Posts Tagged ‘Arabic’
I Can’t Believe It’s June Links
* CFPs: MLA Subconference 2015 and Society for Utopian Studies 2014.
* Rebecca Schuman has the best my-thoughts-exactly rundown of the MLA Task Force report I’ve seen.
* Called psychylustro, German artist Katharina Grosse’s project is a large-scale work designed to distract Amtrak train riders from the dilapidated buildings and fallen factories of north Philadelphia.
* “But, Sergei,” I protested (I forget his actual name), “that didn’t happen because capitalists just decided to be nice. That happened because they were all afraid of you.” More Graeber: I’m thinking of a labor movement, but one very different than the kind we’ve already seen. A labor movement that manages to finally ditch all traces of the ideology that says that work is a value in itself, but rather redefines labor as caring for other people.
* Is my high school, Lake Area New Tech, a prison or school?
* School Guard Filmed Hitting Student, Dumping Him From Wheelchair.
* Translating Frozen into Arabic.
* Maya Angelou, Respectability Politics, and Sex Work.
* Revolution and American Indians: “Marxism is as Alien to My Culture as Capitalism.”
* The Way We Live Now: Faking Cultural Literacy.
* Just Following Orders: Thoughts on Agents of SHIELD‘s First Season.
In reality, after seven decades of growing into each other, it shouldn’t be so easy to separate out SHIELD from Hydra. On the one hand, Hydra should have so completely infested SHIELD as to taint all but the most minute of its good acts–as evidenced by the fact that even the good guys, who aren’t shooting at Captain America, were perfectly OK with SHIELD’s rampant trampling of privacy and civil rights before these escalated to mass murder. And on the other hand, SHIELD’s protocols and organizational culture are the ones that nearly all Hydra agents were trained in, which would shape their habits of thought even as they employ their training to evil ends. No matter who they swear allegiance too, SHIELD and Hydra agents should be pretty hard to tell apart, and the lofty or vile ideals that guide them should, in all but the most extreme cases of true believers, be less present in their psychological makeup than institutional culture.
* Ames notes the migration of rage massacres from the workplace (in the 80s) to the school (during the 1990s), a trajectory that followed the generalization of neoliberal principles into the US education system. In their suicide notes, school shooters also referenced prolonged bullying, as the entrepreneurial values of mainstream American culture found schoolyard expression in concentrated form, and the gulf between the school’s winners and its losers became more pronounced and more significant. Like the workplace gunman, the teenage killer embraced mass murder as a brutal and incoherent expression of social despair.
* In Florida City With Rampant Stop-And-Frisks, 11-Year-Old Deemed ‘Suspicous’ For Baggy Pants And Hoodie. If You’re A West Virginia Inmate, You Can’t Read This Story. LAPD adds drones to arsenal, says they’ll be used sparingly.
* Researchers Find Association Between Porn Viewing And Less Grey Matter In The Brain.
* 14 Bros Charged in Fraternity Hazing That Cost a Pledge One Testicle.
Lawrence actually defended his new brothers in a November interview, saying the ball-smashing was “not hazing.”
“It was a freak accident more than anything. It definitely wasn’t meant to happen, not hazing whatsoever,” Lawrence told WLWT.
* NC Senate amendment drops provision to close ECSU.
* AP History in the Less Magic Kingdom: “Snow White the False.” The Sea Witch Sets The Record Straight.
* College football and basketball players have finalized a $40 million settlement with a video game manufacturer and the NCAA’s licensing arm for improperly using the likenesses of athletes, leaving the NCAA alone to defend itself in the upcoming Ed O’Bannon antitrust trial.
* Competitive yoga, because there’s nothing Americans can’t turn into a competition.
* A Brazilian Street Artist Has Created the World Cup’s First Viral Image.
* UC President Janet Napolitano said the university will lead research to develop an implantable device that will retrain the brains of the mentally ill. What could possibly go SARCASM OVERFLOW ABORT/RETRY/FAIL
* EPA rules may force Wisconsin utilities to reduce coal use. EPA Rule Will Cut Power Plant Emissions By 30 Percent By 2030. Well, that’ll fix it!
* And finally it can be told: What was Rogue’s missing plotline in Days of Future Past?
Written by gerrycanavan
June 1, 2014 at 3:53 pm
Posted in Look at what I found on the Internet
Tagged with academia, Agents of S.H.I.E.L.D., America, anxiety, Arabic, art, austerity, Big Data, Brazil, bullying, capitalism, Captain America 2, caring, CFPs, climate change, coal, college sports, conferences, cultural literacy, David Graeber, Days of Future Past, despair, digital humanities, Disney, ecology, Elizabeth City State University, EPA, film, five-year Ph.D., fraternities, Frozen, games, graduate student life, guns, Hail H.Y.D.R.A., hazing, historically black colleges, How the University Works, labor, LAPD, Marvel, Marxism, mass extinction, mass shootings, Maya Angelou, mental illness, military-industrial complex, MLA, Native American issues, NCAA, New Orleans, North Carolina, our brains work in interesting ways, over-educated literary theory PhDs, Philadelphia, police brutality, police state, police violence, politics, pornography, poverty, prison-industrial complex, revolution, sex work, Snow White, socialism, street art, subconferences, surveillance society, The Little Mermaid, translation, unions, Utopia, war on education, Wisconsin, World Cup, X-Men, yoga
Christmas Hangover Links
* I knew there was a loophole! Pope says atheists are OK with Jesus, so long as they “do good.”
* Why bother? On family obligation. On institutional breakdown.
* Folks, we need to talk: The Creepy Surveillance of Elf on a Shelf.
* Canada issues Santa Claus a passport.
* Chinese State Media: China’s Air is Too Polluted for Santa to Fly.
* The Work of Christmas in the Age of TBS’ “24 Hours of A Christmas Story.”
* Christmas and the socialist objective.
* The FBI considered “It’s a Wonderful Life” to be Communist propaganda.
* That Christmas Spirit: US emergency food providers brace as $5bn food stamp cuts set in.
* A Map That Reveals the Most Popular TV Show Set in Your Home State.
* We are creating Walmarts of higher education—convenient, cheap, and second-rate.
* We’re Constantly in Fear: The life of a part-time professor.
* Bullying in Academia More Prevalent Than Thought.
* College watchdog groups sharpening their teeth.
* Adjunct Nate Silver has been studying the academic job market in German since 2007: who posts jobs, and who gets jobs. Part 1.
* The Year of the Crush: How the Radically Unfair Candy Crush Saga Took Over Our Lives.
* Why we’re doomed: what Obama reads.
Obama does reserve a certain respect for opinion writers such as Tom Friedman and David Brooks of The New York Times, Jerry Seib of The Wall Street Journal, E. J. Dionne of The Washington Post, and Joe Klein of Time. “My impression is that he reads a lot of columnists,” says Brooks, “and therefore he sort of cares about what they say.”
* And then Amazon ate everything, Someday it might even make a profit!
* The Tumblr of forever: sffworthy.tumblr.com.
* Gasp! Judge: Detroit’s Debt Deal Too Generous To Wall Street.
* North Carolina’s bad plan to take lawyers away from poor people.
* Trying to learn Arabic is now officially probable cause.
* …even though the Obama administration has called on Western buyers to use their purchasing power to push for improved industry working conditions after several workplace disasters over the last 14 months, the American government has done little to adjust its own shopping habits.
* “Choice” is the illusion of power. Vouchers were not dreamed up to provide choice, but to deny it. We need to avoid confusing a justification with an explanation.
* eBay removes anti-Zimmerman artwork the same day Zimmerman’s painting sells for $100k.
* Book bannings on the rise in US schools, says anti-censorship group.
* More proof that America’s prison epidemic is a complete disaster.
* Why MLB Hitters Can’t Hit Jennie Finch and the Science of Reaction Time.
* Carbon Footprint Of Best Conserving Americans Is Still Double Global Average. Inevitable Milwaukee-based “wait, maybe this isn’t so bad” joke.
* Inevitable “well, there’s always Mars” joke.
* The selective disappearance of large animals marks this period out from other extinction episodes, and was the start of what Estes and his fellow authors suggested “is arguably humankind’s most pervasive influence on the natural world”. For Estes, it was the beginning of the sixth mass extinction.
* Does the ASA Boycott Violate Academic Freedom? A Roundtable. The ASA, scholarly responsibility and the call for academic boycott of Israel. Why I changed my mind about the ASA boycott.
* Billionaire’s role in hiring decisions at Florida State University raises questions.
* Nightmare watch: Teen Girl Shot, Killed by Stepdad While Trying to Sneak Back Into House. Texas School Retaliated Against Student For ‘Public Lewdness’ After She Reported Rape.
* An Oral History of Sir Mix-a-Lot’s ‘Baby Got Back’ Video.
* Democrats are over (if you want it): Democrats desperately want war with Iran.
* And the BBC has a Sherlock season three minisode. God bless us, every one!
Written by gerrycanavan
December 26, 2013 at 10:51 am
Posted in Look at what I found on the Internet
Tagged with A Christmas Carol, A Christmas Story, academia, academic boycotts, academic freedom, academic jobs, accreditation, adjuncts, Amazon, America, Arabic, art, ASA, atheism, austerity, Baby Got Back, bankruptcy, banned books, Barack Obama, baseball, bullying, Canada, Candy Crush, capitalism, carbon, Catholicism, censorship, China, Christmas, class struggle, climate change, comedy, communism, Democrats, Detroit, eBay, ecology, Elf on a Shelf, family, Florida State University, food stamps, Fourth Amendment, games, George Zimmerman, guns, Heaven, How the University Works, ideology, institutions, Iran, Israel, It's a Wonderful Life, Jeb Bush, Koch brothers, maps, Mars, mass extinction, military-industrial complex, Milwaukee, MLA, my good works, neoliberalism, NORAD, North Carolina, oral histories, Palestine, Paul F. Tompkins, places to invade next, politics, pollution, prison, prison-industrial complex, probable clause, propaganda, rape culture, religion, Santa Claus, school choice, science fiction, Scrooge, Sherlock, Sir Mix-a-Lot, socialism, sports, surveillance society, sweatshops, television, the Anthropocene, the BBC, the courts, the law, the Pope, Tumblr, Upworthy, vouchers, Wal-Mart, war on education, war on terror, Wisconsin, Won't somebody think of the children?