Posts Tagged ‘circumcision’
Infinite Monday Links! Just Keep Scrolling!
* Podcast report! Everyone is listening to every episode of Hello, from the Magic Tavern one after another pretty much nonstop. My favorite one so far.
* My book Octavia E. Butler has a preview page at University of Illinois Press. Get your pre-orders in now!
* From the archives! That thing I wrote about the first season of Kimmy Schmidt. I’ve been pretty unimpressed with the second season, alas, and some of the things I wrote back then seem to point to why.
* You know, after reading this I think I hate the humanities too.
* CFP: 4th edition of “Games and Literary Theory” in Krakow, Poland (Nov 18-20).
* Black Holes: Afro-Pessimism, Blackness and the Discourses of Modernity.
* And you thought you felt bad about your pedagogy already: Are Colleges Too Obsessed With Smartness?
“When the entire system of higher education gives favored status to the smartest students, even average students are denied equal opportunities,” he writes. “If colleges were instead to be judged on what they added to each student’s talents and capacities, then applicants at every level of academic preparation might be equally valued.”
* Administrators at the University of Beirut seem to have blocked an appointment for Steven Salaita.
* University maladministration can never fail, it can only be failed.
* 272 Slaves Were Sold to Save Georgetown. What Does It Owe Their Descendants?
* Cornell Continues to Receive Scrutiny Over Job Ad.
* Philosophers who work outside of academia – Part 3: Transferrable skills and concrete advice.
* UC Davis spent thousands to scrub pepper-spray references from Internet. The University of Public Relations.
* President Obama to Forgive Nearly 400,000 Disabled Americans’ Federal Student Loans.
* Vatican conference urges end to doctrine of ‘just wars.’
* Behind the Scenes at the Met.
* The Librarian Who Saved Timbuktu’s Cultural Treasures From al Qaeda.
* Huge, if true: Neoliberalism – the ideology at the root of all our problems. Why Are Voters Angry? It’s the 1099 Economy, Stupid.
* A $15 minimum wage is too high and that’s great.
* Mississippi Jails Are Losing Inmates, And Local Officials Are ‘Devastated’ By The Loss Of Revenue.
* Special pleading alert! No, DC Should Not Become The 51st State. Here’s A Quick History Lesson To Remind You Why.
* A(other) New Map for America.
* This Former College President Spent 2 Years in Prison. Here’s What He Learned. The answer will shock you!
* How Not to Audit the Pentagon.
* You could almost forget this, as the term fizzles into a bunch of sagging 4-4 ties and improbable unanimous decisions, but if Antonin Scalia had lived until July the docket was full of poisoned pills and silent time bombs that would have exploded in President Obama’s face this summer. Until and unless we reckon with what might have been at the high court this term, it’s impossible to understand why there will be no hearings for Judge Garland. GOP senators aren’t just angry about losing Justice Scalia’s seat. They are angry because the court as the weapon of choice to screw the president has been taken from them, and they want it back.
* A Huge Portion of Greenland Started Melting This Week. This Is Why the Great Barrier Reef Is Dying. If only someone had known!
* New UN report finds almost no industry profitable if environmental costs were included.
* Now Keurig says it has found a solution. It is taking longer than it took for NASA to put a man on the moon, but in the coming months, the company will begin to sell K-Cups made of material that is easily recycled.
* Every Disney Song from Best to Worst. Glad we settled that!
* There never was a Bernie Sanders movement. Personally I blame Ben and Jerry.
* Why Democrats Must Embrace A Universal Child Allowance. Working moms have more successful daughters and more caring sons, Harvard Business School study says.
* The time Donald Trump’s empire took on a stubborn widow — and lost.
* I was a men’s rights activist.
* An oral history of Childrens Hospital.
* Behold, King Curry. A flashback.
* Remembering the Dungeons and Dragons Moral Panic.
* As I feared, the tide seems to have turned on Title IX. I continue to think the whole law is at risk if its supporters cannot find a way to frame and articulate the need for reform.
* It’s Time To Acknowledge How Important the Death Star is to Star Wars. I don’t know that I quite agree with this, but Rogue One does (seem to) point to a vision of the franchise that isn’t so heavily dependent on the Jedi.
* Ben Affleck’s Solo Batman Movie Has a Huge Opportunity and One Big Problem. And while we’re at it, just one more beating up Batman v. Superman.
* Male chimpanzee Chacha screams after escaping from nearby Yagiyama Zoological Park as a man tries to capture him on the power lines at a residential area in Sendai, northern Japan.
* A Zookeeper Known as “The Tiger Whisperer” Was Killed by a Tiger.
* Journalist wants Obama’s ‘Game of Thrones’ screeners, so files a FOIA request for them.
* Ancient Peruvian Mystery Solved from Space.
* Alien ‘Wow!’ signal could be explained after almost 40 years.
* Could the Broadway smash ‘Hamilton’ help keep a woman’s face off the front of the $10 bill? Coming soon: Andrew Jackson: The Musical! PS: In 2030.
* Why Fans of Hamilton Should Be Delighted It’s Finally Stirring Criticism.
* New ABC show ‘Cleverman’ is about an Aboriginal superhero. Australian ABC, not US ABC, alas.
* Someone should have double-checked that math: Man Sentenced to 4 Years After Victim Says She Was Held Captive, Sexually Assaulted for a Decade.
* At Tampa Bay farm-to-table restaurants, you’re being fed fiction.
* Hawking’s Interstellar Starship Would Revolutionize the Search for Alien Life. What Will Make Interstellar Travel a Reality?
* And they said culture was dead!
* As a wise man once said, you don’t exist.
* Controversial Illustrations By Polish Artist Reveal The Darker Side Of Modern Society.
* Foreskin doesn’t make a man more “sensitive,” study finds.
* Track Changes: A Literary History of Word Processing. The Black Radical Tragic : Performance, Aesthetics, and the Unfinished Haitian Revolution. LARoB v. Shakespeare.
* Are Humans Definitely Smarter Than Apes?
* Have creepy professors ruined the independent study forever?
* If you want a vision of the future.
this is craaaazy. I mean, PASSIVE AGGRESSIVE much? no one wants your avatar, cameron! pic.twitter.com/zFHsohnibD
— Dana Schwartz (@DanaSchwartzzz) April 15, 2016
* And I didn’t know him as well as others, but we’ll all miss Srinivas Aravamudan. Some details on the Aravamudan fund.
Written by gerrycanavan
April 18, 2016 at 9:00 am
Posted in Look at what I found on the Internet
Tagged with 1099s, 2030, Aborigines, academia, academic freedom, academic jobs, administrative blight, Afro-pessimism, Al Qaeda, aliens, Alpha Centauri, alt-right, America, Andrew Jackson, animal intelligence, animal personhood, animals, apes, apocalypse, art, Australia, Avatar, Avatar 5, Barack Obama, basketball, Batman, Batman v. Superman, Beirut, Ben Affleck, Ben and Jerry, Bernie Sanders, Bill Clinton, blackness, books, capitalism, CEOs, CFPs, Cherie Berry, Chernobyl, child care, Childrens Hospital, circumcision, class struggle, Cleverman, climate change, coffee, college, contract employees, coral reefs, Cornell, creeps, Death Star, Democratic primary 2016, disability, disability studies, Disney, Donald Trump, Duke, Dungeons & Dragons, ecology, elevators, emoji, emoji movie, feminism, film, Florida, FOIA, food, Foon, Game of Thrones, games, Georgetown, gig economy, Golden State Warriors, Great Barrier Reef, Greenland, Haiti, Hamilton, Hello from the Magic Tavern, How the University Works, huge if true, ice sheet collapse, independent studies, indigenous futurism, indigenous peoples, intelligence, James Cameron, Jesuits, John McAdams, journamalism, just peace, just war, Keurig, kids today, Kimmy Schmidt, Kumail Nanjiani, LEGO, librarians, libraries, literary theory, local news, Los Angeles Review of Books, maps, Marquette, men's rights activism, Metropolitan Museum of Art, military-industrial complex, Minecraft, minimum wage, misogyny, Mississippi, Modern Masters of Science Fiction, modernity, monarchism, Monica Lewinsky, monkey news, monkeys, moral panic, Mount St. Mary's, music, musical theater, musicals, my scholarly empire, neoliberals, Netflix, North Carolina, obituary, Octavia Butler, Offices and Bosses, outer space, parenting, pedagogy, pepper spray, Peru, philosophers, podcasts, Poland, politics, prison-industrial complex, public relations, rape, rape culture, reactionaries, recycling, Republican primary 2016, Rogue One, Scalia, science film, SeaWorld, Shakespeare, slavery, songs, Srinivas Aravamudan, Star Trek, Star Trek 2017, Star Wars, statehood, Stephen Curry, Stephen Hawking, Steven Salaita, student debt, Supreme Court, Tampa Bay, teaching, television, tenure, the $10 bill, the $20 bill, the courts, the humanities, the law, the Pentagon, tigers, Timbuktu, Title IX, Twitter, UC Davis, United Nations, University of Toledo, Vatican-City-style communofascism, Washington DC, what it is I think I'm doing, word processing, working moms, Wow! signal, you don't exist, zoos, Žižek
Friday Links!
* I’ll be speaking at this event on June 4th in DC: Resolved: Technology Will Take All Our Jobs.
* SF-flavored art exhibit at the Racine Art Museum.
* I think it’s fair to say Marquette has had a pretty rough year.
* Mass contingency is not compatible with shared governance.
* How Austerity Killed the Humanities.
* “If Students Are Smart, They’ll Major in What They Love.”
* Why Technology Will Never Fix Education.
* Alex Rivera on Hollywood and the War Machine. See also!
* Games Without Wages. The video game industry has long relied on the unpaid labor of “modders.” Is it ready to finally pay up?
* Nice work if you can get it: Yale Gives Former President $8 Million Retirement Gift.
* Professors Face Long Odds in Court Battles Over Speech Rights.
* Everybody Calm Down About Breastfeeding.
* The dangerous trick here goes like this: someone fantasizes about a world in which rape frequently occurs and consistently goes unpunished; to explore this emotional fantasy, they set it in a premodern narrative fantasy world where they can displace their own desire onto “history.” The dark impulse or desire isn’t theirs, then; it’s the world’s. It’s history’s. And once a dark personal fantasy becomes “realism,” gazing upon this dark thought or idea isn’t a kind of humiliating or dangerous self-reflection, it’s laudable: it’s an honest engagement with truth.
* I suspect even Notre Dame can’t really explain why it’s suing the federal government over contraception anymore.
* The New Mexico Law Review just published an issue dedicated entirely to Breaking Bad.
* Canadian Aboriginal Group Rejects $1 Billion Fee for Natural Gas Project.
* Study Links Record Dolphin Die-Off In The Gulf Of Mexico To Deepwater Horizon Spill.
* They paved built an oil rig in paradise.
* The $10 Hedge Fund Supercomputer That’s Sweeping Wall Street.
* Nearly one in four financial services employees say it’s likely their co-workers have acted outside of the law. Dismaying as that statistic may be, it is nearly double the 12 percent who said the same in 2012.
* This senior level position is responsible for developing and implementing best practices in fostering the development and launch of companies based on innovations generated from University faculty. Percent Effort: 100.
* We Are Spending Quite a Bit of Money on Jails.
* A Dishonest History of the Last War. Jeb Bush Says His Brother Was Misled Into War by Faulty Intelligence. That’s Not What Happened. Bush and Cheney Falsely Presented WMD Intelligence to Public.
* Here’s how much of your life the United States has been at war.
* America Has Half as Many Hypersegregated Metros as It Did in 1970. Somehow, Milwaukee soldiers on.
* Scrabble adds even more garbage words to its dictionary.
* U.S. Releases Contents Of Bin Laden’s English-Language “Bookshelf.”
* Is there anyone who won’t run for the Republican nomination in 2016?
* Why Have So Many People Never Heard Of The MOVE Bombing?
* “We do not think anyone is going to dispute this at all,” he said.
* Uber, but for putting gas in your car.
* I can’t understand why on Earth Marvel wants to emulate the New 52.
* Not the E.T. sequel we need, but the one we deserve.
* Great moments in “our bad”: Norway’s ‘We’re Sorry’ Monument to 91 Dead Witches.
* You say “equality” like it’s a bad thing.
* How The Soviet Union Tracked People With “Spy Dust.”
* A Professor Tries to Beat Back a News Spoof That Won’t Go Away.
* The health insurance regime: still the worst.
* Israel knew all along that settlements, home demolitions were illegal.
* Very surprising, given the lawsuit: Emma Sulkowicz allowed to bring mattress into Class Day ceremony.
* These numbers are horrifying.
* Irregularities in LaCour (2014). Amazing story.
* An oral history of Industrial Light & Magic.
* Western canon, meet trigger warning.
* 9. Should a nuclear apocalypse happen, The Sound of Music will be played on a loop.
* I wish to outlive all my enemies.
* Everything about this pedagogical model is insane.
* Study Suggests Intelligent Aliens Will Probably Be The Size Of Bears.
* Does Shakespeare pass the Bechdel Test?
* Monkey Day Care: Growing Up as a Child Research Subject.
* “Keep Foreskin and State Separate.”
* And Matt Weiner is sick of your bullshit misinterpretations of his genius. Do you hear that, Limbaugh?
Written by gerrycanavan
May 22, 2015 at 8:00 am
Posted in Look at what I found on the Internet
Tagged with 2012 or never, abortion, academia, academic fraud, academic freedom, adjunctification, adjuncts, administrative blight, administrative bloat, Alex Rivera, aliens, America, art, artificial intelligence, Assata Shakur, austerity, Battle: Los Angeles, Bechdel test, books, Breaking Bad, breastfeeding, Bush, California, Canada, capital, cheese, Cheney, circumcision, class struggle, color, Columbia, contraception, corruption, DC Comics, Deepwater Horizon, do what you love, dolphins, Don't mention the war, E.T., English majors, entrepeneurs, entrepeneurs in residence, espionage, fantasy, film, First Nations, flexible online education, Game of Thrones, games, genies, George Lucas, Gulf of Mexico, health insurance, hedge funds, high-speed trading, history, Hollywood, How the University Works, hypersegregation, IL&M, indigenous peoples, international law, Iraq, Iraq War, Israel, Jeb Bush, labor, lies and lying liars, Mad Men, mad science, Marquette, Marvel, mass contingency, Matt Weiner, military-industrial complex, Milwaukee, monkeys, monkeys' paws, MOOCs, MOVE bombing, museums, my scholarly empire, Norway, Notre Dame, nuclear holocaust, nuclear war, nuclearity, oil, oil spills, Osama bin Laden, our brains work in interesting ways, Palestine, parody, pedagogy, Philadelphia, politics, prison labor, prison-industrial complex, race, Racine, racism, rape, rape culture, realism, Republican primary 2016, Republicans, research, Rush Limbaugh, Santa Barbara, satire, Saturday Morning Breakfast Cereal, science fiction, Scrabble, segregation, sequels, series finales, Shakespeare, shared governance, single payer, spy dust, spy stuff, Star Wars, teaching, technology, technopositivity, tenure, the canon, the courts, the humanities, the law, the past isn't over it isn't even past, the Singularity, The Sound of Music, the wisdom of markets, trigger warnings, true crime, Uber, USSR, war huh good god y'all what is it good for? absolutely nothing say it again, war machines, war on terror, We Are All Completely Beside Ourselves, Whole Foods, Wisconsin, wishes, witches, words, work, Yale
All Your Tuesday Morning Links
* If You Leave Open A Million Tabs, ‘The Great Suspender’ Chrome Extension Is For You. Gamechanger.
* When Birds Squak, Other Species Seem to Listen.
* Two-Thirds of Risk Managers Say Frats Are Major Liability. The other third are on vacation, check back next week.
* This sort of thing is a problem in academia too. If a male prof refuses to mentor female students, that’s also bad.
* “Neoliberalism is the real affront to higher education — not Kanye West’s honorary doctorate.”
* The idea of using “drive-up advising” to reach these students started as a joke, Murray said, but it quickly turned into a reality.
* Low cost college isn’t enough. I’ve tried to argue that plans like #FreeCommunityCollege will actually be a strong accelerant to some of the other problems David is talking about, but it hasn’t exactly set the world on fire.
* The humane and the anti-humane.
What matters more is the loose agglomeration of practices, institutions and perspectives that view human experience and human subjectivity as a managerial problem, a cost burden and an intellectual disruption. I would not call such views inhumane: more anti-humane: they do not believe that a humane approach to the problems of a technologically advanced global society is effective or fair, that we need rules and instrumments and systems of knowing that overrule intersubjective, experiential perspectives and slippery rhetorical and cultural ways of communicating what we know about the world.
* Academic Freedom versus Academic Legitimacy.
* Public universities are using non-need-based aid to recruit out-of-state students, at the expense of low-income and in-state students.
* Three New Jersey colleges are appearing to be more competitive than they are in admissions by counting incomplete applications, NorthJersey.com reported.
* academiaiskillingmyfriends.tumblr.com. beingawomaninphilosophy.wordpress.com.
* Hamburger U: As more firms have set up their own “corporate universities”, they have become less willing to pay for their managers to go to business school.
* The best historical model for the transition from the WWIII-devastated Earth to the post-First Contact regime may be the rise of the Soviet Union.
* Strange result, what could explain it? Students Who Attend Class Outperform Those Online, Study Says.
* Like Dylan plugging in, Simon Pegg Worries The Love Of Science Fiction Is Making Us “Childish.”
* “Keep Foreskin and State Separate”: Battle Over Florida Boy’s Circumcision Heads To Federal Court.
* N.C. Senate bill would criminalize, fire teachers for having political views.
* Why Did NY Ban Fracking? The Official Report Is Now Public.
* Fossil fuels subsidised by $10m a minute, says IMF.
* Canada Approves Nuclear Waste Site on Great Lakes Shore.
* Texas Elementary School Accused of Locking Boy up in a “Focus Room.” Why did we turn all our schools into torture chambers?
* Homework is a Social Justice Issue.
* Obama to Limit Military-Style Equipment for Police Forces.
* Washington State Is In A Drought ‘Unlike Any We’ve Ever Experienced.’
* Sure it looks as if things are getting more peaceful. But, looking at the mathematics, that’s exactly what we should expect to see, even if we’re most likely due for a much more violent future.
* Spies, they’re just like us.
* In fan fiction, even the Dursleys can potentially be redeemed.
* Counterpoint: Republicans Are Not on the Edge of Extinction.
* The White House Is Archiving Every Tweet Begging @POTUS for Sex.
* The truth about poo: we’re doing it wrong.
* Scientists examine why men even exist.
* Like Uber, but for stopping this from happening all the time.
* Great moments in spin: “New Jersey voters say they don’t think I would be a good president because they want me to stay.” It might just be because they’re jealous.
* “That’s an extraordinarily high number of medications in a state with less than 2 million people.”
* Generation gibberish. I think a version of this sort of thinking organized around the penetration of consumer technology is probably viable, but a lot harder to wrangle than assigning arbitrary birth years.
* Mad Men and the Coke Jingle Theory. Mad Men and the Movement.
* And from the archives: As good as it gets: Mad Men and neoliberalism. And today’s followup: The commodity is the better Jesus: On the Mad Men finale.
In any case, I regard the genre of television as completed now. The most critically acclaimed, culturally prestigious, artistically ambitious television show of all time — and judging by current trends, I include the future here too — has culminated in a tacky commercial. By doing so, it made us experience its moving utopian qualities and its sinister cult-like qualities. There’s nowhere else to go at this point. That’s “the real thing.” That’s “it.”
Written by gerrycanavan
May 19, 2015 at 8:34 am
Posted in Look at what I found on the Internet
Tagged with #FreeCommunityCollege, academia, academic freedom, Adam Kotsko, adjunctification, adjuncts, advertising, advising, animal personhood, animals, anti-humanism, austerity, Barack Obama, Big Pharma, birds, Canada, Chris Christie, Chrome, circumcision, class struggle, climate change, commuter students, corporatization, delicious Coca-Cola, demographics, drought, drugs, Duke, ecology, even better than the real thing, fan fiction, feminism, financial aid, flexible online education, fossil fuels, fraternities, graduate student life, Great Lakes, Harry Potter, homework, honorary doctorates, Horcruxes, How the University Drinks, How the University Works, humanism, hydrofracking, Internet, J.K. Rowling, Judas, juking the stats, Kanye West, kids today, language, legitimacy, literally corporate universities, Mad Men, men, military-industrial complex, misogyny, MOOCs, neoliberalism, New Jersey, North Carolina, nuclearity, over-educated literary theory PhDs, parenting, pedagogy, philosophy, police, police-industrial complex, politics, pollution, poop, privatize everything, race, Republicans, Risk, schools, science, science fiction, sexism, Simon Pegg, social justice, Soviet Union, spies, Star Trek, student debt, takin' 'bout my generation, teaching, technopositivity, television, Texas, the courts, the Dursleys, The Great Suspender, the law, tuition, Twitter, Uber, war huh good god y'all what is it good for? absolutely nothing say it again, war on education, Washington State, West Virginia
For His Unwavering Devotion to Weekend Links, Gerry Canavan Has Been Awarded the Nobel Prize for Linkblogging
* Every so often the Nobel Committee accidentally picks a genuinely deserving, genuinely inspiring recipient of the Peace Prize. This year was one. A 2013 profile of Malala Yousafzai. A speech to Pakistani Marxists. What did one Nobel laureate say to the other?
Obama: Look at this brave, strong woman. Malala: Stop drone attacks. Obama: Look at this cute little girl.
— Kumail Nanjiani (@kumailn) October 17, 2013
* Every so often the Supreme Court accidentally makes a good decision. Last night’s overturning of Wisconsin’s voter suppression law was one.
* What would the twentieth-century history of English studies look like if we had thought to preserve the records of our teaching? How could that history be different if we had institutional archives of syllabi, student notes, lecture drafts, handouts and seminar papers, just as we have archives of journal articles, drafts of novels, recordings of performances, and committee meeting minutes? What if universities had collected classroom documents alongside other records and traces of the knowledge they create and culture that they value?
* Another lovely Chomsky rant on the university.
So the university imposes costs on students and on faculty who are not only untenured but are maintained on a path that guarantees that they will have no security. All of this is perfectly natural within corporate business models. It’s harmful to education, but education is not their goal.
* Recent cuts have unfortunately made future cuts inevitable: The University of Wisconsin System is about to do some wholesale, strategic belt-tightening, according to its president. But it’s not all absolutely miserable news:
Regent Janice Mueller noted that of the $1.6 billion total paid to unclassified staff on UW campuses, faculty accounted for $550 million, leaving more than $1 billion going to non-faculty. “That seemed a little out of whack to me,” Mueller said. “I would think faculty salaries would be the larger share.”
I didn’t think Regents were allowed to notice things that like.
* The Excessive Political Power Of White Men In The United States, In One Chart.
* Phil Maciak on the greatness of Transparent.
* Why we need academic freedom: On Being Sued.
* Neoliberalism is the triumph of the state, not its retreat. The case of Mexico.
* On the cultural ideology of Big Data.
* It Would Actually Be Very Simple To End Homelessness Forever.
* It seems that all of Pearson’s critical foundational research and proven classroom results in the world couldn’t get the question 3 x 7 x 26 correct.
* Federal spending was lower this year than Paul Ryan originally asked for. Ha, take that Republicans! Another Obama-led triumph for the left!
* But things will be different once Obama finally becomes president. Obama Plans to Close Guantanamo Whether Congress Likes It Or Not.
* Nightmares: Could Enterovirus D68 Be Causing Polio-Like Paralysis in Kids?
* NYC airport workers walk off job, protesting lack of protection from Ebola risks.
* SF in everything: Malware needs to know if it’s in the Matrix.
* Lady Ghostbusters will be a reboot, almost assuredly a terrible one.
I love origin stories. That’s my favorite thing. I love the first one so much I don’t want to do anything to ruin the memory of that. So it just felt like, let’s just restart it because then we can have new dynamics. I want the technology to be even cooler. I want it to be really scary, and I want it to happen in our world today that hasn’t gone through it so it’s like, oh my God what’s going on?
* It’s happening again: Vastly Different Stories Emerging In Police Shooting Of St. Louis Teen. The Associated Press is On It:
Angry protesters yell abuse, accusations of racial profiling at stoic police in south St. Louis: http://t.co/Q3GFc12WzL
— The Associated Press (@AP) October 10, 2014
* Teenagers in prison have a shockingly high suicide rate.
* Roger Ebert: The Collected Wikipedia Edits.
* The many faces of capitalism.
* The University of Wisconsin at Madison Police Department issued an apology Wednesday after a list of safety tips posted to the department’s website was criticized for appearing to blame victims of campus crimes, particularly survivors of sexual assault.
* What We Talk About When We Talk About Trigger Warnings.
* Today in theology: Europe’s history of penis worship was cast aside when the Catholic Church decided Jesus’s foreskin was too potent to control.
By the 15th century, the Holy Prepuce had become the desirous object of many mystics’ visions. Bridget of Sweden recorded the revelations she received from the Virgin Mary, who told the saint that she saved the foreskin of her son and carried it with her until her death. Catherine of Siena, the patron saint of Italy, imagined that her wedding ring—exchanged with the Savior in a mystical marriage—had been transmuted into the foreskin. In her Revelationes (c. 1310), Saint Agnes Blannbekin recounts the hours she spent contemplating the loss of blood the infant Christ must have suffered during the circumcision, and during one of her contemplative moments, while idly wondering what had become of the foreskin, she felt the prepuce pressed upon her tongue. Blannbekin recounted the sweet, intoxicating taste, and she attempted to swallow it. The saint found herself unable to digest the Holy Prepuce; every time she swallowed, it immediately reappeared on her tongue. Again and again she repeated the ritual until after a hundred gulps she managed to down the baby Jesus’ cover.
* Two Bad Tastes That Taste Bad Together: The US Doesn’t Have Enough Railroads to Keep Up With the Oil Boom.
* For some unfathomable reason somebody handed Cary Nelson another shovel: A Civility Manifesto.
* Another piece on the law and Tommy the Chimp.
* And maybe there are some doors we just shouldn’t open: I’m Slavoj Žižek, AMA.
Written by gerrycanavan
October 10, 2014 at 12:18 pm
Posted in Look at what I found on the Internet
Tagged with academia, academic freedom, adjunctification, animal personhood, ask me anything, austerity, Barack Obama, Big Data, capitalism, Cary Nelson, Catholicism, cats, circumcision, civility, class struggle, cultural preservation, drones, Ebola, English departments, enterovirus, feminism, Ferguson, foreskins, Ghostbusters, graduate student life, Guantánamo, Halloween, homelessness, How the University Works, Jesus Christ, juvenile detention, Kailash Satyarthi, Kumail Nanjani, LEGO, Malala Yousafzai, male privilege, malware, Marxism, men, Mexico, neoliberalism, New York, Noam Chomsky, Nobel Peace Prize, oil, Paul Ryan, Pearson, pedagogy, police brutality, police riots, police violence, polio, politics, precarity, pregnancy, prison-industrial complex, privatization, railroads, rape, rape culture, religion, Roger Ebert, Saturday Morning Breakfast Cereal, science fiction, sexism, socialism, St. Louis, Steven Salaita, suicide, Supreme Court, syllabi, teaching, television, the courts, the law, The Matrix, theology, they say time is the fire in which we burn, Tommy the Chimp, Transparent, trigger warnings, University of Wisconsin, violence, voter ID, voter suppression, war huh good god y'all what is it good for? absolutely nothing say it again, war on education, war on terror, white privilege, Wikipedia, Wisconsin, Žižek
Wednesday Night Everything
* Details are emerging about Wes Anderson’s next film, Moon Rise Kingdom:
[The film] is set in the 60s. Two young adults fall in love and run away. Leaders in their New England town are sticking the idea that they’ve disappeared and go in search of them. Norton will play a scout leader who brings his charges on a search. Willis is in talks to play the town sheriff who’s also looking, and who is having an affair with the missing girl’s mother, the role McDormand is in talks to play. Murray, a regular in Anderson films, will play the girl’s father, who has his own issues.
Let Bleeding Cool have the final word for now: “The film is set in the 60s and has a script by Anderson and Roman Copolla. The potential for obsessive compulsive production design and a soundtrack full of hipper-than-thou needle drops is actually quite frightening.”
* Why Humanities? Talks from the Birkbeck College Conference. Via @traxus4420, who smartly proclaims it the “antidote to stanley fish’s studied moronism.”
* Rep. John Shimkus, candidate for House Energy Committee chair in the new Congress, explains why we don’t have to worry about climate change. New Jersey governor and potential presidential candidate Chris Christie frets that it’s all just so complicated.
* According to the International Energy Agency World Energy Outlook peak oil happened in 2006. So there’s that.
* From now on, every time you say “It’s on like Donkey Kong” you have to give Nintendo a quarter.
* Holy crap: what hospitals do with foreskins. Via Kottke.
* Child abuse at 0% in lesbian households. You read that right.
* What I didn’t see was a party that supports single-payer health care, free universities, the redistribution of wealth from the top one percent, an end to corporate-owned elections. I also want a party that hopes to abolish the death penalty, the internal combution engine and the U.S. Senate, an anti-democratic body that should go the way of the House of Lords. My friend and sometime editor David Fellerath quits the Democratic Party.
* Only the super-rich can save us now: PNC Bank Will No Longer Fund Mountain Top Removal.
* Ad the co-chairmen of the Catfood Commission has returned from hibernation with a triumphant plan to fix the deficit that absolutely no one likes, not even the other members of the Commission itself.
Written by gerrycanavan
November 10, 2010 at 9:49 pm
Posted in Look at what I found on the Internet
Tagged with 1960s, academia, Bill Murray, Catfood Commission, child abuse, Chris Christie, circumcision, climate change, coal, Democrats, Donkey Kong, ecology, film, foreskins, John Shimkus, lesbocracy, Moon Rise Kingdom, New Jersey, Nintendo, only the super-rich can save us now, Peak Oil, politics, religion, Republicans, Social Security, Stanley Fish, the humanities, trademark, Wes Anderson, Won't somebody think of the children?