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	<title>cafe tableaux &#187; Northampton</title>
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		<title>Haymarket Cafe</title>
		<link>http://www.cafetableaux.com/haymarket-cafe/</link>
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		<pubDate>Mon, 24 Apr 2006 23:59:14 +0000</pubDate>
		<dc:creator>Saul Cups</dc:creator>
				<category><![CDATA[Massachusetts]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[Northampton]]></category>

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		<description><![CDATA[For those of us who were raised in circa-1980s South Floridian suburbs, terms like &#8216;outdoor market&#8217; and &#8216;riot&#8217; were first met in air-conditioned portable classrooms in between lunch periods and awkward square dancing sessions, which now, upon reflection, seem aptly Reaganian. The &#8216;outdoors,&#8217; first of all, were intolerable places we made all efforts to avoid, [...]]]></description>
			<content:encoded><![CDATA[<p>For those of us who were raised in circa-1980s South Floridian suburbs, terms like &#8216;outdoor market&#8217; and &#8216;riot&#8217; were first met in air-conditioned portable classrooms in between lunch periods and awkward square dancing sessions, which now, upon reflection, seem aptly Reaganian. The &#8216;outdoors,&#8217; first of all, were intolerable places we made all efforts to avoid, skirting through fluorescent-lighted hallways and bays, following the whir of ceiling fans, living as if this planet were really not suitable for human life. I was six years old before I was removed from the incubator of my youth and granted opportunity to experience out-of-doors spaces. Thereafter, I endeavored to remain in the machines of convenience that would provide respite from the inhospitable swamp, for whenever faced with the prospects of having to weather the tropical clime, I would be struck by an insurmountable bout of torpitude, which would render me unable to do much of anything. One might think that such an &#8216;interior&#8217; existence might provide precisely the conditions that would foster a healthy and critical life of the mind: while carried by one car to the next, from one Publix to another, what else does one have to dwell on? Is this not the ideal our 19th- and 20th-century revolutionaries had fought for? That one day the machine would liberate us from the factory and the field, and all would work towards a social utopia? But this comfortable, sheltered life inspired quite the opposite: a proclivity towards intellectual and political torpor grew in me.<br />
<span id="more-49"></span><br />
This may be why &#8216;Haymarket&#8217; at first failed to conjure any palpable image in my mind. While it may refer to either (or both) the 1886 Chicago labor union strike-cum-riot, or to the twice weekly, outdoor Boston market, the Haymarket Caf? is neither a hotbed of radical expression,  nor does it offer outdoor seating or sell produce outdoors. This is understandable, though. Located in western Massachusetts, the Haymarket Caf? does not have to satisfy a burgeoning need for organic produce&mdash;Northampton and the surrounding towns have their own organic farmers&#8217; markets. Nor need it function as an activist nerve center; such nexuses already abound. Maybe that&#8217;s why the Haymarket clientele and staff seem so blas?. Of course they carry vegan lemon bars, and of course they serve homemade sambar daily. Everyone here has a dyke neighbor, or is a dyke themselves; and everyone farms in a community garden. I would have found it difficult to explain to the caf? locals why places like the Haymarket are so attractive to people like me, and probably impossible to convey why I am so ambivalent about such loci of liberalness.</p>
<p>If you exit out the rear of the caf?, you&#8217;ll find yourself before an odd little domicile. Beyond is a parking lot, a movie-set-like alley, and then some street that loops around, back to Main. That&#8217;s Northampton: a nice little loop spotted by places such as the Haymarket, where one can stop for a steamed slatte, in between snacking on tofu on the lawn near the town hall and browsing for used books. I enjoyed it while it lasted&mdash;before I had to drag myself back onto the interstate so I could speed for no reason, scan impatiently for public radio, and count ribbon magnets.</p>
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