No, I really like the misunderstanding. In fact, I suspect that there
is no 'there' anywhere at all. Remember Easy Rider?
She may not have said it quite like that but I prefer to think that
she meant so much more than a missing house, and in a more universal
sense. In fact, I'll go all post-modern for once and claim that it
doesn't matter a bugger what she meant, it's how it is received
that's significant, faulty or not.
So there.
I feel much better now.
Andrew Fildes
afildes@xxxxxxxxxxxxx
On 20/04/2008, at 4:02 PM, Winsor Crosby wrote:
> Thanks, Moose. I had no idea. It will probably be the last time I use
> the quotation, although I think it probably would apply to the
> modernized version of the high school I went to. Well, I suppose I
> could not return there in any case, barring an out of body or out of
> time experience, nor would I want to. Coming full circle, the first
> time I heard it was in a class at UC Berkeley by a professor during a
> class. He used it to denigrate Oakland.
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