TASP 2003 at UT Austin: The Mystery of Creativity



reasonably remarkable



Tuesday, March 16, 2004
We began reading Rosencrantz and Guildenstern are Dead today in English. Though I've only read the first couple of pages, I love it. Tae-Yeoun, I remember when we first started posting, you mentioned this play. Are you still interested in discussing it? (This question applies to all others who are interested too.)
Alex Y--are you planning on visiting the Cornell Telluride House on April 8-12/whatever time slot Simon gave you? Because it would be very very cool to synchronize our visits--though these dates supposedly encompass all the ex-tasper acceptees.
Congratulations John! Happy belated birthday, Olga!
Oh, and I have my first concert of the season on March 27th. I will be performing, among other things, Schubert's Wanderer Fantasie--the piece I was working on at tasp. Like Aimee and all other performers before me, I expect 100% tasper attendance.

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[ recommended for discussion ]
Existentialism is A Humanism, Essay by Sarte
preface to the lyrical ballads
the trial
heidegger's what calls for thinking
When Life Almost Died (deals with the Permian mass Extinction)
elizabeth costello
the god of small things
jung's aion
foucault's pendulum
coetzee's nobel acceptance speech
faulkner's nobel acceptance speech
koestler's The Act of Creation: part one, the jester
my mother and the roomer
Tao, the Greeks, and other important things
rosencrantz and guildenstern are dead

endgame
the book of job
Trilobites
joseph campbell