Posts Tagged ‘citation’
So Here’s Everything You Missed While You Were Paying Attention to the Election Links
* It was an absolutely crazy month trying to get the final proofs locked down, but The Cambridge History of Science Fiction has an Amazon page and a publication date: November 30, 2018. Thanks to everyone who contributed to this massive undertaking! Obviously $175 is a hefty price tag, so talk to your public and university library about science fiction today…
* SFRA Review #326 is up with my last vice president’s note (sniff).
* I think I forgot to hype my review essay in the latest Science Fiction Film and Television on Arrival and parenting. Consider it hyped!
* I was also lucky enough to participate in the symposium for the new issue of Science Fiction Studies on climate crisis. (The end of my contribution for those who can’t get past the preview.)
* Wired has a profile of KSR in honor of Red Moon, which I’m meant to be reviewing for LARB one of these days…
* Ted Chiang’s second collection, Exhalation, is finally coming out in May 2019. An absolute must-buy.
* J.R.R. Tolkien’s Final Posthumous Book Is Published.
* It’s been too long since I last posted and this CFP is out of date now, but it looks like a great event at Madison next year: CFP: Childhoods of Color.
* At least the Post45 CFP is still active! And this one! Transgressions: McGill University’s 25th Annual English Graduate Conference.
* CFP: The Sanzed Empire on Fire: A Panel on N.K. Jemisin’s The Broken Earth Trilogy.
* Call for Papers: Insecurity Conference (Spring 2019). At UWM’s Center for 21st Century Studies.
* Another thing I missed in a month of not posting: Jaimee’s first review for the Rumpus. It’s a good one!
* Monsters vs. Empire: Mark Bould vs. the Space Force.
* Nine sci-fi subgenres for understanding what’s to come.
* Race and Halloween in Milwaukee.
* A special issue of the Canadian Journal of Canadian Studies: Black Lives, Black Politics, Black Futures—An Introduction.
* Why I’m Fighting To Get Rid Of The “Baby Graveyard” At Marquette University.
* Jesuits to release names of accused priests in the west. This is going to hit Catholic higher education like a sledgehammer.
* Superstar-professor-industrial complex. Academia as cult.
* Architectural history in an era of capitalist ruin.
What if I told you one of the largest ever undertakings in American historic preservation was happening not through the graces of any large institution, but through the autonomous participation of thousands, if not hundreds of thousands, of individuals across the country, who are collectively stitching together their own narrative of architectural history?
The “Kmart” group on the photo-sharing website Flickr has amassed a staggering twenty-five thousand photos of its subject, a struggling American discount store. It hardly matters that, against the grain of the high-architectural image factory, many of these photos could not be called artistic—a number of them appear to have been taken with shaky cell phones, or from the wrong side of a speeding car. The production of high-gloss photography is not the purpose of this group. It’s purpose is to document a slow extinction.
* “I’m about to hit the ground but the bottom of my shoes were melting. I … prayed to God, ‘Please, don’t let me die like this,'” said nurse Nichole Jolly. Nurses fleeing fast-moving Camp Fire scramble to save patients — and themselves.
* Microplastics found in 90 percent of table salt. Insect collapse study ‘one of the most disturbing articles I have ever read,’ expert warns. Humanity has wiped out 60% of animal populations since 1970, report finds. Entire cities evacuate as hellish wildfires whip through California. Here’s Where the Post-Apocalyptic Water Wars Will Be Fought. As the Antarctic Peninsula heats up, the rules of life there are being ripped apart. Alarmed scientists aren’t sure what all the change means for the future. Geoengineering as a weapon of war. Left-wing climate realism and the Trump climate change memo. Weather 2050: See how your city’s weather will be different in just one generation. Capitalism torched the world, fascism rose from the ashes. No Empires, No Dust Bowls Ecological Disasters and the Lessons of History. Best prepare for social collapse, and soon. Climate Change Is Already Damaging American Democracy. Climate Change is Already Drastically Altering the World’s Climate Zones. High Tide Socialism in Low Tide Times. Disaster socialism. Billionaires Are the Leading Cause of Climate Change. The end of the world is over. Now the real work begins.
* The Wandering Earth could be China’s breakout sci-fi blockbuster film.
* How Marvel and Corporate Comics Are Failing the ‘Vulnerable’ Creators Behind Their Superheroes. The case of Chuck Wendig.
* Citation as gratitude. Should Scholars Avoid Citing the Work of Awful People? Over time all cultural work asymptotically approaches the condition of Twitter.
* The NCAA is gaslighting you. The secret betrayal that sealed Nike’s special influence over the University of Oregon. Scandal at Maryland. Nearly 100 More Women Accuse USC Gynecologist George Tyndall of Abuse.
* Going Hungry at the Most Prestigious MFA in America.
* Secretive Campus Cops Patrol Already Overpoliced Neighborhoods.
* Meet the UW professor who just killed the death penalty.
* When you wake up this morning from unsettling dreams, you find yourself changed in your bed into a monstrous vermin. You Are Jeff Bezos.
Politics corner!
* Years too late, the end of Scott Walker. Wisconsin’s $4.1B Foxconn Boondoggle.
* Back to this. No asylum. These Companies Are Helping Trump Wage ‘Technological Warfare’ Against Immigrants. Amazon is helping ICE track, detain and deport immigrants, report say. Migrant Children in Search of Justice: A 2-Year-Old’s Day in Immigration Court. The Five-Year-Old Who Was Detained at the Border and Persuaded to Sign Away Her Rights. The war inside 7-11. How A Massive ICE Raid Changed Life In One Small American Town. ICE Is Imprisoning a Record 44,000 People. ICE Is Sending Separated Children Home With No One To Pick Them Up.
* Swedish student who stopped deportation flight of Afghan asylum seeker to be prosecuted.
* The President personally and directly violating election law is like a page 6 story. And this one. And this one!
* I know the vast amount of focus is on the immediate future of the Mueller probe, but it’s also wild that Whitaker, with this resume, is now the chief law enforcement officer in the country. ‘He’s a F*cking Fool.’
* The political theology of Trump.
* Florida. Why is it always Florida?
* The Gerontocracy is Driving America into the Ditch. The rigging of American politics.
* What would you say about abolishing the Supreme Court? It’s a start. Resisting the Justocracy.
* Rule of law watch: Promise not to kill anyone? After losing election, TX judge wholesale releases juvenile defendants.
* Elsewhere in Texas: Now we see the violence inherent in the system.
* Periodic unhappy reminder that stochastic terrorism is a term you’re going to want to familiarize yourself with.
* Pittsburgh Shooting Was Straight Out of White Power Movement. Law enforcement can’t and won’t fight them. More on that won’t.
* Fascism Is Not an Idea to Be Debated, It’s a Set of Actions to Fight.
* Brazil. One key lesson from Brazil’s lapse into fascism: Don’t trust liberals. This Is How We Radicalized The World.
* Classic Obama move to punish a bank for its crimes and make sure not to tell anyone.
* There are so many constitutional crises going on right now that it’s hard to remember where they all are. This from West Virginia was less than a month ago.
* Three Months Inside Alt-Right New York.
* Five Principles for Left Foreign Policy.
* Why are we in the Middle East?
* The Senate is a huge problem for Democrats. America needs a bigger House. The Democrats’ Existential Battle: Achieving Real Democracy.
Wisconsin voters cast *54%* of their ballots for Democratic state assembly candidates…and won 36% of the seats.
This is not what democracy looks like. https://t.co/OhN4LNY2B3
— Steve Kantrowitz (@skantrow) November 10, 2018
* Trans rights are human rights.
* Victims of School Shootings From 1946–2018, in Their Own Words.
* Death or Debt? National Estimates of Financial Toxicity in Persons with Newly-Diagnosed Cancer.
* But Neel makes the unifying, underlying dynamics hard to deny — dynamics of dwindling state resources, growing demands stemming from unfolding climate catastrophe and rising superfluity, and deepening threats to government capacity and legitimacy. This is stark terrain that too few scholars glimpse with any clarity. Its implications are massive.
* Tell Me It’s Going to be OK.
* What is the evolutionary advantage of death?
* Training our self-driving cars to be fascists.
* If #Bitcoin were to cease trading tomorrow, 0.5% of the world’s electricity demand would simply disappear – which would cover one year’s worth of the carbon emission cuts required to limit temperature rises this century to 2C.
* Miscarrying at Work: The Physical Toll of Pregnancy Discrimination.
* A $21,634 bill? How a homeless woman fought her way out of tow-company hell.
* I want to believe! Welcome ‘Oumuamua.
* How Jennifer’s Body went from a flop in 2009 to a feminist cult classic today.
* Maryse Condé Wins an Alternative to the Literature Nobel in a Scandal-Plagued Year.
* The Singularity. Rebelling. By the time he realizes he’s agreed to teach high school English, it’ll be too late. Kafkaesque. The Literary Turning Test. What I ought to want, what I actually want, what I behave like I want. Fermi problems. Fun facts. Autocomplete. Lifecycle of the academic. Mental health. Amalekites.
* “Do you want to turn your notifications off?” Twitter asked.
* Is There Such A Thing As Ballet That Doesn’t Hurt Women?
* The story of a serial SWATter.
* The idea that the ancients disdained bright color is the most common misconception about Western aesthetics in the history of Western art. “He started poking around the depots and was astonished to find that many statues had flecks of color: red pigment on lips, black pigment on coils of hair, mirrorlike gilding on limbs. For centuries, archeologists and museum curators had been scrubbing away these traces of color before presenting statues and architectural reliefs to the public.”
* So many people have had their DNA sequenced that they’ve put other people’s privacy in jeopardy.
* In defense of Harry Potter and the Cursed Child.
* The Making of The Empire Strikes Back.
* The Sears catalog and Jim Crow. How vulture capitalists ate Sears. Eddie Lampert not only ran the company; he was also its largest creditor and the guy who sold major Sears assets to … Eddie Lampert.
* I’m sorry my parrot is so racist.
* Friction-free racism: Surveillance capitalism turns a profit by making people more comfortable with discrimination. An AI lie detector will interrogate travellers at some EU borders. Twilight of the Racist Uncles. We Are All Research Subjects Now.
* Looking for the helpers: Turning the reassuring line for children into a meme for adults should make everyone uncomfortable.
* The Possessed: Dispatches from the Third Trimester.
* A British baby who was born at exactly 11 a.m. on the great day was christened Pax. At the age of twenty-one, he would be killed in the next war. The obligatory Vonnegut.
* 2018 in headlines: Man run over by lawn mower while trying to kill son with a chainsaw, police say. Loggers Accidentally Cut Down World’s Oldest Tree in Amazon Forest. Was Tony The Tiger Driven Off Twitter By Unbelievably Horny Furries?
* Nothing gold can stay: Big Bird and Oscar the Grouch puppeteer Caroll Spinney announces retirement.
* And if you want a vision of the future, imagine increasingly unnecessary sequels to any cultural production that strikes any sort of chord in anyone, forever. I don’t know how I’m managing to maintain a good attitude about the Picard show given that every piece of available evidence demonstrates it’ll be just another cynical cash grab.
* Same exact joke but about people trying to adapt Foundation.
Written by gerrycanavan
November 12, 2018 at 9:00 am
Posted in Look at what I found on the Internet
Tagged with #MeToo, abortion, academia, academic writing, Afrofuturism, aliens, alt-right, Amazon, animals, Antarctica, apocalypse, Apu, Armistice Day, Arrival, art, artificial intelligence, asylum, ballet, Barack Obama, Bitcoin, bookstores, Brazil, Broken Earth trilogy, Cambridge History of Science Fiction, cancer, capitalism, Captain Picard, Center for 21st Century Studies, CFPs, childhood, Chinese science fiction, Chuck Wendig, citation, Cixin Liu, class struggle, climate change, college sports, comics, conferences, cruel optimism, cults, cursing, cussing, death, death penalty, debt, democracy, Department of Justice, deportation, DNA, Donald Trump, empire, epherema, ethnic cleansing, Exhalation, Fantastic Beasts and Where to Find Them 2, fascism, fim, Florida, Foundation, Foxconn, futurity, games, geoengineering, gerontocracy, graduate student life, grief, guns, Halloween, Harry Potter, Harry Potter and the Cursed Child, homelessness, How the University Works, ice, immigration, Infinite Jest, insects, insecurity, Iowa, Jaimee, Jeff Bezos, Jennifer's Body, Jesuits, K-Mart, Kim Stanley Robinson, Lovecraft, Madison, maps, Mark Bould, Marquette University, Marvel, Maryland, mass extinction, mass shootings, Matthew Whitaker, MFA, Middle East, military-industrial complex, Milwaukee, minimum wage, miscarriage, monsters, Muppets, murder, my scholarly empire, N.K. Jemisin, NCAA, neoliberalism, New York, Nike, Nobel Prize, Oumuamu, over-educated literary theory PhDs, pandemic, parenting, Pittsburgh, plastic, poetry, police, politics, precocity, pregnancy, public humanities, race, racism, Red Mars, Republicans, research, Robert Mueller, ruin, Saturday Morning Breakfast Cereal, science fiction, Science Fiction Film and Television, science fiction studies, Scott Walker, Sears, self-driving car, Sesame Street, SFRA, SFRA Review, shoot shootings, social media, socialism, Space Force, Star Trek, Star Trek: Discovery, Star Wars, statues, stochastic terrorism, Supreme Court, surveillance society, SWAT teams, Ted Chiang, television, Texas, the Constitution, the courts, The Empire Strikes Back, The Fall of Gondolin, the flu, the House, the law, the Left, the Pentagon, the Senate, The Simpsons, the Strand, the university in ruins, The Wandering Earth, theology, TNG, Tolkien, trans* issues, true crime, Twitter, UFOs, University of Oregon, university police, USC, Vonnegut, voting, vulture capitalism, war, war huh good god y'all what is it good for? absolutely nothing say it again, water, West Virginia, white nationalism, white supremacy, wildfires, Wisconsin, World War I, writing
Friday Links Are Just a Party and Parties Aren’t Meant to Last
* Out today, a project very close to my heart: my edited 2016 rerelease of Darko Suvin’s Metamorphoses of Science Fiction. Here’s the Amazon order page, for you or your favorite academic library!
* The Ever-Tightening Job Market for Ph.D.s. The Mobile Academic.
* The strange story of Hugo Gernsback, who brought science fiction magazines to America.
* Just in time for finals! MLA Eighth Edition: What’s New and Different.
* At LARoB Rebecca Evans reviews the reissue of Kim Stanley Robinson’s Science in the Capital series, Green Earth. David Perry reviews The Secret Life of Stories. Against Star Wars. Inside the Coetzee Collection.
* My desire to see The Twilight Zone has boomeranged on me in the most ironic possible way.
* An independent researcher claims to have discovered a lost civilization in China.
* Existential Depression in Gifted Children.
* Mourning Prince and David Bowie, who showed there’s no one right way to be a man. Buzzfeed’s The Most Powerful Writing about Prince. Nation Too Sad To F*ck Even Though It’s What Prince Would Have Wanted.
Evidence is scant, but historians now believe the ancient Americans worshipped a fertility god they called “Prince.”
— Gerry Canavan (@gerrycanavan) April 21, 2016
* The Secret Life of Novelizations.
* The Hidden Economics of Porn.
* Five Hundred Years of Utopia.
* Harriet Tubman once staged a sit-in to get $20. The Treasury just gave her all of them. You have no idea how hardcore Harriet Tubman really was.
* The smug style in American liberalism.
* How Chicago elites imported charters, closed neighborhood schools, and snuffed out creativity.
* How Seattle Gave Up on Busing and Allowed Its Public Schools to Become Alarmingly Resegregated.
* How to Blow $9 Billion in 6 Months.
* Nearly half of Americans would have trouble finding $400 to pay for an emergency. I’m one of them.
* Why America’s Schools Have A Money Problem. Related: 25 Best Wisconsin High Schools: U.S. News Rankings 2016.
* For forty years, liberals have accepted defeat and called it “incremental progress.” Bernie Sanders offers a different way forward. How Sanders fell short. The real scandal.
* 12 Reasons Not to Write Lord of the Rings.
* I Talked to the Kid Whose Mom Used Craigslist to Find Him a Feminism Tutor, and It Got Weird.
* Do Honeybees Feel? Scientists Are Entertaining the Idea. Insects Are Conscious and Egocentric.
* Our foundation of Earth knowledge, largely derived from historically observed patterns, has been central to society’s progress. Early cultures kept track of nature’s ebb and flow, passing improved knowledge about hunting and agriculture to each new generation. Science has accelerated this learning process through advanced observation methods and pattern discovery techniques. These allow us to anticipate the future with a consistency unimaginable to our ancestors. But as Earth warms, our historical understanding will turn obsolete faster than we can replace it with new knowledge. Some patterns will change significantly; others will be largely unaffected, though it will be difficult to say what will change, by how much, and when.
* Details arise about U.S. Bank robbery in the Alumni Memorial Union.
* Behold, the Hasbro Cinematic Universe.
* The Tragic History of RC Cola.
* U.S. Suicide Rate Surges to a 30-Year High.
* Hamilton just won the Pulitzer for drama. Here’s why it matters for American musicals. And congrats to Emily Nussbaum!
* This map shows every place in the US that has ever had a woman in Congress.
* Milwaukee’s Appeals, Vibrant and Cheap.
* First Criminal Charges Handed Down After Flint Water Crisis.
* A man once described as a “perfect donor” at an August, Georgia sperm bank and who fathered at least 36 children around the world is actually a mentally ill felon whose lies on his donor forms went undiscovered for more than a decade.
* We owe Rey and Finn’s friendship to Harrison Ford’s broken leg.
* Love It Or List It sued over shoddy renovations, ridiculous falsehoods.
* As A Father Of Daughters, I Think We Should Treat All Women Like My Daughters.
* Hello, from the Magic Tavern watch! There’s two noncanonical podcasts from Foon-16 over at One Shot. There’s also a band new, slightly less… rigorous improv podcast from some of the principals involved called Siblings Peculiar.
* The U.S.’s Best High School Starts at 9:15 a.m.
* Lab Mice Are Freezing Their Asses Off—and That’s Screwing Up Science.
* New Evidence Suggests That Limbs and Fins Evolved From Fish Gills.
* And rejoice, comrades! Twilight Struggle has come to Steam.
still a great tweet, now more than ever https://t.co/i0yOcGbuuv
— Gerry Canavan (@gerrycanavan) April 20, 2016
Written by gerrycanavan
April 22, 2016 at 9:00 am
Posted in Look at what I found on the Internet
Tagged with academia, academic jobs, activism, Amazing Stories, America, animal consciousness, animal personhood, animal testing, animals, archaeology, Bernie Sanders, Big Pharma, books, Bowie, cards against humanity, Chicago, childhood, China, citation, class struggle, climate, climate change, Coetzee, Congress, creeps, Darko Suvin, Democratic primary 2016, depression, disability, disability studies, drugs, economics, elites, Episode 7, feminism, Flint, flowcharts, Foon, futurity, games, gifted and talented, gifted kids, Green Earth, Hamilton, Harriet Tubman, Harrison Ford, Hasbro Cinematic Universe, Hello from the Magic Tavern, high school, Hillary Clinton, honeybees, How the University Works, Hugo Gernsback, insects, interactive TV, kids today, Kim Stanley Robinson, laboratory animals, lead, lead poisoning, liberalism, Lord of the Rings, lost civilizations, Love It or List It, Marquette, medicine, men's rights activism, Metamorphoses of Science Fiction, mice, Michael Bérubé, Michigan, millennials, Milwaukee, misogyny, MLA, mobility, money, music, musicals, my scholarly empire, neoliberalism, New York, nostalgia, novelizations, over-educated literary theory PhDs, podcasts, politics, porn, Prince, Pulitzers, RC Cola, reality TV, resegregation, science, science fiction, science fiction studies, Science in the Capital, Seattle, sexism, Shakespeare, Siblings Peculiar, Sir Thomas More, smugness, soda, sperm banks, sperm donors, Star Wars, suicide, television, the $20 bill, the Cold War, The Force Awakens, the humanities, The Twilight Zone, Theranos, Tolkien, true crime, Twilight Struggle, Utopia, war on education, water, what it is I think I'm doing, Won't somebody think of the children?
Tuesday Links! Too Many of Them! Send Help!
* Don’t forget! Just two weeks until the “Global Weirding” deadline!
* And tomorrow night in Missouri! Marquette Professor to Present ‘After Humanity: Science Fiction After Extinction.’
* CFP: Radical Future and Accelerationism.
* Evergreen headlines: The Shrinking Ph.D. Job Market.
* Last year’s Pioneer Award winner: “Improbability Drives: The Energy of SF.”
* The Anthropological Unconscious, or How Not to Talk About African Fiction.
* AfroSF Now: A Snapshot, Seven Novels and a Film.
* Africa Has Always Been Sci-Fi.
* Cost Control Is a Progressive Value.
* Grade Inflation, Forever and Ever Amen.
* Dueling letters: President Lovell. Professor McAdams.
* Cheating Incidents Blemish NCAA’s Marquee Event.
* Honors Colleges Promise Prestige, But They Don’t All Deliver.
* The Humanities in the Anthropocene.
* Extinction: A Radical History.
* Art in the Age of Economic Inequality.
* Manifesto of a Future University.
* 30 Cities Where America’s Poor Are Concentrated. You know where this is going.
* It’s Probably First Ballot Or Bust For Donald Trump At The GOP Convention. And a bit on the nose, don’t you think? Jeffrey Dahmer’s House Is Up for Rent During the Republican National Convention.
* More politics watch! The Democrats Are Flawlessly Executing a 10-Point Plan to Lose the 2016 Presidential Election. Sanders +2.6! Trump -4.1! Go vote Wisconsin!
* It’s Really Hard To Get Bernie Sanders 988 More Delegates.
* My analysis of the latest federal data shows that, on average, these families’ income — including tax credits and all sources of welfare — is about $9,000 below the poverty line. That means ensuring no children grow up in poor households would cost $57 billion a year. (To put that in perspective, that’s how much money we’d get if Apple brought back the $200 billion it has stashed overseas, and paid just 29 percent tax on it – it’s a big problem, but it’s small compared to the wealth of our society.)
* Unionizing Pays Big Dividend for Professors at Regional Public Universities. What Tenured and Tenure-Track Professors at 4-Year Colleges Made in 2015-16.
* The villain gap: Why Soviet movies rarely had American bad guys. Risk time in the gulag by reading about Soviet-era underground media. Cold War board games explore the conflict’s history, spycraft, and humor. Soviet sci-fi: The future that never came.
* This Genius Twitter Feed Is Turning Classic Kids’ Books Into Nightmares.
* Superman And The Damage Done: A requiem for an American icon. An oral history of Superman. A Brief History of Dick: Unpacking the gay subtext of Robin, the Boy Wonder. Death to All Superheroes. Yes, chum, there’s more links below the picture.
* The Antonin Scalia School of Law, or…
Koch donation leads George Mason to rename its law school the Antonin Scalia School of Law. That's right: ASS Law. https://t.co/7vtmEusF5s
— Justin Wolfers (@JustinWolfers) March 31, 2016
* Retirees Are Handing Wall Street Billions For No Good Reason.
* All politics is local: I grew up being compared to my overachieving cousin. Now he’s a Supreme Court nominee.
* Imagine living in a cell that’s smaller than a parking space — with a homicidal roommate.
* Up to half of people killed by US police are disabled.
* “Three generations of imbeciles are enough.”
* The Panama Papers: how the world’s rich and famous hide their money offshore.
* Study Confirms World’s Coastal Cities Unsavable If We Don’t Slash Carbon Pollution. But I say that’s not thinking big enough! 12 Ways Humanity Could Destroy The Entire Solar System.
* This Is How We Could Hide Our Planet From Bloodthirsty Aliens.
* Dibs on the screenplay: Japan’s Lost Black Hole Satellite Just Reappeared and Nobody Knows What Happened to It.
* Researchers Just Discovered a New State of Matter.
* Hot take watch: Aaron Burr, Not So Bad? I wish I knew the Hamilton soundtrack well enough to make a proper joke here.
* Statistical Analysis Has Revealed Game of Thrones‘ True ‘Main’ Character.
* Data suggests a mere 94% of Tor data is malicious.
* Indigenous video games you should download.
* Scientists bemoan SeaWorld decision to stop breeding orcas.
* Dark, gritty ad absurdum: The Tick in 2016.
* Trumpism in everything, Wal-Mart edition.
* NFL Sends Threatening Letter To New York Times, Demands Retraction Of Concussion Investigation.
* The Ultimate List of Weapons Astronauts Have Carried Into Orbit.
* Climate Model Predicts West Antarctic Ice Sheet Could Melt Rapidly. The end of Florida. These Maps Show What Washington Will Look Like When Antarctica Melts.
* Ambiguous utopias: In Pod-Based Community Living, Rent Is Cheap, But Sex Is Banned.
* Can an outsider become Amish?
* The strange case of Jennifer Null.
* Whatever happened to utopian architecture?
* Miracles and wonders: Treating Huntington’s With Gene Knockout Might Be Safe For Adults.
* Terry Gilliam tempts fate, again.
* The best Star Wars character you’ve never heard of.
* And the arc of history is long, but the MLA has changed its style guide again.
Written by gerrycanavan
April 5, 2016 at 8:00 am
Posted in Look at what I found on the Internet
Tagged with a vague mish-mash of identitarian buzzwords, Aaron Butt, academia, academia freedom, accelerations, Africa, Afrofuturism, Ainehi Edoro, aliens, ambiguous utopias, America, anonymity, anthropology, apocalypse, Apple, April Fool's, architecture, art, astronauts, austerity, Batman, Batman v. Superman, Bernie Sanders, board games, CFPs, cheating, Chronic Traumatic Encephalopathy, citation, class struggle, Cleveland, climate change, Clone Wars, coastal cities, Cold War, college basketball, college sports, comics, concussions, coral reefs, cost control, databases, Democratic primary 2016, Democrats, digitality, disability, distant reading, Don Quixote, Donald Trump, Duke, economics, energy, eugenics, extinction, fascism, Florida, football, futurity, Game of Thrones, games, genetics, genomics, George Mason, George R. R. Martin, global weirding, Google, grade inflation, graphs, Hamilton, Hillary Clinton, honors colleges, How the University Works, Huntington's disease, ice sheet collapse, income inequality, indigenous futurism, indigenous peoples, Jeffrey Dahmer, John McAdams, laughter, law schools, manifestos, maps, March Madness, Mark Bould, Marquette, mass extinction, matter, Merrick Garland, Michael Lovell, Milwaukee, miracles and wonders, MLA, my media empire, my scholarly empire, NASA, NCAA, neoliberalism, NFL, Occupy Duke, ocean acidification, orcas, outer space, over-educated literary theory PhDs, Panama Papers, paperbacks, Paradoxa, pensions, PhDs, Pioneer Award, pod-based community living, police, police state, politics, polls, poverty, prison, prison-industrial complex, race, racism, reboots, Republican primary 2016, Republicans, retirees, Robin, satellites, Scalia, science fiction, science fiction studies, science is magic, Sea World, sex, since the dawn of time man has yearned to destroy the sun, solar system, Soviet Union, sports, Star Wars, Star Wars Rebels, superdelegates, superheroes, Superman, Supreme Court, tax havens, taxes, tenure, Terry Gilliam, the Amish, the Anthropocene, The Dark Forest, the dark side of the digital, the dark web, the humanities, the Internet, the Tick, the university in ruins, Tor, trees, Trumpism, trutherism, underground media, unions, USSR, Utopia, villains, Wal-Mart, Wall Street, war on drugs, Washington DC, wealth, weapons, whales, Wisconsin, writing
Thursday Links
* Call for Applications: The Le Guin Feminist Science Fiction Fellowship.
* American SF and the Other. Ursula K. Le Guin, 1975.
This tendency has been remarkably strong in American SF. The only social change presented by most SF has been towards authoritarianism, the domination of ignorant masses by a powerful elite—sometimes presented as a warning, but often quite complacently. Socialism is never considered as an alternative, and democracy is quite forgotten. Military virtues are taken as ethical ones. Wealth is assumed to be a righteous goal and a personal virtue. Competitive free-enterprise capitalism is the economic destiny of the entire Galaxy. In general, American SF has assumed a permanent hierarchy of superiors and inferiors, with rich, ambitious, aggressive males at the top, then a great gap, and then at the bottom the poor, the uneducated, the faceless masses, and all the women. The whole picture is, if I may say so, curiously “un-American.” It is a perfect baboon patriarchy, with the Alpha Male on top, being respectfully groomed, from time to time, by his inferiors.
* Pentagon preparing for mass civil breakdown. Gee, you don’t say.
Spending priorities of US police agencies suggest they think they’re going to have to kill large numbers of civilians in the near future.
— Gerry Canavan (@gerrycanavan) August 12, 2014
* Who rules America? The answer may surprise you!
* Abolishing the Broken US Juvenile Justice System.
* Pentagon weaponry in St. Louis County. Those sound cannons were supposed to be for speeders. The Militarization of the Police. These Photos Prove Just How Chaotic The Situation In Ferguson Has Become. Ferguson, Missouri, August 13, 2014. There’s a police coup going on right now in Ferguson, Mo. Even the liberal Matt Yglesias. Even CNN’s pro-police witness describes an execution. They even arrested an alderman. “The Obamas danced nearly every song. A good time was had by all.” In Defense of the Ferguson Riots. “Hands up, don’t shoot” spreads beyond Missouri. The Death of Michael Brown and the Search for Justice in Black America. You have a right to record the police.
#thecopsaretheonesrioting #thecopsaretheonesrioting #thecopsaretheonesrioting #thecopsaretheonesrioting #thecopsaretheonesrioting
— Gerry Canavan (@gerrycanavan) August 14, 2014
* Editorial: Governor must let Ferguson be where better begins.
When you have an organized criminal conspiracy like Ferguson PD you arrest them all + then have the lower-ranked guys turn state’s evidence.
— Gerry Canavan (@gerrycanavan) August 14, 2014
At this point they ought to treat this like a mob trial.
— Gerry Canavan (@gerrycanavan) August 14, 2014
Step One: St. Louis County Police To Be Withdrawn From Duty After Ferguson Protests.
* 4 Unarmed Black Men Have Been Killed By Police in the Last Month. LAPD shooting of mentally ill man stirs criticism, questions.
* 5 Issues (Among Many) on Which Libertarians Are On Your Side.
* America Is Not For Black People.
* Climate change is here: Cataclysmic flooding in Detroit and Baltimore. Meanwhile: Democrats are attacking Mitch McConnell for not liking coal enough.
* How discounting tuition drives college admissions. Really eye-opening.
When Noel-Levitz takes on a client, it takes the school’s admissions and retention data, scrubs it clean and uses the results to tell the school who’s coming, who’s going and who might be enticed to stay with a few more aid dollars or certain enhancements to student life. Their formulas might show the benefits of giving four well-heeled applicants with high SAT scores a 10% discount from its $50,000 tuition–rather than give one high-achieving, lower-income applicant the $20,000 scholarship she needs. The award of an extra $5,000 to rich kids might provide an ego boost that moves the needle–and bring in four students sure to pay the remaining $45,000 each year. That same $20,000 generated an additional $150,000 in relatively stable net tuition revenue. “One of the things that’s a hallmark of this company is we don’t fly around and give our opinion,” Crockett notes. “We always will back that opinion with data points.”
* Reading Salaita in Illinois—by Way of Cary Nelson. Nearly 300 Scholars Declare They Will Not Engage With the University of Illinois.
* In fact, gender was one of the best predictors of whether an article would be cited or not. Walter writes that women authors received “0.7 cites for every 1 cite that a male author would receive.” Untenured women were the least likely to be cited.
* IHE blog post argues that basically all academic hiring is illegal on age discrimination grounds. Talking about this on Twitter yesterday I was directed to this brief indicating such claims would be unlikely to prevail in court, though in each of the named cases the college settled rather than let it go that far.
* Another great post in Adam’s continuing exegesis of Star Trek: Why a Star Trek film would never work.
The deepest irony here, of course, is that the “messianic” blockbuster plot is ultimately a story about white privilege, a fantasy set up to present it as deserved. No matter how hard anyone else works, the white hero always has that “special something” everyone else lacks — and his close friendship with the meritocratic rival always turns crucially on that rival’s acknowledgment of the white messiah’s right to be in charge and save the day. In contrast to this overtly white-centered paradigm, the Star Trek franchise has always been marked by diversity in casting, and over the years, it showed a profound interest in imagining alien cultures, sometimes in great depth (Klingons above all, but also Ferengi, Vulcans, Trill, and even the Borg). To start the reboot by actually destroying the alien culture most important to Star Trek, and in the process making Spock more human, is a profound betrayal on this level.
* Also from Adam: Genocide vs. War.
* Atomic Tests Were a Tourist Draw in 1950s Las Vegas.
* 10 Of The Most Bizarre Books Ever Written.
* A woman has won the Fields medal for the first time. Meanwhile: “Local Mom Decides Important Sports Case.”
* BPA-Free Plastics are probably poison too.
* First Nation Will Evict Mining Company After Massive Spill Contaminated Area Water.
* The Martian, but on Earth: Antarctic Halley Station lost power and heat at -32C.
* Scenes from the class struggle at Columbia University.
* Can the state legitimately force you to give your children food? Opinions differ!
* NYCABC has a list of Amazon wish lists for American political prisoners, which includes a name that might be familiar to you if you went to Randolph High School in the late 1990s.
* The 1979 “Rockford Files” Episode that Inspired “The Sopranos.”
* Some people just see further and farther: Comcast put customer on hold until they closed.
* RNC Condemns AP Exam’s ‘Radically Revisionist View’ Of U.S. History.
“Instead of striving to build a ‘City upon a Hill,’ as generations of students have been taught, the colonists are portrayed as bigots who developed ‘a rigid racial hierarchy’ that was in turn derived from ‘a strong belief in British racial and cultural superiority,'” the letter reads. “The new Framework continues its theme of oppression and conflict by reinterpreting Manifest Destiny from a belief that America had a mission to spread democracy and new technologies across the continent to something that ‘was built on a belief in white racial superiority and a sense of American cultural superiority.'”
* BREAKING: 2016 is going to be a real bummer. But don’t worry: there’s definitely no hope.
Campaigning against Obama in 2008, Hillary Clinton insisted that hope was unrealistic — and by god in 2016 she’s going to prove it.
— Gerry Canavan (@gerrycanavan) August 12, 2014
* Evolution proves there’s no such thing as ghosts. QED.
* Ice-T’s Dungeons & Dragons Audiobook is Out, and it’s Free!
* Are the kids all right? Are Millennials Compatible With U.S. Military Culture?
* Twitter vows to “improve our policies” after Robin Williams’ daughter is bullied off the network.
* Speaking my language: Multiversity Turns the DC Universe Into a Quantum-Theory Freakfest.
* And everything you want, in the worst way possible: Veronica Mars will return as an in-universe, Ryan-Hansen-scriped sequel for The-Comeback-style web series Play It Again, Dick.
Written by gerrycanavan
August 14, 2014 at 11:08 am
Posted in Look at what I found on the Internet
Tagged with academia, academic boycotts, academic freedom, academic jobs, Adam Kotsko, adjunctification, adjuncts, ageism, Amazon, America, Antarctica, apocalypse, Aquaman, audiobooks, Baltimore, Barack Obama, books, BPA, Cary Nelson, CFPs, citation, civil unrest, class struggle, climate change, coal, college admissions, college sports, Columbia, Comcast, customer service, cyberbullying, David Chase, DC Comics, Democrats, Detroit, Dungeons & Dragons, ecology, evolution, Ferguson, Field Medal, film, First Nations, Gaza, general election 2016, genocide, ghosts, graduate students, Grant Morrison, Hillary Clinton, history, How the University Works, hydrofracking, Ice-T, Israel, juvenile detention, Katrina, LAPD, libertarianism, male privilege, math, messiahs, Michael Brown, military-industrial complex, millennials, misogyny, Missouri, Multiversity, NCAA, nuclear tourism, nuclear weapons, nuclearity, oligarchy, Palestine, parenting, Pentagon, plastic, police brutality, police coups, police riots, police state, police violence, political prisoners, politics, prison, protest, race, racism, Randolph, rape culture, Republicans, resistance, revolution, riots, Robin Williams, Rockford Files, Saturday Morning Breakfast Cereal, science fiction, science fiction studies, sexism, Sopranos, St. Louis, Star Trek, Steven Salaita, television, tenure, The Comeback, the courts, the humanities, the kids are all right, the law, The Martian, the Other, the past is not another country, the past isn't over it isn't even past, tuition, Twitter, UIUC, Ursula K. Le Guin, Veronica Mars, violence, war, We're screwed, webisodes, white privilege
If You Want a Vision of the Future: Weekend Links
* CFP: Literature and Social Justice Graduate Conference.
* Dan Harmon’s advice for career happiness — imagine a job you could stand doing and then invent it — is more or less exactly how I describe what I do. I’m definitely getting away with something.
* Explains a lot: Long-Term Couples Develop Interconnected Memory Systems.
* Deafness and Hawkeye #19. How Hawkeye #19 Portrays The World Of A Deaf Superhero To A Hearing Audience, For Next Year’s Eisner Awards. I’m pretty sure this seals the deal on me using Fraction’s Hawkeye run the next time I do my comics class.
* An Astrobiologist Asks a Sci-fi Novelist How to Survive the Anthropocene.
KSR: I think we can make it through this current, calamitous time period. I envision a two-part process. First, we need to learn what to do in ecological terms. That sounds tricky, but the biosphere is robust and we know a lot about it, so really it’s a matter of refining our parameters; i.e. deciding how many of us constitutes a carrying capacity given our consumption, and then figuring out the technologies and lifestyles that would allow for that carrying capacity while also allowing ecosystems to thrive. We have a rough sense of these parameters now.
The second step is the political question: It’s a matter of self-governance. We’d need to act globally, and that’s obviously problematic. But the challenge is not really one of intellect. It’s the ability to enforce a set of laws that the majority would have to agree on and live by, and those who don’t agree would have to follow.
So this isn’t a question of reconciling gravity with quantum mechanics, or perceiving the strings of string theory. Instead it involves other aspects of intelligence, like sociability, long-range planning, law, and politics. Maybe these kinds of intelligence are even more difficult to develop, but in any case, they are well within our adaptive powers.
* Everyone knows the mass extinction of Earth’s animal life is an almost unfathomable evil. What this blog post presupposes is… maybe it isn’t?
* The Pre-History of Halbig. Senate documents and interviews undercut ‘bombshell’ lawsuit against Obamacare. Wheeeeeee!
* Same-sex marriage in the 19th century.
In 1807, Charity and Sylvia moved in together in Vermont. A historian uncovers their story.
* Show your support! Agamben and empty political gestures.
* Wisconsin Supreme Court bumming everyone out today.
* Adjuncts Would Qualify for Loan Forgiveness Under Proposed Bill.
* Under the terms of the proposed legislation, whose exact language has not been made public, colleges that don’t comply with its rules could face fines of up to 1 percent of their operating budgets.
* The open data movement might address some of these challenges but its greatest success to date has been getting governments to release data that is mostly of economic and social utility. The thorny political data is still closely guarded. There’s no “social physics” for the likes of Goldman Sachs or HSBC: we don’t know the connections between their subsidiaries and shell companies registered in tax havens. Nobody is running RCTs to see what would happen if we had fewer lobbyists. Who will nudge the US military to spend less money on drones and donate the savings to the poor?
* God, Democrats can’t even make Republicans eat their own shit right.
* The Long, Sad Fall of Richard Dawkins.
* John Oliver vs. America’s Nuclear Command.
* The Catholic Church Makes A Fortune In The German Porn Business.
* US’s Oldest Private Black University Is in Trouble.
* One Year of Prison Costs More Than One Year at Princeton.
* Prisoners are getting paid $2 a day to fight California wildfires.
* The youngest prisoner at Guantánamo.
* Why Bad New York Cops Can Get Away With Abuse.
* Green groups too white and too male compared to other sectors – report.
* Death threats for MedievalPOC at Tumblr because Reddit is a cesspool.
* David Frum’s Apology for His Nutty Theory Links to More Nutty Theories. Of course his credibility is now shot forever and we’ll never hear anything from him again…
* CIA Pisses on Rule of Law, Separation of Powers, No One Cares.
* The Case Against Cards Against Humanity.
* Scientists Have Measured 16-Foot Waves In The Arctic Ocean.
* The world risks an “insurmountable” water crisis by 2040 without an immediate and significant overhaul of energy consumption and demand, a research team reported on Wednesday.
* How Much Energy Would You Need To Replicate Elsa’s Powers In Frozen?
* Marvel might be doing something with Squirrel Girl.
* South Korean Robots Stand In For Real Baseball Fans.
* A Map Of The U.S., If There Had Never Been A Mexican-American War.
* The six-hour miniseries just greenlit by HBO is based on the book by Lisa Belkin and will be co-scripted by writer-producer David Simon okay I’ll watch.
* Postmodernism is the only explanation for black licorice.
* Tumblr of the minute: Michelle Foucault.
* A rare bit of good news: researchers whose last names begin with A, B, or C who are listed first as authors in articles in a variety of science journals receive, on average, one to two more citations than their peers whose names start with X, Y, or Z.
* Blogger fired from language school over ‘homophonia.”
* And I don’t care how this goes down: I will always consider it Marnie starring as Peter Pan.
Written by gerrycanavan
August 1, 2014 at 8:00 am
Posted in Look at what I found on the Internet
Tagged with "Is Health Care Reform Constitutional?", 2312, academia, academic jobs, academic journals, academic writing, actually existing media bias, adjuncts, Agamben, America, animals, apocalypse, Arctic Ocean, austerity, autism, Barack Obama, baseball, cards against humanity, Catholicism, CFPs, CIA, citation, class struggle, climate change, comics, conferences, Dan Harmon, David Frum, David Simon, deafness, Democrats, disability, Disney, drought, ecology, empty gestures, Firefly, Foucault, Frozen, Full House, futurity, games, gay rights, Gaza, girls, green economy, Guantánamo, hashtag activism, Hawkeye, HBO, health care, history, homophones, How the University Works, incentives, inspiration porn, Israel, job applications, John Oliver, Joss Whedon, kids today, Kim Stanley Robinson, labor, Last Week Tonight, licorice, literature, love, maps, Marquette, Marvel, mass extinction, Matt Fraction, medicine, memory, Mexican-American War, MPAA, neoliberalism, New York, nuclear weapons, nuclearity, our brains work in interesting ways, Palestine, Peter Pan, police brutality, police state, politics, postdocs, postmodernism, prison labor, prison-industrial complex, prisons, race, racism, rape, rape culture, Reddit, relationships, religion, Republicans, research, Richard Dawkins, robots, science, science fiction, separation of powers, skydiving, social justice, South Korea, Squirrel Girl, status update activism, student debt, superheroes, Supreme Court, surveillance society, television, tenure, the Anthropocene, the courts, the law, The Wire, theory, they say time is the fire in which we burn, Title IX, truthiness, Tumblr, unions, Vermont, war on terror, water, what it is I think I'm doing, wildfires, Wisconsin, work
Thursday Links!
* Apocalypse, New Jersey: Matt Taibbi reports from Camden. Camden has been like this for decades — while the discourse in the state is always about whether Newark and Jersey City can be “saved,” Camden is simply and permanently written off.
* “The countervailing voices of this notion that student-athletes are being taken advantage of has been the dominant theme and had played out pretty loudly in a variety of outlets,” Emmert said. “The reality is schools are spending in between $100,000 and $250,000 on each student-athlete.” Good news, everyone, I just figured out a really painless way to solve university budget crises!
* The academy as pyramid scheme.
* NYU re-unionizes. And Cooper Union blinks?
* Jason Segal to play David Foster Wallace in you know what I give up.
* New Data Show Articles by Women Are Cited Less Frequently.
* A privileged childhood as tragic disability.
Prosecutors were hoping to send Couch to jail for up to 20 years, but the defense made the case for why Couch should be let go with just an ankle bracelet and a court order to go to rehab for a while. Their main line of argument was that Couch was actually a victim too. His parents enjoyed a life of wealth and privilege and due to that never bothered to teach Couch that actions had consequences, an expert brought in to defend Couch dubbed the condition “affluenza.”
* BREAKING: Dissent isn’t Possible in a Surveillance State.
* That reality TV show that wants to send a group of people to go die on Mars is really making of go of acting like they’re serious about it.
* UW-Madison ranks as eighth ‘best value’ among public colleges.
* Dark horse apocalypses: Yellowstone supervolcano ‘even more colossal’ that previously thought.
* The Desolation of Smaug is basically Tolkien fan fiction, and Salon says that’s just fine.
* Meanwhile, The New York Post publishes some spicy Obama/Thorning-Schmidt slash fic.
* Draw feminist inspiration from this Pantene ad. No, really!
* Megyn Kelly Wants Kids At Home To Know That Jesus And Santa Were White.
* Simulations back up theory that Universe is a hologram.
* And science proves Mitochondrial Eve was killed by a really scary spider: Phobias may be memories passed down in genes from ancestors. And not to mention: Fear of Snakes Drove Pre-Human Evolution.
Written by gerrycanavan
December 12, 2013 at 11:22 am
Posted in Look at what I found on the Internet
Tagged with academia, academic jobs, actually existing media bias, adjunctification, apocalypse, Are we living in a simulation?, Barack Obama, Camden, citation, class struggle, college sports, Cooper Union, cosmology, David Foster Wallace, disability, dissent, drunk driving, evolution, fan fiction, fear, feminism, film, Fox News, genetics, grad student life, holograms, How the University Works, Jesus, Johns Hopkins, Lamarck was right, Mars, Megyn Kelly, misogyny, NCAA, New Jersey, NYU, over-educated literary theory PhDs, Pantene, phobias, politics, privilege, pyramid schemes, race, Santa, scams, sexism, simulation argument, snakes, spiders, supervolcanoes, surveillance society, The Desolation of Smaug, The Hobbit, Tolkien, tuition, unions, University of Wisconsin, white people, Yellowstone