Posts Tagged ‘Gertrude Stein’
Tuesday Night Links
* A Scholarship of Resistance: Bravery, Contingency, and Higher Education.
* Dear Professor James, #YOLO :). Riffing on this story, though this one is also in the background somewhere.
* Fat profits at NCAA while athletes play for free.
* David Simon on America’s war on drugs and The House I Live In. Introduction to TNI‘s marijuana issue.
* Open Casting Call for History Based Reality TV Show.
* Plot to rig the mayor’s race in New York City.
* The headline reads, “Pope’s foot-wash a final straw for traditionalists.” Elsewhere on the Catholic beat: A suspended Roman Catholic priest in Connecticut accused of making more than $300,000 in sales of methamphetamines is expected to plead guilty to one of the charges.
* So that’s why they act that way: Refusing to apologize can have psychological benefits.
* Did Pacific Islanders reach South America before Columbus?
* As Canada scrambles to dig up some of the world’s dirtiest oil, a bush doctor tracks mysterious diseases, poisoned rivers, and shattered lives. From 2008. I’m sure we’ve sorted it all out by now.
* The Atlantic interviews Kim Stanley Robinson.
KSR: With capitalism, we can say that it has very strong residual elements of feudalism. It’s as if feudalism liquefied and the basis of power moved from land to money, but with the injustice of the huge hierarchical feudal differences between rich and poor still intact. What is emergent in capitalism is harder to identify, but there may be something to the idea of the global village, also the education of the entire world population, so that everyone knows the world situation and wants justice, that may be leading the way to a more just global society. Seeing and exaggerating these emergent elements is something utopian science fiction tries to do. So the dichotomy is a sort of x/y graph in a thought experiment.
* One night in the life of a Boston cabbie.
* Game of Thrones renewed for fourth of eighty planned seasons.
* Drawing the impossible? Fully dressed Superheroines.
* Wake up, sheeple! Only 4% of voters say they believe “lizard people” control our societies by gaining political power.
* Presenting Adam Kotsko’s grading lexicon.
* Feminism for women who can’t cry at work.
* And your headline of the day: Why I Study Duck Genitalia.
Written by gerrycanavan
April 2, 2013 at 5:45 pm
Posted in Look at what I found on the Internet
Tagged with 2312, academia, adjuncts, Alberta, Boston, Breaking Bad, cabbies, Canada, capitalism, Catholicism, cheating, college basketball, college sports, Columbus, creative writing, crying, David Simon, duck genitalia, energy, English departments, feminism, feudalism, Game of Thrones, Gertrude Stein, grading, HBO, history, How the University Works, intersectionality, Keystone XL, Kim Stanley Robinson, lizard people, maps, marijuana, meth, misogyny, NCAA, No Child Left Behind, oil, pedagogy, polls, Polynesia, race, Raymond Williams, reality TV, science, science fiction, sexism, South America, standardized testing, superheroes, tar sands, teaching, the inadequacy of apology, the kids are all right, The New Inquiry, the Pope, war on drugs, war on education, writing, you only live once
Sunday Links
(some shamelessly borrowed from you-know-who)
* Britain paid reparations for slavery? That’s fantast–oh god.
The true scale of Britain’s involvement in the slave trade has been laid bare in documents revealing how the country’s wealthiest families received the modern equivalent of billions of pounds in compensation after slavery was abolished.
* Fathers matter, but so do grandfathers and great-grandfathers. Indeed, it may take as long as 300-500 years for high- and low-status families to produce descendants with equal chances of being in various parts of the income spectrum.
* The Ambition Gap: When researchers have studied the ambition gap, they’ve discovered something peculiar: It’s not there. Women do ask for more. They just aren’t rewarded for it. Via Feminéma.
* 7 Obscure Children’s Books by Authors of Grown-Up Literature. Joyce! Twain! Woolf! Eliot! Shelley! Tolstoy! Wilde! 7 (More) Obscure Children’s Books by Famous “Adult” Lit Authors. Huxley! Stein! Thurber! Sandburg! Rushdie! Fleming! Hughes!
* Actually existing media bias: Glenn Greenwald on what’s become of MSNBC.
I wonder: does someone who goes from being an Obama White House spokesman and Obama campaign official to being an MSNBC contributor even notice that they changed jobs?
* Mentoring and cruel optimism.
* Rehabilitating Zero Dark Thirty.
Susan Sontag once wrote that every mass art form is practiced and experienced as “a social rite, a defense against anxiety, and a tool of power.” Zero Dark Thirty’s critics, unwilling to understand themselves as the film’s intended audience, instead imagined that “real Americans” were being made tools of power through one of their most important social rites: moviegoing. What these critics did not confront was their own need to fend off anxiety. For Maya, as for many Americans, the anxiety has to do with the inadequacy of Osama bin Laden’s death as consolation for all of the disasters that preceded it. How else to explain the manic focus on proving that torture did not contribute to the search for bin Laden? It suggests a kind of desperation, a desire to hold up just this one episode as separate and different from the rest of the war. This desire is Zero Dark Thirty’s true subject, as well as the object of its critique.
* ‘Welcome to Dystopia’: We Are ‘Entering A Long-Term And Politically Dangerous Food Crisis.’
* The Princess and the Trolls: The Heartrending Legend of Adalia Rose, the Most Reviled Six-Year-Old Girl on the Internet. People are the worst. Jesus Christ.
* Texts from Pride and Prejudice. Texts from Don Quixote.
* George Saunders, lapsed Catholic.
Perhaps the classic expression of this idea belongs to none other than the outgoing pope, Benedict XVI, who as Cardinal Joseph Ratzinger was asked on Bavarian television in 1997 if the Holy Spirit is responsible for who gets elected. This was his response:
I would not say so, in the sense that the Holy Spirit picks out the Pope. … I would say that the Spirit does not exactly take control of the affair, but rather like a good educator, as it were, leaves us much space, much freedom, without entirely abandoning us. Thus the Spirit’s role should be understood in a much more elastic sense, not that he dictates the candidate for whom one must vote. Probably the only assurance he offers is that the thing cannot be totally ruined.
Then the clincher:
There are too many contrary instances of popes the Holy Spirit obviously would not have picked!
* Hayley Schafer chose her dream job at the age of 5. Three years later, her grandmother told her that if she wrote it down, the dream would come true. So she found a piece of blue construction paper and scrawled on it with a pencil: “Veterianian.” “No one told me how to spell it,” she remembers. “They just said, ‘Sound it out.’ ”
At the age of 30, she still has the sign, which is framed on her desk at the Caring Hearts Animal Clinic in Gilbert, Ariz., where she works as a vet. She also has $312,000 in student loans, courtesy of Ross University School of Veterinary Medicine, on the Caribbean island of St. Kitts. Or rather, $312,000 was what she owed the last time she could bring herself to log into the Sallie Mae account that tracks the ever-growing balance.
* A brief history of the car cup holder.
* Oscar voters overwhelmingly white, male.
* Oscar Pistorius and the Media. The curious case of Reeva Steenkamp’s boyfriend. Inspiration porn and compulsory able bodiedness.
* Stay Free or Die Tryin’: Scenes from the student protests at Cooper Union.
* Hidden behind a false wall and a fast-food restaurant, large black and brown images depict the faces of seven UCLA alumni, symbolizing the struggle of social activism and black history.
Written by gerrycanavan
February 24, 2013 at 9:32 am
Posted in Look at what I found on the Internet
Tagged with academia, actually existing media bias, affective labor, Aldous Huxley, animals, Barack Obama, books, Bowie, Britain, Carl Sandburg, cars, Catholicism, children's literature, class struggle, climate change, College of Cardinals, compulsory able bodiedness, Cooper Union, cruel optimism, disability, Don Quixote, drones, ecology, Emory, fantasy, feminism, film, flexible accumulation, food, George Saunders, Gertrude Stein, Glenn Greenwald, Harlem Shake, How the University Works, Ian Fleming, ideology, illness, income inequality, inspiration porn, James Joyce, James Thurber, Jesus wept, justice, kids today, labor, Langston Hughes, Lauren Berlant, Leo Tolstoy, literature, male privilege, Mark Twain, Mary Shelley, memes, mentoring, meritocracy, MSNBC, oligarchy, Osama bin Laden, Oscar Pistorius, Oscar Wilde, Oscars, papal conclave, pay equity, poetry, politics, post-Fordism, Pride and Prejudice, prison, prison-industrial complex, privilege, race, reparations, Salman Rushdie, slavery, student debt, student movements, T.S. Eliot, the Pope, the rich are different from you and me, the Vatican, torture, trolls, true crime, tuition, UCLA, veterinarians, Virginia Woolf, voting, war on terror, white privilege, women, women's suffrage, work, writing, YouTube, Zero Dark Thirty
‘The Only Thing That Any One Wants Now Is to Be Free, to Be Let Alone, to Live Their Life as They Can, but Not to be Watched, Controlled and Scared, No No, Not’
Written by gerrycanavan
December 23, 2011 at 9:43 am
Posted in Look at what I found on the Internet
Tagged with collaborators, France, Gertrude Stein, literature, Nazis, Vichy, World War II
Great Moments in Rejection Letters
Written by gerrycanavan
November 19, 2011 at 12:18 pm
Posted in Look at what I found on the Internet
Tagged with authors, Gertrude Stein, Hunter S. Thompson, Jack Kerouac, Nabokov, Sylvia Plath, Ursula K. Le Guin, Vonnegut, writing
Rejecting Gertrude Stein
Written by gerrycanavan
February 4, 2011 at 7:57 pm
Posted in Look at what I found on the Internet
Tagged with Gertrude Stein, rejection letters, writing
Sunday Links
As my never-ending semester draws no closer to its promised close, I present you with Sunday links.
* My good friend Ryan Vu has a long piece in this week’s Independent about alternative mapmakers and “what Google Earth doesn’t show you.”
* Desperate Hillary to Barack: “Next vote wins.”
* Fay’s brother Austin is profiled in the New York Times regarding his book, The Secular Conscience, which I saw him read from the other day.
* Gertrude Stein’s “Reflections on the Atom Bomb” from 1946.
They asked me what I thought of the atomic bomb. I said I had not been able to take any interest in it.
I like to read detective and mystery stories. I never get enough of them but whenever one of them is or was about death rays and atomic bombs I never could read them. What is the use, if they are really as destructive as all that there is nothing left and if there is nothing there nobody to be interested and nothing to be interested about. If they are not as destructive as all that then they are just a little more or less destructive than other things and that means that in spite of all destruction there are always lots left on this earth to be interested or to be willing and the thing that destroys is just one of the things that concerns the people inventing it or the people starting it off, but really nobody else can do anything about it so you have to just live along like always, so you see the atomic [bomb] is not at all interesting, not any more interesting than any other machine, and machines are only interesting in being invented or in what they do, so why be interested. I never could take any interest in the atomic bomb, I just couldn’t any more than in everybody’s secret weapon. That it has to be secret makes it dull and meaningless. Sure it will destroy a lot and kill a lot, but it’s the living that are interesting not the way of killing them, because if there were not a lot left living how could there be any interest in destruction. Alright, that is the way I feel about it. They think they are interested about the atomic bomb but they really are not not any more than I am. Really not. They may be a little scared, I am not so scared, there is so much to be scared of so what is the use of bothering to be scared, and if you are not scared the atomic bomb is not interesting. Everybody gets so much information all day long that they lose their common sense. They listen so much that they forget to be natural. This is a nice story.
* Questions you never thought to ask: How is Barack Obama like a tech startup?
* And in science news, a group in New Mexico claims they’re allergic to Wi-Fi, and is suing to have it banned, while huge cracks are developing in the Arctic ice.
Written by gerrycanavan
May 25, 2008 at 3:03 pm
Posted in Uncategorized
Tagged with atheism, Austin Dacey, Barack Obama, books, climate change, Durham, Gertrude Stein, Google, Hillary Clinton, ice sheet collapse, maps, nuclearity, politics, religion, twentieth-century disease