Posts Tagged ‘dyslexia’
Wednesday Night Links!

* Somehow, Grad School Vonnegut has returned.
* I’ll be giving a talk at UCSB next Tuesday as part of my ongoing Aurora project. Email me for details if you want them!
UCSB Lit and Environment Research Center is proud to host Prof. Gerry Canavan on June 8th, 12pm (PST) as he presents his current research on the impacts of works by celebrated science fiction author Kim Stanley Robinson.
— UCSB English (@UCSB_English) June 2, 2021
All are welcome!@baker_r_r @me1odiousone @gerrycanavan pic.twitter.com/7XJwiOmWom
* What Is It Like to Be a Robot Fish Man? A Conversation with Ted Chiang.
* The Personal Works of Samuel R. Delany.
* She’s appeared in over 100 Star Trek episodes and three films — meet Tracee Cocco.
* The Planet after Geoengineering, at Biennale Architettura 2021.
* ‘A Watershed Moment’ for Shared Governance. AAUP Report: Survey Data on the Impact of the Pandemic on Shared Governance. Austerity Pedagogy and Unilateral Leadership Decisions. University of California Lecturers Unanimously Authorize Potential Strike. Why does college cost so much? Don’t save the university — transform it.
“Some institutional leaders seem to have taken the COVID-19 crisis as an opportunity to turbocharge the corporate model that has been spreading in higher education over the past few decades.”@AAUP’s report on COVID-19 and Academic Governance. https://t.co/TtzA8vk8OP
— MarquetteAAUP (@MarquetteAAUP) May 26, 2021
“…it also offers a hopeful counterpoint by documenting an increase in faculty influence at some institutions, including those where faculty members benefited from leadership transitions or from being more vigilant and outspoken.”https://t.co/l3GQgeVEhr
— MarquetteAAUP (@MarquetteAAUP) June 2, 2021
* A New Hire, a Koch Grant, and a Department in Crisis. A Poisonous Atmosphere at the County College of Morris. What Do You Do with a BA in English? The Native Scholar Who Wasn’t. How Many Black Women Have Tenure on Your Campus? On Decolonisation and the University. Academic Freedom on the Ropes.
* COVID-19 left college students depressed and anxious. Who will pay for their therapy?
If yesterday's story about the low rate of tenured Black woman in the US was the shot, here's a bleak chaser: in the obit today for the playwright and professor Robbie McCauley, the Globe says she was, at Emerson, "the first Black person to to receive tenure without a lawsuit."
— Jeff Melnick (@melnickjeffrey1) May 28, 2021
brb founding a journal where the only thing we do is publish articles like this pic.twitter.com/yRnNGvJjns
— Gerry Canavan (@gerrycanavan) May 28, 2021
you've heard of unpaid internship but have you heard of reverse financed internships? pic.twitter.com/lrULKunC2M
— dexxe (@dexxe) May 28, 2021
* Oklahoma teacher says summer class canceled due to bill that bans teaching critical race theory. Why Social Justice Triggers Conservatives. Words That Mean Nothing. The Republican Party, Racial Hypocrisy, and The 1619 Project. Nikole Hannah Jones, A Mega-Donor, and the Future of Journalism. Behind Nikole Hannah-Jones’s Tenure Case. “Cancel Culture,” Hypocrisy, and Double Standards. Cancel culture telephone. Wild.
* Imani Perry: Ok, here’s some of the CRT books that I’ve taught and read over the years.
*This* is the source of the "evidence" that caused Boise State to shut down a 50-section class and the legislature to enact a new statute https://t.co/15wSuTy7h0 pic.twitter.com/u8e54mw0fe
— Scott Lemieux (@LemieuxLGM) May 24, 2021
American states making it illegal to tell the truth about American history is such a cartoonishly dystopian development and yet here we are https://t.co/fCigv6aSae
— Gerry Canavan (@gerrycanavan) May 28, 2021
* We’ll Innovate Our Way Out of the Climate Crisis or Die Trying. Prayer for a Just War: Finding meaning in the climate fight. Why two women sacrificed everything to stop the Dakota Access pipeline. Eight children and an octogenarian nun took the Australian Minister for the Environment to court, to establish whether there is a ‘duty of care’ to future generations. What’s Worse Than Climate Catastrophe? Climate Catastrophe Plus Fascism.
* We’re Not Ready for the Next Pandemic. The End IS Near. No, Seriously. The unseen covid-19 risk for unvaccinated people. New Mask Guidelines Don’t Take a Huge Number of Americans Into Account. Necrosecurity, Immunosupremacy, and Survivorship in the Political Imagination of COVID-19. How the Wuhan lab-leak theory suddenly became credible. If the Wuhan lab-leak hypothesis is true, expect a political earthquake.
* We Should Applaud the Cuban Health System — and Learn From It.
* Queer Girls in The Wilds: Refusing White Feminism’s Settler Colonial Fantasy.
* An Elementary School Teacher’s Secret Life As A White Nationalist Writer.
* 500+ Biden/Dem staffers call on Biden “to end the…occupation, blockade, and settlement expansion that led to this exceptionally destructive period in a 73-year history of dispossession and ethnic cleansing. The resulting status quo is…apartheid.” Biden Steps Back On Student Loan Debt Forgiveness, Leading To Major Criticism.
https://t.co/kZhIwYzhzK pic.twitter.com/hv1lFTevyV
— Gerry Canavan (@gerrycanavan) June 2, 2021
- Texas Republicans finalize bill that would enact stiff new voting restrictions and make it easier to overturn election results. The election investigator hired by Vos wrote a police report that spawned partisan fight over voting rules in 2008. Are Democrats sleepwalking toward democratic collapse? Can Trump Run for President from Prison?
“sleepwalking” implies they aren’t consciously choosing this outcome knowing full well it is happening and what the outcome will be https://t.co/cS4z17P7jE
— Gerry Canavan (@gerrycanavan) May 30, 2021
that Trump had the precise mix of narcissism, impetuousness, and indiscipline to be able to open the door, but not step all the way through it, is a sort of miracle we are perversely determined as a country not to benefit from https://t.co/eyj4vGaXAq
— Gerry Canavan (@gerrycanavan) May 30, 2021
rough prediction of where we're headed:
— ryan cooper (@ryanlcooper) June 1, 2021
1) no filibuster reform -> no voting rights protections
2) last Dem bill passed is infrastructure/welfare thing ~25-50% as big as promised
3) huge Republican wave in 2022, democracy abolished in most swing states
4) second Trump term

* Small Businesses Have Surged in Black Communities. Was It the Stimulus? What happened to the $45 billion in rent relief? Hospitality Workers Struggle to Find Reliable, Affordable Ways Home. Giving people money makes them happier and safer.
* The Graveyard Doesn’t Like: The Texas Winter Storm And Power Outages Killed Hundreds More People Than The State Says.
* We’re Being Worked to Death by Capital. Work Isn’t Fulfilling Because Capitalism Is a Death March. Bosses are acting like the pandemic never happened. The Luddites Were Right. The Blue Welfare State. On Chandler Bing’s Job.
* Hard to Read: How American schools fail kids with dyslexia.
* Wisconsin Republicans advance ban on transgender athletes in girls’ and women’s sports.
* The Professor Who Became a Cop. The Lies Cops Tell and the Lies We Tell About Cops. And on the carceral futurism beat: How Will Radical Life Extension Transform Punishment?
* U.S. Soldiers Accidentally Leaked Nuclear Weapons Secrets Online: Report. Let’s hope the Russians haven’t heard about flashcards.
* The Spacefaring Paradox: Deep-space human travel is a lose-lose proposition.
* Crowdfunding is killing board game expansions. Video games have turned my kids into wage slaves – but without the wages. The Shortest Possible Game of Monopoly.
* Amazon Prime Is an Economy-Distorting Lie.
* Question time: my life as a quiz obsessive.
* How many American children have cut contact with their parents?
* Disaster patriarchy: how the pandemic has unleashed a war on women.
* When Watchmen Were Klansmen. Tulsa’s Greenwood neighborhood found prosperity after the 1921 massacre. Then the highways arrived. Tulsa and the Myth of Objectivity.
* Let’s review how Bill and Melinda Gates spent billions of dollars to change public education.
* “Effective Altruism” and Disability Rights Are Incompatible.
* Spare a Thought for the Billions of People Who Will Never Exist.
The truly compassionate will shed the most tears for children that couldn't possibly exist in any universe, like the child of Marie Curie and Clark Kent. This is where our sympathy should really be directed. https://t.co/GoQ2mYJzfC
— Eric Hittinger (@ElephantEating) June 1, 2021
* You can’t outrun a nightmare: The lasting trauma of rape.
* Dangerous Bodies & Dress Codes.
* QAnon Now as Popular in U.S. as Some Major Religions, Poll Suggests.
* Potatoes exonerated. Cleared of all charges!
* Scientists now think that being overweight can protect your health.
* Not great: The Age of Autonomous Killer Robots May Already Be Here. Yikes.
* The world’s riskiest project.
* Neuralink Brain Chip Will End Language in Five to 10 Years, Elon Musk Says. Well, if Elon Musk says it…
* The Oral History of A Different World.
* And Wes Anderson’s next movie has a release date. Nature is healing.
bear didn’t put up his best effort imo https://t.co/YQgwOi3ixJ
— Gerry Canavan (@gerrycanavan) June 1, 2021
I don’t care for it https://t.co/z96yAZrH4Y
— Gerry Canavan (@gerrycanavan) June 1, 2021

Written by gerrycanavan
June 2, 2021 at 4:06 pm
Posted in Look at what I found on the Internet
Tagged with A Different World, a new life awaits you in the off-world colonies, AAUP, academia, actually existing media bias, ADHD, Amazon, Amazon Prime, America, apartheid, artificial intelligence, Associated Press, Augustine, Aurora, bears, Bill Gates, BMI, Boise State, cancel culture, capitalism, China, class struggle, climate change, coronavirus, County College of Morris, COVID-19, critical race theory, crowdfunding, Cuba, dams, debt forgiveness, decolonize everything, democracy, depression, disability, disaster capitalism, disaster patriarchy, Disney, dress codes, drones, dyslexia, dystopia, ecology, education, Elon Musk, English departments, English majors, extrasolar planets, fascism, film, free speech, games, geoengineering, Grad School Achebe, Grad School Vonnegut, Greater Idaho, gymnastics, health care, housing market, How the University Works, Idaho, J.J. Abrams, Joe Biden, Kickstarter, kids today, killer death robots, Kim Stanley Robinson, Koch brothers, labor, language, minority rule, mommyblogging, Monopoly, my scholarly empire, neoliberalism, nuclearity, Oklahoma, Oregon, outer space, pandemic, parenting, Peter Singer, philosophy, podcasts, police, police state, police violence, politics, potatoes, QAnon, queerness, race, racism, rape, rape culture, Republicans, Samuel R. Delany, science fiction, science fiction studies, settler colonialism, shared governance, skydiving, Skynet, social democracy, social justice, Spanish Civil War, Star Trek, Star Wars, stimulus checks, stimulus package, strikes, student debt, talks, Ted Chiang, tenure, the economy, The French Dispatch, the rent is too damn high, Tracee Cocoo, trans* issues, trivia, Tulsa, Tulsa massacre, UCSB, unions, unpaid internships, USPS, Utopia, vaccination, video games, voter suppression, voting, war on education, Watchmen, Wes Anderson, white nationalism, Wisconsin, work, Wuhan, young people
Friday Night Links!
UPDATE: oof.
* ICYMI: Grad School Vonnegut #14: Happy Birthday, Wanda June! This one is Aaron’s “Vonnegut and Africa” episode.
* CFP: Utopia and Tabletop Games. CFP: NeMLA 2021 Creative Session, “Speculative Figures and Speculative Futures: Our Uncanny Postapocalypse.”
* Two core pieces of Watchmen criticism from my Watchmen class this week: “Panelling Parallax: The Fearful Symmetry of William Blake and Alan Moore” and “The Forgotten Story of Watchmen’s Unsung Hero.” The second one comes via my pal Jacob Brogan, who was kind enough to shoot some ideas about Watchmen, Higgins, and auteurship with me back and forth the other day.
When I ask Damon Lindelof, showrunner for the upcoming HBO series Watchmen, about John Higgins, his mind goes straight to the Beatles. “John Higgins remains one of the unsung heroes of Watchmen,” he says. “Certainly Moore and Gibbons were John and Paul, but Higgins was George and Ringo combined, and his striking colors reinvented the genre every bit as much as Alan’s words and Dave’s pencils.”
Higgins was indeed a hero of the graphic novel that Lindelof’s show riffs on, having been the man who did the coloring for the book. That makes him one of only three collaborators who created the Watchmen comic, along with writer Alan Moore and artist Dave Gibbons, and he is indeed underappreciated, even by the book’s supporters. But even that bold analogy isn’t enough: It’s more as if Beatles fans assumed the band consisted only of John and Paul and didn’t even know George and Ringo existed, much less that they created music of their own.
* Let’s Stop with the Realism Versus Science Fiction and Fantasy Debate.
* Wisconsin’s daily COVID-19 case count breaks record again, tops 2,500. They had to rescale Marquette’s COVID Dashboard today. Outbreak Stresses Town-Gown Relations in Wisconsin. Millennials and Gen Z are spreading coronavirus—but not because of parties and bars. Laughin’ and a-runnin’, hey hey. Skippin’ and a-jumpin’.
Slippage between multiple concepts described as “lockdown” and “quarantine” really doesn’t capture what the students in these quarantined dorms are experiencing. They’re being asked not to leave relatively tiny dorm rooms; even bathroom time is scheduled. The yard went up *today* https://t.co/a2vbvYEdwq
— Gerry Canavan (@gerrycanavan) September 18, 2020
They’re the dog that caught the car, now, though — having lured these students here they can hardly disperse them to the winds now. So they find themselves with a duty of care they never should have volunteered for and cannot responsibly provide. https://t.co/Jlv1sPUjvZ
— Gerry Canavan (@gerrycanavan) September 18, 2020
* Huge, if true: The United States is backsliding into autocracy under Trump, scholars warn.
* Federal judge temporarily blocks USPS operational changes amid concerns about mail slowdowns, election. The U.S. Commerce Department has announced it plans to block downloads of the Chinese-owned social apps WeChat and TikTok, beginning on Sunday. “The Trump administration argued against a challenge to its 2020 census plans by saying the Constitution requires a count but does not say it must be accurate.” Bill Barr’s Titanic Lack of Self-Awareness. Independently of Trump and this presidency, William Barr, his henchmen, and his Federalist Society supporters represent a powerful threat to the fundamental values of liberal democracy. The Department of Education as Right-Wing Troll.
What Trump calls "patriotic education" is racist education.
— Ibram X. Kendi (@DrIbram) September 18, 2020
the call for an explicitly fascist national curriculum is just the logical extension of all the 'PC culture has gone too far' rhetoric of the past few years and every one of you who contributed to that discourse is culpable
— Saladin Ahmed (@saladinahmed) September 18, 2020
* Only going to get worse: NYPD Crushes Tiny Anti-ICE Protest With Overwhelming Force And Bloody Arrests.
* The U.S. Is on the Path to Destruction.
when I hear it I think MY KIDS ARE GOING TO DIE YOUNG AND MISERABLE BECAUSE OF WHAT YOU MONSTERS DID https://t.co/SHMAiSafZQ
— Gerry Canavan (@gerrycanavan) September 18, 2020
* Friends And Family Members Of QAnon Believers Are Going Through A “Surreal Goddamn Nightmare.” It Makes Perfect Sense That QAnon Took Off With Women This Summer. Meet the families torn apart by toxic cable news. The Toxic Slime Will End Us.
* Where Is Biden’s Ground Game?
knocking on doors doesn’t win elections, an unprecedented massive dropout of all your opponents on the eve of Super Tuesday wins elections https://t.co/q23qXjHB2K
— Gerry Canavan (@gerrycanavan) September 17, 2020
For a club for pathetic sad sacks who love to lose, the idea of somberly turning the keys to the planet over to Donald Trump on a technicality for the second time must be intoxicating
— Gerry Canavan (@gerrycanavan) September 17, 2020
Ok this is pretty huge: the NYT says that if polls are as wrong as they were in 2016, Trump will win. This means we should actually assume Biden is losing, not winning. The lead is a mirage based on assuming that the exact same thing we’ve already seen can happen will not happen. pic.twitter.com/OWJ0sGxbZD
— Nathan J Robinson (@NathanJRobinson) September 18, 2020
also, when Trump won the first time he did it from a position of laughing-stock weakness, rather than being at the head of a cult-like fascist movement that will break any law or norm to win, and not having full control of the executive, the Senate, and the courts https://t.co/xKz2VA85BJ
— Gerry Canavan (@gerrycanavan) September 18, 2020
every tweet on this website should be this tweet https://t.co/gZ4PjZJ7JH
— Gerry Canavan (@gerrycanavan) September 17, 2020
we are less than two months out from the final crisis, and democrats are too busy declaring themselves 99.5% likely to win to hear what Republicans are already saying about the vote
— Gerry Canavan (@gerrycanavan) September 17, 2020
* Ugh, Tatiana Maslany is great casting for She-Hulk. I thought I was done with these!
* Academic freedom in action: U of T law school under fire for opting not to hire human-rights scholar after pressure from sitting judge. Search for new director of U of T law faculty’s International Human Rights Program leads to resignations, allegations of interference.
* BLM and the University of Chicago English department. I had some thoughts about this (blessedly left out of the article) the other day (and again the next morning).
* Big Ten announces football returning Oct. 23-24. No confidence at the University of Michigan.
So we're going to more-or-less intentionally infect a bunch of (disproportionately nonwhite) student athletes with COVID-19 by making them play sports for our entertainment, then use them to study the heart damage caused by COVID-19.
Tuskegee vibes https://t.co/K7TZ7Hkevl
— Will Stancil (@whstancil) September 16, 2020
* The Black Community in Indianapolis has been left reeling — as shocking and disturbing details released in the last 24 hours have emerged regarding a disgraced activist exposed for posing as a Black Woman. This one has exciting estate fraud on the side.
* Restaurants need a bailout. The Big Corporate Rescue and the America That’s Too Small to Save. Inequality Robs $2.5B from American Workers Each Year.
* Russia’s space agency chief declares Venus a “Russian planet.” Quick, someone wake up Rachel Maddow!
sometimes i remember that if a clown wants to trademark their makeup they have to paint it on an egg that is stored in a special clown egg warehouse and then i have to go lie down pic.twitter.com/5ltP6aQzL5
— jø mårius (@jo_hauge) September 16, 2020
the implication here is that the face breathes
which means it has lungs and blood pic.twitter.com/fymeQTIGrr— Heather Anne Campbell (@heathercampbell) December 14, 2017
* When overwhelmed unemployment insurance systems malfunctioned during the pandemic, governments blamed the sixty-year-old programming language COBOL. But what really failed? Meanwhile, in Wisconsin: Tony Evers firing DWD Secretary Caleb Frostman over unemployment claim backlog.
* Pedagogy corner! The Moment Is Primed for Asynchronous Learning.
* Dallas school district apologizes for assignment describing Kenosha shooter as ‘hero.’
Given the last tweet, I wanted to share this. It's a tinotype photograph ftom 1856, of three unidentfied women from Harvard's collection. Note their style, and think about how black women are too often styled during that era when portrayed on film. pic.twitter.com/jGH89cvL39
— Octavia Butler Predicted This MAGA Dystopia (@MsGo) September 16, 2020
* Reprogramming a Game By Playing It: an Unbelievable Super Mario Bros 3 Speedrun.
* The Boys confronts real American Nazis better than most comic-book stories.
* Songs of Love and Hate: “Layla” and Martin Scorsese’s ‘Goodfellas.’
* Patrick Blanchfield goes deep into the Call of Duty storyworld in my menchies.
* And it’s not all bad news: the sequel to one of the best Metroidvania games I’ve played in years is out on the Switch. And I’ve been loving Baba Is You, too! It’s a golden age for video games. AND NOTHING ELSE.
Written by gerrycanavan
September 18, 2020 at 6:14 pm
Posted in Look at what I found on the Internet
Tagged with 9/11, academia, academic freedom, Africa, America, anti-racism, apocalypse, asynchronous learning, autocracy, Baba Is You, bars, Bill Barr, Black Lives Matter, blackfishing, Call of Duty, Castlevania, CFPs, China, class struggle, climate change, clowns, COBOL, college football, college sports, comics, comics studies, coronavirus, COVID-19, Department of Education, disability, Donald Trump, drama, dyslexia, ecology, Electoral College, English departments, extraordinary popular delusions and the madness of crowds, fantasy, fascism, film, Fox News, games, general election 2020, Generation Z, Goodfellas, Grad School Vonnegut, Green New Deal, guns, Happy Birthday Wanda June, How the University Works, ice, income inequality, Indianapolis, Joe Biden, Kenosha, Kyle Rittenhouse, lockdown, Marquette, Marvel, masks, mass shootings, MCU, Metroid, millennials, moral panics, MSNBC, my media empire, Nazis, NCAA, Nintendo, Nintendo Switch, NYPD, Ori and the Blind Forest, Orphan Black, Palestine, pedagogy, plays, podcasts, police violence, politics, QAnon, quarantine, quit lit, race, Rachel Dolezal, racism, Republicans, restaurants, Russia, science fiction, science fiction studies, She-Hulk, speed runs, Super Mario, Tatiana Maslany, teaching, The Boys, the Census, the courts, the law, the stock market, Thomas the Tank Engine, TikTok, trolling, Tuskegee, unemployment, University of Chicago, University of Tennessee, USPS, Utopia, Van Morrison, Venus, Vonnegut, voting, Watchmen, whiteness, William Blake, Wisconsin, zunguzungu
Tuesday Links!
* Reminder: the deadline for abstracts for SFRA 2016 is the end of the month. MLA CFP: Science Fiction Comics. CFP: “Academic Insecurities: Precarious Labour and the Neoliberal University.”
* Milwaukee Journal-Sentinel: Sara Goldrick-Rab, the outspoken University of Wisconsin-Madison professor who vowed after tenure protections were changed by state lawmakers last year to leave Wisconsin, announced on her blog Monday night that she has accepted a job at Temple University and will start July 1.
* Black Study, Black Struggle.
* Huge, if true: Universities Run Into Problems When They Hire Presidents From The Business World.
* Ten Theses In Support of Teaching and Against Learning Outcomes.
* Why Do Colleges Still Use Grades?
* No other discipline of comparable size in the humanities is as gender-skewed as philosophy. Women still receive only about 28% of philosophy PhDs in the United States, and are still only about 20% of full professors of philosophy — numbers that have hardly budged since the 1990s. And among U.S. citizens and permanent residents receiving philosophy PhDs in this country, 86% are non-Hispanic white. The only comparably-sized disciplines that are more white are the ones that explicitly focus on the European tradition, such as English literature.
* Northwestern University students who qualify for financial aid no longer will have to borrow to pay for their education, part of a plan announced Thursday to make the school more affordable and prevent students from being saddled with debilitating debt.
* How Has the MFA Changed the Contemporary Novel?
* Rowling explores the magical history of America.
* My deep wound is video games. In the same way Bell “pretended to be someone else whenever [he] stepped outside of the house” and learned “to never talk about computer games in class or on the school bus,” I learned that my love for video games was excessive and embarrassing. I was swept away by those worlds in a way that nobody else seemed to be, and I walked around with my head full of pixels and quests and ideas. Video games made me very happy and very lonely.
and forever after our lives were divided into “before” and “after,” Before Classy and After Donald
— Gerry Canavan (@gerrycanavan) March 7, 2016
* Case Western in the ne– oh.
This isn’t the first time that an idea in psychology has been challenged—-not by a long shot. A “reproducibility crisis” in psychology, and in many other fields, has now been well-established. A study out last summer tried to replicate 100 psychology experiments one-for-one and found that just 40 percent of those replications were successful. A critique of that study just appeared last week, claiming that the original authors made statistical errors—but that critique has itself been attacked for misconstruing facts, ignoring evidence, and indulging in some wishful thinking.
* Marquette in the — oh come on.
* How a mistranslation made you think your tongue had ‘taste zones.’
* This simulation helps show you what it’s like to have dyslexia.
* Maps Show Where Bloomberg Aides Thought He Would Have Been Competitive.
* Meritocrats and Egalitarians.
* Reparations isn’t a political demand.
* Some Birds Are Just As Smart As Apes.
* The Future Of Telltale Games.
* “Some supporters of Rubio say bad strategy, poorly run campaign killing his chances.” What do the rest of them think is killing his chances?
* Meanwhile: Report Raises New Questions About Trump’s Ties To N.J. Mob-Linked Figure. Yes, Mitt Romney Could Actually Become The Republican Presidential Nominee.
* The remarkable persistence of the Green Man.
* “What I wish I’d known before I had gender-affirming surgery.”
* Daughter of Civil War vet still getting a pension.
* Actually existing media bias: The Washington Post ran 16 negative stories about Bernie Sanders in 16 hours. Going for the record!
* The Problematic Rape Reporting On ‘This American Life.’
* We want dead bodies to be in the right place. Caring for the dead is a foundational human activity, and so the wrong dead body in the wrong place, or bodies abandoned or desecrated, is considered an affront to the moral order. Why We Need the Dead.
* Mr. Spock and the autism spectrum.
* This is for you: an oral history of The Golden Girls.
* Rise of the hiking game: The Witness and Firewatch.
* What could go wrong? U.S. military spending millions to make cyborgs a reality.
* The neoliberal university will grind us down until there’s nothing left. Choose solidarity.
* Three Thoughts on Westerosi Political Economy.
* Slavoj Žižek and The Twilight Zone.
* And I don’t know about the other two law, but the third law of politics here is pretty much literally the predicament academia and most other public institutions find themselves in in 2016:
The simplest way to explain the behavior of any bureaucratic organization is to assume that it is controlled by a cabal of its enemies.
Written by gerrycanavan
March 8, 2016 at 9:00 am
Posted in Look at what I found on the Internet
Tagged with #BlackLivesMatter, academia, academic labor, actually existing media bias, adjunctification, animal intelligence, animals, apes, autism, Bernie Sanders, birds, Bloomberg, bureaucracy, Case Western, catastrophe, CEOs, CFPs, childhood, Civil War, class struggle, climate, climate change, comics, cyborgs, dead bodies, death, Dilbert, disability, divorce, Donald Trump, dyslexia, ecology, egalitarianism, ego depletion, Electoral College, eviction, Firewatch, Game of Thrones, games, gay rights, gender, grades, grading, Green Man, Harry Potter, hiking, homework, Houston, How the University Works, hurricanes, J.K. Rowling, Jonathan Blow, kids, language, learning outcomes, literature, Luke Skywalker, Madison, magic, maps, Marco Rubio, Marquette, meritocracy, MFAs, military-industrial-cyborg complex, Milwaukee, Mitt Romney, moralism, mortality, neoliberalism, Northwestern University, over-educated literary theory PhDs, parenting, pedagogy, pensions, politics, poverty, precarity, primates, psychology, race, racism, rape, rape culture, reparations, Republican primary 2016, Sara Goldrick-Rab, science, science fiction, Scott Adams, SFRA, solidarity, Spock, Star Trek, Star Wars, student debt, student movements, superstorms, taste, teaching, Telltale Games, tenure, The Golden Girls, The Twilight Zone, the Wisconsin Idea, The Witness, This American Life, trans* issues, University of Wisconsin, video games, war huh good god y'all what is it good for? absolutely nothing say it again, Westerns, Wisconsin, Won't somebody think of the children?, writing, Žižek
Wednesday Links!
* Today at Marquette! Dr. Robin Reid, “Conflicting Audience Receptions of Tauriel in Peter Jackson’s The Hobbit.”
* Tomorrow at Marquette! The English Department pop culture group geeks out over The Hunger Games.
* Solving prostitution the Swedish way.
“In Sweden prostitution is regarded as an aspect of male violence against women and children. It is officially acknowledged as a form of exploitation of women and children and constitutes a significant social problem… gender equality will remain unattainable so long as men buy, sell and exploit women and children by prostituting them.”
* Keywords for the Age of Austerity 13: Engagement.
The point of engagement in this sense is not to involve the public in making decisions, but make them feel involved in decisions that others will make. That this may be done with the best of intentions is important, of course, but ultimately besides the point. Like “stakeholder,” “engagement” thrives in a moment of political alienation and offers a vocabulary of collaboration in response. So if civic engagement is in decline, one thing that is not is the ritualistic performance of civic participation. The annual election-cycle ritual in American politics is a case in point here. In one populist breath, we routinely condemn the corruption of politicians who, it is said, never listen to the average voter. And in the next, we harangue the average voter for failing to participate in a process we routinely describe as corrupted. So it’s not the “apathy” or “disengagement” of the public that we should lament or criticize—it’s the institutions that give them so many reasons to be disengaged in the first place.
* A Few Questions About the Culture: An Interview with Iain Banks.
JR: In the past you have said that you are a short-term pessimist and a long-term optimist. Could you expand on this a bit: why are you pessimistic about the short term? What changes do you anticipate taking place between the near and far futures that change your pessimism to optimism?
IB: On a personal level, it’s damage limitation; a sanity-keeping measure. Expect the worst and anything even only half-decent seems like something to celebrate. The pessimism comes from a feeling that as a species we seem unable to pass up any opportunity to behave stupidly, self-harmfully (the Copenhagen climate talks being but the latest example). The long-term optimism comes from the the fact that no matter how bad things seem and how idiotically and cruelly we behave. . . well, we’ve got this far, despite it all, and there are more people on the planet than ever before, and more people living good, productive, relatively happy lives than ever before, and—providing we aren’t terminally stupid, or unlucky enough to get clobbered by something we have no control over, like a big meteorite or a gamma ray buster or whatever—we’ll solve a lot of problems just by sticking around and doing what we do; developing, progressing, improving, adapting. And possibly by inventing AIs that are smarter and more decent than we are, which will help us get some sort of perspective on ourselves, at the very least. We might just stumble our way blindly, unthinkingly into utopia, in other words, muddling through despite ourselves.
* “Gamechanging” climate deal that seems radically insufficient to the scale of the crisis. What could go wrong?
* Think Progress has a good rundown on King v. Burwell, the case that could kill Obamacare. Eight Reasons to Stop Freaking Out About the Supreme Court’s Next Obamacare Case.
* The growth of auxiliary activities was the primary driver in spending increases by the schools, the report concludes. From 2005 to 2012, $3.4 billion was spent on instructional and research facilities. The cost for nonacademic auxiliary facilities was $3.5 billion from 2002 to 2012. Limit athletic fees, check construction to control college costs, study says.
* The State Funding Sleight-Of-Hand: Some Thoughts on UC’s Proposed Tuition Hike.
* The Vitae Adjunct Retirement Survey.
* ProQuest says it won’t sell dissertations through Amazon anymore.
* Why Wall Street Loves Hillary
* It’s a start: Massachusetts Town Proposes First Complete Ban On All Tobacco.
* Inside America’s inept nuclear corps.
* The Digital Games Research Association (DiGRA) is under attack by critics who say academe is colluding with the mainstream media to push a feminist agenda in video games. How deep does this conspiracy go?
* When we think about the collapse of communism, we should emphasize and celebrate the attractiveness of a social market economy — not free enterprise.
* Can You Gentrify America’s Poorest, Most Dangerous City?
* Today, New York Mayor Bill de Blasio’s administration announced through the New York Times that it may stop making arrests for low-level marijuana possession, opting instead to issue tickets without detaining the suspect. This would feel like an important step toward reasonable weed policy if New York state hadn’t already mandated it 37 years ago.
* The seminars offered police officers some useful tips on seizing property from suspected criminals. Don’t bother with jewelry (too hard to dispose of) and computers (“everybody’s got one already”), the experts counseled. Do go after flat screen TVs, cash and cars. Especially nice cars. Police Use Department Wish List When Deciding Which Assets to Seize.
* One in every 8 arrests was for a drug offense last year.
* Milwaukee Public Museum’s Sci-Fi Film Fest gathers large audience.
* Running a school on $160 a year.
* Is Pre-K academically rigorous enough? That’s a real question this real article is asking.
* Hello, My Name Is Stephen Glass, and I’m Sorry.
* Grace Dunham is now an adult and she read this book before it was published. She is managing her sister’s book tour and they are best friends. Are we really going to overlook this?
* Also on the subject of Lena Dunham: this is an extremely clickbaity headline, but the testimony from a juvenile sex offender is fascinating and horrible.
* Sorry I Murdered Everyone, But I’m An Introvert.
* In America, today’s parents have inherited expectations they can no longer afford. The vigilant standards of the helicopter parents from the baby boomer generation have become defined as mainstream practice, but they require money that the average household earning $53,891 per year— and struggling to survive in an economy in its seventh year of illusory “recovery”— does not have. The result is a fearful society in which poorer parents are cast as threats to their own children.
* Although it looks like a traditional typeface, Dyslexie by Christian Boer is designed specifically for people with dyslexia.
* Scientists Have Finally Found The First Real Reason We Need To Sleep.
* Wes Anderson might be making another movie with puppets.
* In its gentle sadness, its deceptively light tone, and its inherent contradictions, this is the perfect ending to The Next Generation. One of these days, the crew will be dispersed. The Enterprise will be put in mothballs. Starfleet will complete its transformation into a body that none of them particularly want to serve in. But for now, their voyages continue.
* Peak Prequel: Sony Rumored to Be Prepping Aunt May Spider-Man Spin-Off Movie.
* And the best news ever: HBO Will Make Asimov’s Foundation With Interstellar‘s Jonathan Nolan. I may lose my mind over this show. I may even do a podcast. And a lot of what went wrong with Interstellar wasn’t even Jonathan Nolan’s fault!
Written by gerrycanavan
November 12, 2014 at 8:00 am
Posted in Look at what I found on the Internet
Tagged with "Is Health Care Reform Constitutional?", academia, adjunctification, adjuncts, administrative blight, Amazon, America, Aunt May, austerity, Baby Boomers, Barack Obama, Camden, carbon, child molestation, China, civil forfeiture, class struggle, climate change, coal, college sports, communism, dissertations, dyslexia, ecology, engagement, Fantastic Mr. Fox, feminism, film, finance capital, flexible accumulation, fossil fuels, Foundation, free markets, Gamergate, general election 2016, gentrification, grad school, grad student nightmares, Hari Seldon, HBO, health care, Hillary Clinton, How the University Works, Iain Banks, intergenerational warfare, Interstellar, introverts, Isaac Asimov, kids today, Lena Dunham, Lord of the Rings, marijuana, Marquette, Massachusetts, Milwaukee, NCAA, neoliberalism, New Jersey, New York, nuclearity, NYPD, oil, over-educated literary theory PhDs, parenting, Peter Jackson, police corruption, police state, politics, pre-K, prequels, prostitution, rape culture, reception studies, retirement, science fiction, sex offenders, sleep, smoking, Spider-Man, Star Trek, Stephen Glass, Supreme Court, Sweden, the courts, The Culture, The Hobbit, The Hunger Games, the law, TNG, tobacco, Tolkien, tuition, University of California, Wall Street, war on drugs, war on education, Wes Anderson, Won't somebody think of the children?