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Diary: How to Improve the World

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  • 173 pages
  • 7 hours of reading

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Composed over 16 years, this diary is one of Cage's most personal works, filled with observations, anecdotes, and koan-like stories that reflect his views on the world and predictions about contemporary life. With a playful yet purposeful approach, Cage explores a wide range of topics, from postwar music to Watergate and ideas on global nourishment. Using an IBM Selectric, he employed chance operations to dictate not just the word count and typefaces but also the number of letters per line and indentation patterns. In Part Three, published as a Great Bear pamphlet, color was also determined through chance, creating visual variances that echo musicality and enhance the physicality of the language. This complete hardcover edition gathers all eight parts originally published in A Year from Monday, M, and X. Coeditors Kraft and Biel consulted these publications and Cage's original manuscripts, using chance operations to present the text in various combinations of red and blue and applying 18 different typefaces throughout. John Cage (1912-92), a composer, philosopher, writer, and artist, remains one of the 20th century's most influential figures, pioneering new boundaries in music and significantly impacting dance, poetry, performance, and visual art.

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Diary: How to Improve the World, John Cage

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Released
2015
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Title
Diary: How to Improve the World
Language
English
Authors
John Cage
Publisher
Siglio Press
Released
2015
Format
Paperback
Pages
173
ISBN10
1938221109
ISBN13
9781938221101
Series
Rating
4.25 out of 5
Description
Composed over 16 years, this diary is one of Cage's most personal works, filled with observations, anecdotes, and koan-like stories that reflect his views on the world and predictions about contemporary life. With a playful yet purposeful approach, Cage explores a wide range of topics, from postwar music to Watergate and ideas on global nourishment. Using an IBM Selectric, he employed chance operations to dictate not just the word count and typefaces but also the number of letters per line and indentation patterns. In Part Three, published as a Great Bear pamphlet, color was also determined through chance, creating visual variances that echo musicality and enhance the physicality of the language. This complete hardcover edition gathers all eight parts originally published in A Year from Monday, M, and X. Coeditors Kraft and Biel consulted these publications and Cage's original manuscripts, using chance operations to present the text in various combinations of red and blue and applying 18 different typefaces throughout. John Cage (1912-92), a composer, philosopher, writer, and artist, remains one of the 20th century's most influential figures, pioneering new boundaries in music and significantly impacting dance, poetry, performance, and visual art.