Posts Tagged ‘castration’
Ain’t No Sunday Like an MLA Sunday Links
* In case you missed them: the syllabi for my spring classes, which start tomorrow.
* Meanwhile MLA saves its best panel for last: 759. Guilty Pleasures: Late Capitalism and Mere Genre. Today at 1:45!
* On March 11-12, 2015, the Humanities Division at Essex County College will host its Spring 2015 Conference, “Speculative Humanities: Steampunk to Afrofuturism.” This two-day conference offers space for writers, musicians, artists, and academicians to explore, expand upon, and rethink the implications of speculative humanities. This year’s conference will feature a special emphasis on the life, work, and influence of Octavia E. Butler.
* #MLA: An Economist’s Critique of Job Market for English Ph.D.s.
Got a pretty convincing argument today that the proper “academic job market as game” metaphor isn’t Scrabble but Cards Against Humanity. 1/2
— Gerry Canavan (@gerrycanavan) January 11, 2015
You have to play elements of your arbitrary hand against randomly drawn circumstances, plus participating at all makes you a bad person. 2/2
— Gerry Canavan (@gerrycanavan) January 11, 2015
* The MLA should give Jonathan Goodwin a Lifetime Achievement Award for this post about midcentury MLA job ads. Check out his Twitter feed for more.
* Really, though, huge shoutout to all the literary critics heading home today.
* #FreeCommunityCollege. Did Obama Just Introduce a ‘Public Option’ for Higher Education? Angus is happy. Who Has a Stake in Obama’s Free Community-College Plan? Of course, it’s a Republican plan. And there’s a catch. Or two.
Point of this plan is to “disrupt” higher ed by shifting resources to colleges w/ lower labor costs + worse working conditions. Start there.
— Gerry Canavan (@gerrycanavan) January 9, 2015
* Contingent Faculty and #FreeCommunityCollege.
* $18 billion in job training = lots of trained unemployed people.
You cannot solve a systemic jobs crisis by new jobs training. The best you can do is help some people beat out other people.
— Gerry Canavan (@gerrycanavan) May 16, 2014
Sometimes you don’t get a sales pitch. It’s none of your business, it’s reactionary to even ask the question, it’s an assertion of privilege, something’s got to be done and what have you been doing that’s better? Sometimes you get a sales pitch and it’s all about will and not about intellect: everybody has to believe in fairies or Tinkerbell will die. The increments sometimes make no sense. This leads to that leads to what? And what? And then? Why? Or perhaps most frustrating of all, each increment features its own underlying and incommensurable theories about why things happen in the world: in this step, people are motivated by self-interest; in the next step, people are motivated by basic decency; in the next step, people are motivated by fear of punishment. Every increment can’t have its own social theory. That’s when you know that the only purpose is the action itself, not the thing it’s trying to accomplish.
* Securitization, risk management, and the new university.
* Administrators, Authority, and Accountability.
* Militancy, Antagonism, and Power: Rethinking Intellectual Labor, Relocating the University.
As leverage, Silvia Federici outlines the two-part process of demanding a wage for previously uncompensated labor. The first step is recognition, but the ultimate goal is refusal. “To say that we want money for housework” she says, “is the first step towards refusing to do it, because the demand for a wage makes our work visible, which is the most indispensable condition to begin to struggle against it, both in its immediate aspect as housework and its more insidious character as femininity” (Wages Against Housework). Another way to say this is: it is only with the option of refusal that not-publishing is meaningful.
It is clear that “publish or perish” is undergoing a speedup like all other capitalist work. We must all struggle for a re-valorization of living labor. And in the first step against publication’s command over living labor, we agree with Federici, who demands that “From now on we want money for each moment of it, so that we can refuse some of it and eventually all of it” (Wages Against Housework).
* Exclusive: Prosecutor in Serial Goes On the Record.
* The U.S. has more jails than colleges. Here’s a map of where those prisoners live.
* Scenes from the class struggle inside the National Radio Quiet Zone.
* Debt collection as autoimmune disease.
* Male Senators Banned Women From Senate Pool So They Could Swim Naked. Until 2008.
* Wow. F.B.I. and Justice Dept. Said to Seek Charges for Petraeus.
* “It’s clear he hasn’t been very lucky with the ladies the last few months,” West said of his client.
* Nightmare terror attacks in Nigeria using ten-year-old girls as suicide bombers.
* Clocks Are Too Precise (and People Don’t Know What to Do About It).
* Great moments in matte paintings, at io9. I had no idea the warehouse from Raiders was a matte either, though in retrospect of course it was.
* New research is first to identify which reserves must not be burned to keep global temperature rise under 2C, including over 90% of US and Australian coal and almost all Canadian tar sands.
* Rave drug shows great promise in treating depression once thought resistant to drug therapy. I hope they found some way to control for the curative effects of glowsticks.
* How Wes Anderson’s Cinematographer Shot These 9 Great Scenes.
* Here comes Wet Hot American Summer: The Prequel Series.
* The kids aren’t all right: Millennials Are Less Racially Tolerant Than You Think.
* “Men, what would you be willing to give up to live a couple decades longer?”
* Dad creates drawings based off of quotes from his toddler daughter.
* How LEGO became the Apple of toys.
* We Wish These Retrofuturistic Versions Of American Cities Had Come True.
* Every episode of Friends at the same time.
* And exciting loopholes I think we can all believe in: “He was doing research for a film,” said Sherrard. “It’s not a crime; it’s artwork… He’s an intellectual.”
Written by gerrycanavan
January 11, 2015 at 9:00 am
Posted in Look at what I found on the Internet
Tagged with academia, academic job market, academic labor, academic publishing, adjunctification, adjuncts, administrative blight, Adnan Syed, Afrofuturism, America, Atlanta Braves, Barack Obama, Bernie Sanders, Boko Haram, castration, CFPs, cities, class struggle, climate change, clocks, community college, contingent faculty, cultural preservation, debt collection, Democratic primary 2016, depression, domestic violence, don't make me choose, Dragonlance, ecology, electrosensitives, English departments, English majors, fantasy, FBI, film, finance capitalism, Friends, Game of Thrones, games, George Zimmerman, gradualism, guns, health care, horror, How the University Works, intellectuals, jobs, kids today, LEGO, longevity, magic, male privilege, Marquette, matte paintings, medicine, mere genre, millennials, MLA, my scholarly empire, National Radio Quiet Zone, neoliberalism, Netflix, Nigeria, Octavia Butler, over-educated literary theory PhDs, patriarchy, pedagogy, Petraeus, police state, politics, prison-industrial complex, prisons, race, racism, Raiders of the Lost Ark, rave culture, retrofuturism, Return of the Jedi, science fiction, securitization, Serial, single payer, special effects, Special K, student debt, supercuts, syllabi, teaching, tenure, terrorism, the courts, the law, the Senate, The State, they say time is the fire in which we burn, time, toddler, toys, Trayvon Martin, true crime, tuition, unemployment, Vermont, visionary incrementalism, wages for housework, Wes Anderson, Wet Hot American Summer, what it is I think I'm doing, writing, xkcd, young adult literature, YouTube
Wednesday Morning!
* Man tragically unable to remember saying Barack Obama would make a great president says Hillary Clinton will make a great president. Meanwhile, the rest of us are reduced to talking about Obama’s secret achievements.
* Solitary Confinement May Dramatically Alter Brain Shape In Just Days, Neuroscientist Says.
* Last Night on Jeopardy No One Wanted to Answer Qs About Black History.
* Noose Found Around The Neck Of Statue Honoring Civil Rights Icon At Ole Miss.
* What Does it Mean that Most Children’s Books Are Still About White Boys?
* The J.R.R. Tolkien Manuscripts: Public Showings in 2014.
* Here are the hoops a college football team has to jump through to be allowed to form a union.
* 84-Year Old Nun Sentenced To Prison For Weapons Plant Break-In.
* Academic freedom with violence.
* Has humanity produced enough paint to cover the entire land area of the Earth? The dream remains alive.
* Whistle-blower fired from Hanford nuclear site.
“We do not agree with her assertions that she suffered retaliation or was otherwise treated unfairly,” URS said, adding Busche was fired for reasons unrelated to the safety concerns. “Ms. Busche’s allegations will not withstand scrutiny.”
…
Busche is the second Hanford whistle-blower to be fired by URS in recent months. Walter Tamosaitis, who also raised safety concerns about the plant, was fired in October after 44 years of employment.
* A new China Miéville short story collection, scheduled for November 2014.
* A world of horrors: There is no such thing as a child prostitute.
* In the same way that certain styles of dance simulate sex, the Winter Olympics simulates scraping one’s February-chapped nostrils against the surface of a Kleenex whose aloe content is useless and reaching out for the warm escape of death. It’s an art of failed suicide attempts.
* A preliminary sketch of the data reveals, of course, that by 2050 films will be reviewing us.
* “First, why would we even think about letting it go through?”
* “This whole thing is totally and completely bonkers.”
* Grace Kerr sometimes jokes with her family that “Amanda was not that great. Zach is awesome.” What she means is that her son is finally happy, and is helping others.
* Diseased and unsound meat: Hot Pockets®!
* In Act Of Protest, Ai Weiwei Vase Is Destroyed At Miami Museum.
* News You Can Use: Why It’s Nearly Impossible to Castrate a Hippo.
* A portrait of Steve Jobs made entirely out of e-waste.
* The Ice Caves of the Apostle Islands National Lakeshore.
* Candy Crush: Addictive Game, Incredible Business, Horrible Investment.
* How the north ended up on top of the map.
* Inside Kappa Beta Phi, the Wall Street Fraternity.
* And our long national nightmare is over: Obama apologizes for disparaging art historians.
Written by gerrycanavan
February 19, 2014 at 7:43 am
Posted in Look at what I found on the Internet
Tagged with academia, academic freedom, American Studies, animals, Apple, archives, art, art history, Barack Obama, BDS, big pictures, black history, books, Candy Crush, castration, Chicago, children, China Miéville, class struggle, college football, college sports, Comcast, cultural preservation, Daily Kos, death drive, destruction, eating meat, Facebook, Florida, flowcharts, general election 2016, Her, Hillary Clinton, hippos, history, horror, Hot Pockets, How the University Works, ice caves, integration, Israel, Jeopardy, Kappa Beta Phi, kids today, Krugman, labor, Lake Superior, male privilege, maps, Marquette, Miami, Mississippi, monopolies, NCAA, neuroscience, New Weird, Northern Lights, nuclear weapons, nuclearity, nuns, Olympics, paint, Palestine, pedagogy, politics, pollution, poverty, prison-industrial complex, prisons, prostitution, race, racism, radiation, Ray Kurzweil, rules are rules, scale, science fiction, short stories, solitary confinement, Steve Jobs, strikes, suicide, the courts, the Internet, the law, the rich are different from you and me, the Singularity, threats, Time Warner, Tolkien, transgender issues, trash, UIC, unions, violence, Wall Street, waste, weird fiction, what if, whistleblowing, white privilege, winter, Winter Olympics, xkcd
Weekend Links
* It used to be that families first signed up for education loans when their child enrolled in college, but a growing number of parents are seeking tuition assistance as soon as kindergarten. Though data is scarce, private school experts and the small number of lenders who provide loans for kindergarten through 12th grade say pre-college loans are becoming more popular.
* As for what may have driven her to do it, the prosecutor argued in her opening statement that whatever horrors Harris had endured at the hands of her father should have little bearing on the crime itself. A Daughter’s Revenge. Not for the faint of heart.
* More nightmares: Aleksander Hemon records the death of his young daughter.
* To conclude, a projection from 1981 for rising temperatures in a major science journal, at a time that the temperature rise was not yet obvious in the observations, has been found to agree well with the observations since then, underestimating the observed trend by about 30%, and easily beating naive predictions of no-change or a linear continuation of trends.
* A study concludes the recent earthquake spike in the U.S. is almost certainly manmade.
* Corporations Hoard Cash Overseas In Anticipation Of Congress Giving Them A Huge Tax Break. It’s like they can see the future!
* Olson noted that the IRS relied on computers to audit all but the highest-income brackets. “We’re getting to a situation where the only people who will get face-to-face audits are the 1 Percent,” she said. “For the majority of taxpayers, the IRS has become faceless, nameless, with no accountability and no liability.”
* Moorhead, MN, police steal $12,000 tip from waitress.
* Learning literally nothing from history: The Obama Administration has approved the expansion of a pilot program that allows poultry producers to hire their own regulators. Via LGM.
* And I may have done this one before, but why not again? The Collective Snapshot.
Written by gerrycanavan
April 7, 2012 at 2:40 pm
Posted in Look at what I found on the Internet
Tagged with Barack Obama, cancer, castration, child abuse, climate change, collective art, corporations, deregulation, earthquakes, ecology, education, hydrofracking, IRS, justifiable homicide, kids today, meat, photographs, photography, police corruption, student debt, taxes, The Jungle, the rich are different from you and me, What could possibly go wrong?