|| from bay area, CA but johannesburg, s. africa is my second home ||

a refugee of paul beatty's "designated neighborhood safe houses on the ghetto geeks' underground railroad." i am 24 and i love high top chuck taylors, bookstores, photography and orphaned technologies. i like to learn & take great pride in my nerdiness. i take photos, bake vegan oatmeal, raisin&almond butter cookies on sunday nights, gossip about books&politics, and teach the young folks.


i hold three 'jobs': high school teacher, writer, city planning commissioner.

::blog

PARADISE IS A FABULOUS SUIT

laeticia:

These are sapeurs, acolytes of a 25-year-old movement called la SAPE—La Societé des Ambianceurs et des Personnes Élégantes (aka Kitendi, the religion of the cloth) — that revolves around the possession of the most expensive, most luxurious, most extravagant fashion in the world. Followers of SAPE wear $10,000 jackets and $500 shoes, but these mostly young Congolese men otherwise barely eke out a living in the rubble of Kinshasa and Brazzaville or the ghettos of Paris and Brussels, washing dishes or washing bodies, and sometimes selling their own.

The craze started with le Pape de la SAPE—intermediary between the gods of fashion and practicing sapeurs—the musician Papa Wemba, born Jules Shungu Wembadio Pene Kikumba in the Kasai River region of the Belgian Congo. Papa Wemba, an emerging pop star in the late 1960s, fomented a revolution in self-presentation, agitating for pizzazz over the dowdy duds prescribed by Mobutu Sese Seko’s “authenticity movement.”

photo via africa is a country
(via colors magazine)

ageofdhool:

An early photograph of Claude Lévi-Strauss and his wife, Dina, in their tent while doing fieldwork in Mato Grosso, Brazil. [via]
Claude Lévi-Strauss, Anthropologist, Dies at 100 by Edward Rothstein

ageofdhool:

An early photograph of Claude Lévi-Strauss and his wife, Dina, in their tent while doing fieldwork in Mato Grosso, Brazil. [via]

Claude Lévi-Strauss, Anthropologist, Dies at 100 by Edward Rothstein

unicornology:

flickflickflicker:thunderclavicleflonkertonbird:secondstar05:thirtyrockefeller:(via heartwarming)

DWIGHT; Jim is my enemy. But it turns out, that Jim is also his own worst enemy. And the enemy of my enemy is my friend. So, Jim is actually my friend. … But, because he is his own worst enemy, the enemy of my friend is my enemy, so, actually, Jim is my enemy. But-


[i LOVE dwight :)-K]

unicornology:

flickflickflicker:thunderclavicleflonkertonbird:secondstar05:thirtyrockefeller:(via heartwarming)

DWIGHT; Jim is my enemy. But it turns out, that Jim is also his own worst enemy. And the enemy of my enemy is my friend. So, Jim is actually my friend. … But, because he is his own worst enemy, the enemy of my friend is my enemy, so, actually, Jim is my enemy. But-

[i LOVE dwight :)-K]

REYKJAVIK (Reuters) - Thousands of Icelanders lined up at McDonald’s restaurants to order their last Big Macs before the U.S. fast-food chain abandons the crisis-hit island at midnight Saturday due to soaring costs. The world’s largest fast-food company said earlier this week that all three of its restaurants in Iceland, operated by franchisee Jon Ogmundsson, would shut down October 31. The outlets have been packed since the announcement, with lines at one restaurant on the east side of the city backing up out the door and onto the street. At lunchtime Friday the outlet’s parking lot was full and staff inside were working furiously to keep up with the soaring demand. “It’s my last chance for a while to have a real Big Mac,” Siggi, a 28-year old salesman waiting in line, told Reuters. “With the economy as it is, I won’t be traveling abroad any time soon,” he added. “It’s not that I’m a big fan of McDonald’s, but a Big Mac now and then adds to variety.

Thousands line up for last Big Mac in Iceland | U.S. | Reuters

laeticia:

self portrait april ‘09 ©jared nickerson [portfolio]  (via share some candy)

laeticia:

self portrait april ‘09
©jared nickerson [portfolio]
(via share some candy)