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What's This?
Since it's founding in the Spring of 2000, Mr. Beller's Neighborhood has published over six hundred pieces of writing, been nominated for a 2002 Webby Award in the Print and Zine catagory, and published a book,
Mr. Beller's Neighborhood combines a magazine with a map. It uses the external, familiar landscape of New York City as a way of organizing the wildly internal, often unfamiliar emotional landscapes of the city dweller. It is about a specific place - New York - and it is about the many different consciousness that thrive and wilt and rage and reminisce here. We publish reportage, personal essays, urban sketches-- any piece of writing that might illuminate a corner of life in the city. By and large everything you read on the site is true. The events of 9/11 were the site's focus for a while, but this is a site about a place, not a disaster, and we're open to all kinds of topics. The front page of the site is a map of Manhattan and parts of Brooklyn. It's been divided into sections, each representing a neighborhood. If you click on one of these sections you zoom into that neighborhood. On the neighborhood maps, the red dots link to articles. The green dots let you know where in the city you are. Like any neighborhood, or city, or person, Mr.Beller's Neighborhood is a work in progress.
Who is Mr. Beller? He is someone rushing to work, or taking a solitary stroll along the river, or waving madly amidst a crowded bar, trying to get the bartender's attention.
On a less abstract note, Mr. Beller is the front for a bunch of editors and writers gathered together by Thomas Beller, author of two works of fiction, The Sleep-Over Artist,
There is an anthology of writing collected from the site, Before and After: Stories from New York.
Notes on the map images These images were taken by a plane flying over the island. Every dozen blocks or so, another picture was taken. This is what accounts for the odd, patchwork look of the Hudson and East River on the main map. The main map, showing most of the island, is oddly beautiful to look at. The more detialed neighborhood maps, are downright disturbing after a while. You see Manhattan from a distant yet oddly intimate perspective. The closest I ever came to such a view was the time a plane, taking a very strange flight path, flew more or less right over Manhattan. In a way my memory of Manhattan seen from above has a similar feel to the close-up view of the neighborhood maps: the light flew against the buildings at strange angles, and, from the plane, I was acutely aware of what a little island this is. So much ado about nothing! From this angle (and perhaps only from this angle) Manhattan looks like a benign place. Seen from above, you see how densely packed together it is, tighter than it ought to be, self-regarding,almost haughty. But there are also spaces and valleys and all sorts of incredible looking crevices that immediately evoke Manhattan of days gone by. Its many previous incarnations somehow shine up at the viewer above. The map is in black and white, so it has an odd surveillance feel to it. The surveillance gets even more conspicuous on the neighborhood maps. Here you can examine, peruse, be specific. Find places. If you are intimate with a single building in Manhattan, you'll probably be able to locate it on the map. And what then? if you think you have some interesting facts about the place, either in the journalistic mode or in the form of a personal essay - anything that can give us a window into the history of the place - tell Mr. Beller a story about the place. The best explanation of what we are looking for can be found by reading the the other pieces on the site. Mr.Beller's Neighborhood was designed and built in collaboration with Sabin Streeter and Tomas Clark, and redesigned and rebuilt by James Thoms of squareimage.com. Marisa Bowe, editor of the late Word.com, was an essential early supporter of the project. |