book someone who hasn't published in it buys if one paper turns out to be really interesting, against all expectation, or which you have a subscription to if it's your field.

    However, it turned out to contain a nice paper by Bishop Kallistos on the secret conversion to Orthodoxy by an English peer in the first half of the nineteenth century and a really amusing account of corruption in the Greek church under the Turks -- a bishop was said to eat lakes of yoghurt for breakfast and mounds of filleted sardines for lunch. Poor man... The article by Nicolas Zernov on the Russian diaspora in the west and its effects on the Christian West is probably why my unknown predecessor in the library has bought the volume; it's interesting, but a little too self-congratulatory for my tastes. And so the collection winds to its somewhat weary end: twenty papers from the late seventies, I should not expect all of them to be interesting in 2004.


    2004-10-28

    The Invention of Tradition

    Eric Hobsbawm and Terence Ranger

    I have been taught that Columbus discovered that the earth was round and not flat; and that he has been put to torture by the inquisition. That was not true; it was a nineteenth century invention. Apart from authors with a clearly allegorical intention, such as Lactantius, no educated person in Europe ever gave a hint of thinking that the earth was flat.

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    2004-03-04

    Een in de was, een in de kast, een aan de bast

    Corrie de Groot

    A little book, illustrated with fine, well-executed pencil drawings on that perennial subject -- women's undies.

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    2004-02-02

    De Weg der Historie

    By J. Dek

    After reading 1633 I suddenly realized that I, in fact, knew hardly a thing about Dutch history. It isn't taught in schools anymore, because history now has to be a fun thing children can relate to, about common people and their life. Nothing wrong with that; but the events that have created the nation I have to live in have some importance too. So, what does someone who needs a quick primer in his national history do?

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