A Modest Construct

Wednesday’s Word LXIII

khaki
n. a dull, yellowish-brown colour, the colour of dust.
n. a strong cloth of wool or cotton, often used for military uniforms, used as a school uniform color.

Khaki is everywhere; if you don’t own a pair of pants in that universal dust color, then you at least own a pair of pants in a different color that you still refer to as “khakis.” Unlike a lot of military fashion, which is still the province of people dumb or crazy enough to wear them when getting groceries (camo pants, etc), khakis are one military export that everyone seems to have accepted into mainstream fashion and culture.

Khaki was a color before it was a pair of pants: The Hindustani ख़ाकी (xākī) and the Persian خاکی (xâki) refer to that which is “dusty, earthy, or earth-colored.” In fact, Hindustani got it from Urdu, which got it from Persian to begin with, khak in Persian meaning “dust.” Its absorption into English occurred in the mid-18th century, after the color was introduced in British soldiers’ uniforms in India; Lieutenant Harry Lumsden “invented” it for the Guide Corps in 1846.

One can’t imagine why else the color would be used except for camouflage is anyone’s guess, but it apparently was not widely used for camouflage by Western wearers until half a century later, during the Boer Wars (1899-1902); these were two short wars fought between Britain and the Boer states (Orange Free State and Transvaal Republic) in Africa. Other sources indicate that the khaki uniform was official as early as 1867, during the Abyssian campaign (when Britain smacked around the crazy King Theodore a bit (the King committed suicide after the British trounced his army). From what I can tell, the color was used officially in campaigns, but didn’t become official service dress until the turn of the century. The United States Army adopted in around this same time for the Spanish American War

The kind of color that “khaki” as a uniform indicated, however, managed to shift as it was adopted by various militaries, most noticeably taking on a much greener hue—what we would now refer to as “olive drab.” Most military uses of the word will refer to any one of a number of more greenish hues, though civilian use still refers to the canonical dust color.

Khakis as referring to a pair of trousers is a relatively recent invention, dating back to the 1950s, when the phenomenon came to civilian fashion. Though of course at first these were necessarily dust-colored, the word has changed over time to refer more to the style of pants rather than the colors; I, for instance, find myself referring to “my black khakis” or even, ridiculously, “my khaki khakis,” which makes me die a little inside.

Last Words

Last Words: A Memoir Last Words: A Memoir
by George Carlin
Publisher: Free Press
Year: 2009
Pages: 320
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What is 52 Books in 52 Weeks?
№3

Last Words took about 17 years to write. As the story goes, Carlin commissioned it in 1993 with Tony Hendra, but it wasn’t until Carlin died in 2008 that Hendra finally pulled together all of his recorded conversations, notes, and other materials and cranked out the more or less definitive semiautobiography of George Carlin, and Last Words is that book.

I need hardly explain who George Carlin is or why he is important—if you don’t know, this review will be meaningless to you—but for those of us well-acquainted with his unique and sometimes unpredictable views, Last Words is really quite illuminating, and I was surprised by not only the general quality of its craft, but the depth of its information, as well.

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Still Life With Woodpecker

Still Life With Woodpecker Still Life With Woodpecker
by Tom Robbins
Publisher: Bantam Books
Year: 1980/1990
Pages: 277
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What is 52 Books in 52 Weeks?
№2

Tom Robbins was one of those authors whom I always heard referenced, but never understood their contribution to literature. This was finally remedied in Robbins’ case by an old friend of mine who (citing a conversation we’d apparently had but which I only vaguely remember) pushed Still Life With Woodpecker into my hands and insisted that I read it. It surprised me, and that’s difficult to do.

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Fire in the Grove

Fire in the Grove: The Cocoanut Grove Tragedy and Its Aftermath Fire in the Grove: The Cocoanut Grove Tragedy and Its Aftermath
by John Esposito
Publisher: Da Capo Press
Year: 2005
Pages: 288
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What is 52 Books in 52 Weeks?
№1

Standard social studies fare more most high school students is the Triangle Shirtwaist Factory fire, which horrifically and succinctly summarizes the excesses of the industrial age that eventually led to novels like The Jungle and the creation of institutions of governmental oversight. For those who don’t know or have forgotten the Triangle Shirtwaist Factory, it was an blouse-making factory on the 8th-10th floors of a building in New York which succumbed to an industrial fire; 146 garment workers were killed, in large part because the exit doors were locked (to prevent theft and indigence, most likely) and the building was not set up in such a way as to allow easy egress.

The result of the fire, however, was a movement to regulate fire safety in new buildings (as well as further unionization). It was in this well-intentioned environment of fire safety that Fire in the Grove begins.

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52 Books in 52 Weeks, 2010

The Exposition

2010 marks the sixth year of my 52 Books in 52 Weeks meme, where I challenge myself to read a minimum of 52 books in the coming calendar year, and then briefly review each book here on A Modest Construct.

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52 Books in 52 Weeks, 2009: a wrapup

For the full list of books, see here.

I’m afraid I lack the time for a full-featured wrap-up, but I’ve summarized the relevant information into a table of handy stats. In short, the general makeup of this past year’s books was about the same, with slightly fewer re-reads.

52 Books in 52 Weeks, 2009 statistics
Key Value
Books Read 65
Total Pages 22′564
Shortest Book 134
Longest Book 800
Average Length 347.14
Worst Book Twilight
Best Book Tie: Three Farmers On Their Way to a Dance; Death From the Skies!
Nonfiction Books 35
Fiction Books 30
New Reads 55
Re-reads 10