Both Kay's and Safdie's vague prescriptions
call to mind Jacobs's warning that "people who get marked with the planners' hex signs are pushed about, expropriated, and uprooted much as if they were the subjects of a conquering power." Safdie, for example, ends a confused passage about central planning and the free market with this inscrutable imperative: "We must create new conditions in which a vision of the city is integrated with feedback from the city's inhabitants, and in which a central authority is vested with power to enact this vision in a manner unthreatening to individuals or communities." Whatever that means exactly, it can't be good.
(For some reason these items
call to mind an early 1940s schoolboy joke about a news bulletin from Tokyo: "A Japanese battleship has intercepted three American torpedoes and completely destroyed them.")
WE
call to mind, before our God and Father, how your faith has shown itself in action, your Love in labour, and your Hope of our Lord Jesus Christ in fortitude.
Its graceful lines
call to mind the "glory that was Greece," to quote Poe.
The photographs of Christine Felten and Veronique Massinger
call to mind John Berger's dictum that the relation between what we see and what we know is never settled.
Just as my family spent our waiting time thinking back on all the places we'd been in our old car,
call to mind the ways we all have been on the journey with Christ.
In conclusion, I would like to
call to mind a Gospel truth which can shed a higher light on the horizon of your research into the origins and unfolding of living matter.
Individuals routinely
call to mind memories of events they have experienced, but scientists are just beginning to understand how the brain makes this possible.
The whole form of "An Aside," meanwhile, might
call to mind Girl Stowaway, 1994, an installation including film, objects, and images Dean accumulated through intention and coincidence.