Posts Tagged ‘Grad School Achebe’
Grad School Achebe #8: “The Voter”
The long-anticipated to The Many Saints of Newark bonus episode is finally here: “The Voter”!
Written by gerrycanavan
November 12, 2021 at 9:38 am
Posted in Look at what I put on the Internet
Tagged with Chinua Achebe, Grad School Achebe, podcasts, The Many Saints of Newark
GSA #7: A MAN OF THE PEOPLE!
Gerry and Aaron talk about what may be their favorite Achebe novel yet, A Man of the People, originally published in 1966. Also they try to figure out whether or not America had a coup.
Written by gerrycanavan
November 5, 2021 at 9:24 am
Posted in Look at what I found on the Internet
Tagged with A Man of the People, Chinua Achebe, coups, Grad School Achebe, my media empire, podcasts, Trump
Grad School Achebe #6: ARROW OF GOD!
We are all but faulty microphones in the podcast of an angry God! Grad School Achebe is back with its very-long-awaited discussion of Arrow of God:
Thanks to Aaron Bady for his absolutely heroic efforts to recover the audio from this nearly lost episode and thanks to all of you for your grace and forgiveness on the sound quality. In this one we close out the so-called African Trilogy with Arrow of God — lots of religion talk for all you religion-heads, and a lot more to talk about besides…
Next week: A Man of the People!
Written by gerrycanavan
October 22, 2021 at 12:53 pm
Posted in Look at what I found on the Internet
Tagged with African literature, African trilogy, Arrow of God, books, Grad School Achebe, Grad School Vonnegut, my media empire, podcasts
Grad School Sopranos #0: THE MANY SAINTS OF NEWARK
We’ve had some audio problems with the Arrow of God episode, which Aaron is working hard on and which should be out soon very soon. In the meantime, please enjoy this emergency b-b-b-b-b-b-bonus episode of our brand-new season that is absolutely not a one-off joke, all about The Many Saints of Newark…
Written by gerrycanavan
October 3, 2021 at 2:21 pm
Just Another Monday Morning, Just Another Set of Monday Morning Links
- Grad School Achebe #5 is up! This one is on “Chike’s School Days,” “The Sacrificial Egg,” and “Akueke,” two stories in which singularly nothing happens (and also “Akueke”). Check it out!
- Coming to Marquette in 2022: J.R.R. Tolkien: The Art of the Manuscript! I’ll be teaching a course in relation to this exhibit.
- Fellowships at the Käte Hamburger Centre for Apocalyptic and Post-apocalyptic Studies (CAPAS) 2022-23.
- Fighting for the humanities at church-related colleges.
- We Asked, You Answered: Your 50 Favorite Sci-Fi And Fantasy Books Of The Past Decade.
- Cixin Liu novels coming to comic books.
- A Dazzling Octavia E. Butler Biography Explores the Sci-Fi Legend’s Early Life.
- In games, the environmental crisis is just another bedtime story. SimCity wasn’t built for the climate crisis. These games are. Kim Stanley Robinson: a climate plan for a world in flames. Activists Call It A ‘False Solution.’ But UN Scientists Say We Need To Suck Up CO2. Rewriting the Ecological Imagination. Imagining the climate-proof home in the US: using the least energy possible from the cleanest sources. In a First, U.S. Declares Shortage on Colorado River, Forcing Water Cuts. The best books about the post-human Earth. And we talk a lot around here about ideology at its purest, but folks…
Kim Stanley Robinson: ”We are in terrible trouble, and not everyone agrees that we are; never will everyone agree on this, even though droughts and fires, storms and floods, are coming faster than ever.” https://t.co/I3Nrqm1wFK
— Jonatan Hildén (@jhilden) August 23, 2021
- Athens Is Only Getting Hotter. Its New ‘Chief Heat Officer’ Hopes to Cool It Down.
- Everything You Need to Know About What’s Happening in Afghanistan. The Afghanistan Debacle: How Bush, Obama, Trump, and Biden Bamboozled the American Public. The War in Afghanistan Was a Scam. Cable News Military Experts Are On the Defense Industry Dole. What percentage of your life the U.S. has been at war, by birth year. Meanwhile. The long durée. Here we go again!
- UWM clears 5 million dollars in student debt using stimulus funds. College sports injected with millions in federal COVID funds.
Universities used COVID relief funds to subsidize athletic department lost revenue aka pay the salaries of people not actually doing athletic work.https://t.co/TPffiist9V pic.twitter.com/RtjXE35htx
— Nathan Kalman-Lamb (@nkalamb) August 20, 2021
- Inside Mississippi’s 4th Covid wave: Younger patients, crying nurses and 7 ICU beds left. Alabama Hospitals Have Run Out Of ICU Beds As COVID-19 Cases Surge. Children hospitalized with COVID-19 in U.S. hits record number. “We Are Running a Giant Experiment on Children”: Covid Deniers Put Kids at Risk. Study suggests young children most likely to spread COVID at home to family members. Why Is It Taking So Long to Get Kids the Vaccine? Go Ahead, Vaccinate the Kids. The Deeply Unfair Question Parents Must Answer. New School Year, Same Old Covid Chaos. Parents are not okay. Here we go again.
In seven states, hospitalizations from Covid-19 have passed their previous peaks because of the surge in cases this summer.
— The New York Times (@nytimes) August 17, 2021
There are few signs that the rise in hospitalizations is slowing nationally. https://t.co/XrFm7pJTky pic.twitter.com/2UUmKXrU4C
- Your Pandemic Sadness Is Called ‘Ambiguous Loss’. The coronavirus is here forever.
- Those Anti-Covid Plastic Barriers Probably Don’t Help and May Make Things Worse.
- ‘No concept of how awful it was’: the forgotten world of pre-vaccine childhood in Australia.
- As evictions rise, people may have to give up their pets. Animal shelters are calling for help.
- ‘Like fire through dry grass’: Documenting the Cuomo administration’s cover-up of a nursing home nightmare.
- Superhuman workloads cannot become the new normal.
the blip remains a great metaphor for coronavirus and associated phenomena of denial and deliberate forgetting, and all completely by accident https://t.co/Z7M6MC6UAJ
— flglmn (@flglmn) August 21, 2021
- The reopening challenge. When to go remote. Where is the university? Public Education Is Set Up to Fail in the Pandemic.
- Feds Deliberately Targeted BLM Protesters To Disrupt The Movement, A Report Says.
- South Dakota DOE removed Indigenous topics from social studies standards before final draft.
- Hospitals and Insurers Didn’t Want You to See These Prices. Here’s Why.
- How David Foster Wallace Used Compromise Aesthetics to Sell Infinite Jest.
- The Board Game Pandemic: Cooperative Sociotechnical Imaginaries Obscuring Power Relations.
- The meaning of the Paris Commune.
- “A Smile With Sharp Teeth”: Mike Richards’s Rise to ‘Jeopardy!’ Host Sparks Questions About His Past. Critic’s Notebook: A ‘Jeopardy!’ Host Search So Blundered It Almost Feels Intentional. Before Jeopardy! Can Choose Its Next Host, It Needs to Decide Who Its Audience Is.
- A Chair Reviews The Chair.
- 7 Thrillers About the Dark Side of Academia.
- How to Fix the Jobs Crisis. The Groves of Academe Are Always on Fire.
It's critical to the future of U.S. higher education that we put it this plainly: (1) The typical college professor is an adjunct. (2) The typical adjunct doesn't make a living wage. https://t.co/Dl9FncWfN2
— Jonathan Wilson (@jnthnwwlsn) August 7, 2021
I mean if I’m being *real* the Paw Patrol movie’s depiction of traumatized children trying to bring to justice the malignant politicians who have brought climate disaster to their city might have more relevance to the 21st century than anything on THE CHAIR.
— Gerry Canavan (@gerrycanavan) August 22, 2021
- Teaching Classic Lit Helps Game Designers Make Better Stories. See? I’m HELPING.
- [98] Evidence of Fraud in an Influential Field Experiment About Dishonesty.
Say what you will about the discipline of English but my analysis of science fiction texts (they are about how socialism is good) is universally valid across all time and space
— Gerry Canavan (@gerrycanavan) August 19, 2021
- Attack of the Superweeds.
- Tracing the Crisis of Desertification to Colonization.
- Why Transphobia Is at the Heart of the White Power Movement.
- Bill Aims To Change North Carolina’s Reputation As The Place For Adults To Marry Kids.
- The left eats itself, Current Affairs edition.
if it’s good enough for universities it should be good enough for journalists https://t.co/ywbDk4jJbg
— Gerry Canavan (@gerrycanavan) August 18, 2021
- Stanley Aronowitz Knew That Freedom Begins Where Work Ends.
- Why I’m Ditching Grades This Semester: Saying goodbye to a 120-year-old failed technology.
- The Bob Dylan sex abuse lawsuit. His tour schedule is now at the core of this.
- The Fierce Legal Battle at the Heart of the Fight Over Reclining Airline Seats.
- Berlant v Jameson: Dawn of Justice.
- OnlyFans to shut down in November.
- The most thrilling film I’ve seen in years.
- It’s a bop.
sources confirm it is a bop pic.twitter.com/8NkGuaG6DV
— sara david (@SaraQDavid) August 16, 2021
Written by gerrycanavan
August 23, 2021 at 9:13 am
Posted in Look at what I found on the Internet
Tagged with #MeToo, academia, adjunctification, adjuncts, Afghanistan, Africa, African literature, America, Andrew Cuomo, apocalypse, Black Lives Matter, Bob Dylan, books, carbon, CFPs, Chinua Achebe, Cixin Liu, class struggle, climate change, Colonization, comics, coronavirus, critical race theory, dance, David Foster Wallace, desertification, Dylan, ecology, film, Fredric Jameson, futurity, games, geoengineering, Grad School Achebe, grades, grading, How the University Works, imperialism, Infinite Jest, kids today, Kim Stanley Robinson, labor, literature, Lord of the Rings, marbles, Marquette, Marvel, MCU, my media empire, North Carolina, Octavia Butler, pandemic, parenting, pedagogy, podcasts, politics, race, racism, rape culture, science, science fiction, SimCity, social media, Stanley Aronowitz, student debt, superweeds, teaching, the humanities, the Left, Things Fall Apart, Tolkien, trans* issues, transphobia, UWM, white supremacy, work
Monday Morning Links!
- The latest Grad School Achebe not-so-mini-episode is up! This one is about two of Achebe’s short stories, “Marriage Is A Private Affair” and “Dead Man’s Path.” It was one of our best conversations yet, on some of the slightest literary territory we’ve yet staked out…
- More good podcast news: the Ranged Touch Homestuck podcast is a reality.
- ICYMI: I’ll be doing a lecture and seminar series as a virtual scholar-in-residence @TheRosenbach this fall on four of Octavia Butler’s novels. Here are the details! We’re reading Kindred, Wild Seed, Dawn, and Parable of the Sower…
- CFP: LGBTQIA+ Fantastika Graphics: A Digital Symposium November 20th, 2021.
- An assistant professor position in transgender studies at UC Davis.
- The results of Marquette AAUP’s financial analysis of the university is also out: Independent Analysis Reveals That Marquette University Finances Are Solid — Faculty Demand Greater Role in Financial Decisions and an End to Layoffs.
- A long-delayed interview with me for the Schmitt Fellowship “Leadership” project is up now with lengthy disclaimer indicating that I speak for no one but myself (which is true!).
- Cornell helpfully announces its intention to violate the ADA.
This is straight-up illegal and somebody in the office of the general counsel at Cornell should know it. https://t.co/M0D1PIWzmq
— Michael Bérubé (@MichaelBerube1) August 13, 2021
- Why Mass Effect is some of the best sci-fi ever made.
- Blood, gore and a healthy dose of catharsis: why horror can be good for us. The H Word: Post-Human Horror.
- John Carpenter Interview: “I’m not the biggest fan of talking about my films – but let’s do it.”
- Inside the Nichelle Nichols conservativorship battle.
- ‘Welcome To Cleveland’ rooftop still baffling Milwaukee passengers decades later.
- ‘Mind blowing’: Grizzly bear DNA maps onto Indigenous language families.
- Unnerving gender hypothetical corner.
this is *wild,* the sort of thing i would make up as an "unnerving gender hypothetical" that turns out to have once been routine medical practice: putting cis girls on hrt to keep them from getting "too tall"
— Dr. Samantha Hancox-Li (@perdricof) August 14, 2021
https://t.co/Mn2f5uYKBC
- Milwaukee took a big hit in the new census numbers. The question is whether they’re accurate.
- ‘Be Paranoid’: Professors Who Teach About Race Approach the Fall With Anxiety.
- Higher Ed Has a Credibility Problem.
- July was world’s hottest month ever recorded, US scientists confirm. It’s now or never. “How long can a fish hold its breath?”
- Andrew Cuomo: A Life. Time’s Up to re-evaluate conflict-of-interest policy in wake of Cuomo scandal.
- Why California is beating Florida and Texas on the Delta variant (so far). Inside America’s Covid-reporting breakdown. In the West, a Connection Between Covid and Wildfires. Delta Variant Raises Questions as Campuses Start Semester. Hey, Is Delta Bad for Kids? Yes and no. Why Parents Shouldn’t Hunker Down and Wait for a “Return to Normal”. COVID School Year Three. Covid Vaccines for Kids Can’t Wait.
Each day the question is how can this possibly get worse. Worster. Worstest. And it does.
— Eric Topol (@EricTopol) August 14, 2021
New records set daily, cases >25,000, hospitalizations >16,000, 31.9% test positivity, increasing deaths pic.twitter.com/V70wrA0x9z
Written by gerrycanavan
August 16, 2021 at 8:00 am
Posted in Look at what I found on the Internet, Look at what I put on the Internet
Tagged with #MeToo, #TimesUp, AAUP, academia, ADA, Afghanistan, African literature, Andrew Cuomo, animals, apocalypse, bears, books, Bush, California, CFPs, Chinua Achebe, class struggle, climate change, Cornell, coronavirus, COVID-19, DNA, Don't mention the war, ecology, fantastika, Florida, gay rights, gender, Grad School Achebe, Homestuck, horror, How the University Works, indigeneity, John Carpenter, kids today, Kim Stanley Robinson, Marquette, Mass Effect, Milwaukee, my media empire, my scholarly empire, Nichelle Nichols, Octavia Butler, pandemic, parenting, pedagogy, podcasts, politics, race, Ranged Touch, schools, science fiction, short stories, Star Trek, teaching, Texas, the Census, The Ministry for the Future, Things Fall Apart, trans* issues, war on terror, wet bulb temperatures, Wisconsin
A Whole Summer’s Worth of Links Crammed into a Two-Weeks-Sized Bag
- Some of my own stuff that’s gone up lately: Grad School Achebe #3: No Longer at Ease, my review of Lynell George’s A Handful of Earth, A Handful of Sky: The World of Octavia E. Butler, “Science Fiction and Utopia in the Anthropocene” from American Literature 93.2, and my scorching hot take on Loki and Black Widow.
- (There’s a mini-scorching-hot-take on Loki and The Suicide Squad in this Twitter thread if you’re needing more.)
- I also have a harder-to-get piece in this handbook to comics and graphic narratives about why Jimmy Corrigan is (hear me out) just a really great comic. Cancel me if you must!
- The current issue of SFFTV, on sf and games, was really great — read the interview section for free!
- The current issue of Extrapolation is great too — but no freebies there.
this but for all of science fiction #SFRA21 https://t.co/lSf60ivJxP
— Gerry Canavan (@gerrycanavan) June 21, 2021
- I have a nice little cameo in this great Butler story at LARB: Octavia Butler and the Pimply, Pompous Publisher. And I was interviewed for this piece on quantum mechanics and science fiction at The Quantum Daily.
- Hit me up Hollywood! Adaptations coming of Kindred, Parable of the Sower, and Fledgling, joining Wild Seed and Dawn.
- In addition to having a ton of great stuff in it, SFRA Review 51.3 is a very important issue of SFRA Review, including candidate statements for the fall election and proposed revision of the bylaws.
- CFP – Strange Novel Worlds? Star Trek Novels and Fiction Collections in Popular Culture, 31 Aug 2021. Call for submissions: Just Utopias. CFP: Tabletop Teaching: Board Games and Social Justice. CFP: Dissenting Beliefs: Heresy and Heterodoxy in Fantasy. CFP: Religious Futurisms. CFP: Extrapolation: Special Issue on Speculative Fiction’s Intersections with Posthumanism and New Materialism. CFP: SFFTV, “Oversights.” New book series: Mass Markets: Studies in Franchise Culture.
- A messy utopia is all we get. The Novel Solutions of Utopian Fiction. From the depths of the pandemic towards an ecosocialist utopia.
- Nations have delayed curbing their fossil-fuel emissions for so long that they can no longer stop global warming from intensifying over the next 30 years, though there is still a short window to prevent the most harrowing future, a major new United Nations scientific report has concluded. MIT Predicted in 1972 That Society Will Collapse This Century. New Research Shows We’re on Schedule. Dangerous Heat Wave Is Literally Melting Critical Infrastructure in the Pacific Northwest. 72% of the western US is currently in “severe” drought or worse. This is now the most extensive severe drought in recorded history. Six of California’s seven largest wildfires have erupted in the past year. Ground Temperatures Hit 118 Degrees in the Arctic Circle. Scientists spot warning signs of Gulf Stream collapse. The climate crisis haunts Chicago’s future. Drought deeps in Minnesota. By the mid-2030s even the moon won’t save us from regular floods as sea levels rise, says NASA. The insect apocalypse: ‘Our world will grind to a halt without them’. Joe Biden Is Already Failing on Climate Policy. There’s no going back, so what can be saved?
"Today, the combination of truly dangerous heat and humidity is rare. But by 2050, parts of the Midwest and Louisiana could see conditions that make it difficult for the human body to cool itself for nearly one out of every 20 days in the year."https://t.co/C41QGnwWCi
— ProPublica (@propublica) June 29, 2021
"According to Merriam-Webster, a drought is a temporary condition,” Eric Kuhn, former general manager of the Colorado River Conservation District, tells the @latimes. What is happening, he suggested, is something more permanent and troubling." https://t.co/IbpzNgQrgB
— Michael Hawthorne (@scribeguy) July 12, 2021
Lots going on but for me the big story is the environment on which all human society depends is undergoing a collapse so staggeringly rapid there are now multiple climate disasters across the US every week and you still can’t get representative democracy to even pretend to care.
— Gerry Canavan (@gerrycanavan) July 9, 2021
do you ever think about how the proposition that the Earth should remain inhabitable is an absolutely fringe position in US politics, without representation in either political party and routinely mocked by essentially all mass media of any sort
— Gerry Canavan (@gerrycanavan) June 24, 2021
"The Climate Change Review of Books" has a nice ring to it https://t.co/Ry4SkA8ElH
— Aaron Bady (@zunguzungu) June 25, 2021
As meteorologist @EricHolthaus described the record heat: “We’ve left the era of fucking around, and we’re now entering the era of finding out.”
— Tim Dickinson (@7im) June 29, 2021
- The Climate Crisis Is Worse Than You Can Imagine. Here’s What Happens If You Try.
- I Am Supposed To Be Writing.
- DC11 becomes a site of acute thermodynamics, as server heat multiplies server heat. If anything, the true threat comes from within, not without, as unchecked servers would overheat themselves into oblivion. Put bluntly: the tech industry makes our planet hot in the service of keeping its computers cool. This, I suggest, is what makes DC11 a specifically atmospheric media object. DC11’s reliance on and manipulation of air contributes to the cloud’s formal tendencies toward displacement and (re)centralization. Air expedites the transformation of data centers into climate bunkers. Furthermore, the air’s perceived insubstantiability, compared with other subjects of environmental media study, such as rare earth metals or wastewater, makes its pollution that much more challenging to account. Faced with these atmospheric operations, media studies must develop analytical techniques that pierce through the data center’s security veil to reveal how the cloud now programs the atmosphere against itself.
- The humanities are shrinking, except at community colleges.
- IHE profiles my Greensboro pal Jillian Weise. And another Greensboro friend is hitting the big time with a great new memoir.
- Trees as more-than-human collectives.
- Let’s Rank Every Ted Chiang Story Ever Published.
- How Sun Ra Taught Us to Believe in the Impossible.
- A Century of Science Fiction That Changed How We Think About the Environment.
- Accelerated History: Chinese Short Science Fiction in the Twenty-First Century.
- You can now listen to “The Three Body Problem” as a serialized podcast.
- The Futuristic Stink of Amazon’s Science Fiction.
- 75 New and Upcoming Sci-Fi and Fantasy from African Authors.
- Doctor Who is Anglofuturism.
- The Anarres Project.
- Very cool things happening at ASU.
Time travel is always developed as society crumbles, prompting the rich to flee into the past. There they assume positions of power, which makes the timeline even worse, while also speeding up the development of time travel. Each loop is shorter and nastier than the one before.
— Micro Flash Fiction📖 (@MicroFlashFic) July 4, 2021
- Remembering Climate Change: A Message from the Year 2071.
- How Twitter can ruin a life: Isabel Fall’s sci-fi story “I Sexually Identify as an Attack Helicopter” drew the ire of the internet. This is what happened next.
- Queer readings of The Lord of the Rings are not accidents. Future Lord of the Rings films should acknowledge the book’s queer leanings.
It’s very easy to imagine asking a room full of students “How is Frodo’s story like that of Beren?”, filling a white board with correspondences, asking, “Wait, if Frodo is like Beren, then who is his Luthien?” And then everyone’s eyes go wide as they realize the implications. 6/7
— Jason Tondro (@doctorcomics) July 1, 2021
- Study finds that few major AI research papers consider negative impacts.
- The Economic Recovery Is Here. It’s Unlike Anything You’ve Seen.
- Make Americans’ Crushing Debt Disappear.
- The Clintons Had Slaves.
- California mandated masks. Florida opened its restaurants. Did any of it matter? How We’ll Know It’s Finally Time to Stop Masking.
Pretty damn impressive
— Eric Topol (@EricTopol) July 31, 2021
Thanks Darren Lu @Reddit pic.twitter.com/ST6ueaaoY1
Every piece of data from real-life shows the vaccines work very, very well— yes, even against Delta. Just checked US vaccine breakthrough hospitalizations. It's 6,587 people among the ~163,000,000 vaccinated: or 0.004%. Three fourths are elderly— as happens with other diseases. https://t.co/TmZkxRlETk pic.twitter.com/fUaTyXprey
— zeynep tufekci (@zeynep) August 1, 2021
- What this implies is that, while liberal democracy witnessed a struggle for recognition, neoliberalism converts this into a struggle for reputation. The cultural achievement of commercial society, according to Honneth, drawing on Hegel, was that it enabled individuals to confront one another on the principle of equality via exchange. The rise of criticism in the bourgeois public sphere saw artworks judged on a principle of aesthetic autonomy—that is, independent of status. The ideal critic resembled the ideal consumer in the spot market, determining the value of each product on its intrinsic merits. But if, as Feher argues, neoliberal capitalism reconfigures social relations around the template of financial investment, the public sphere becomes governed by a very different temporality. Value becomes established not in exchange, but as a speculation on the future, calculated on the basis of data from the past—that is, in terms of reputation. Every artefact, identity, moral action and political demand becomes viewed as an addition to an archive of prior behaviour, revealing a pattern to be projected into the future. The present is only ever a new data point. The Politics of Recognition in the Age of Social Media.
- Luxury Surveillance.
- Things of Beauty: The Politics of Postmillennial Nostalgia for Mid-century Design.
- Utopia of Quirk: Mystery Men (1999) and the Fate of the Nerd.
- Our World, Our People: Nationalism and Sovereign Power in “The Falcon and the Winter Soldier.”
- Regulation as near-mystical abstraction.
- The Many Deaths of Neoliberalism. Liberalism in Theory and Practice. Why Neoliberalism Needs Neofascists.
- “Cat Person” and Me.
- Marvel and DC face backlash over pay: ‘They sent a thank you note and $5,000 – the movie made $1bn.’
- How Marvel conquered culture.
- WandaVision Not Television: Franchise on the Small Screen.
- The Dangerous Ideas of “Longtermism” and “Existential Risk.”
- Time For The End Of The Teen Gymnast.
The decentring of the He-Man/Skeletor binary paves the way for the universalist ecological struggle to save Eternia’s magic; or the cultural logic of Mattel in the age of disaster capitalism… https://t.co/dht0sd9Wv6
— Historicizing Matt is Negating the Negation ⵄ ⭕️ (@MattFlisfeder) July 26, 2021
- Strange Plaque Piques Interest On North Farwell In Milwaukee.
- Still thinking about this tweet from Juneteeth.
- How Chapel Hill Bungled a Star Hire. The Miseducation of White Children.
- Catholic colleges ignored faculty handbook provisions in layoffs, report alleges. Unlivable faculty wages put Catholic higher education in existential crisis.
- The Annual Report on the Economic Status of the Profession, 2020-21. The 2021 AAUP Shared Governance Survey: Findings on Faculty Roles by Decision-Making Areas.
- Academentia: the Organization Insanity of the Modern University. The Work of Culture: Of Barons, Dark Academia, and the Corruption of Language in the Neoliberal University.
- For College Finances, There’s No ‘Return to Normal.’
- The richest colleges didn’t need to cut their budgets in the pandemic — but they did.
- What if Everyone on Campus Understood the Money?
- Antiracism in the contemporary university.
- Betrayed by the Dream Factory. The Master’s Trap: What makes a graduate program predatory? ‘Financially Hobbled for Life’: The Elite Master’s Degrees That Don’t Pay Off.
- The end of the NCAA.
- The other freshman class.
Before the new academic job season starts, here’s the numbers for 2020-21, as gleaned from jobs listed on the Academic Jobs Wiki under “English literature” or “Ethnic studies” during that and previous academic years. Overall, like every year since 2017, it was the worst year yet. pic.twitter.com/1lHiCfT8Vk
— Ryan Heuser (@quadrismegistus) August 7, 2021
- So, most people are unaware that One Hundred and One Dalmatians, the novel, has a bonkers sequel called The Starlight Barking.
- Kareem Abdul-Jabbar: What the NBA Championship Means to Me.
- Amanda Knox: Who Owns My Name?
- The Mystery of Magic’s Greatest Card Trick.
- The Green Imagination in Board Game Landscapes. Mother Lands is a tabletop role-playing game free of slavery and colonialism. Board games have a colonialism problem.
- One of my favorite scientific figures is this one of the entropy levels of 100 world cities by the orientation of streets.
- 12 Insane Facts About He-Man And The Masters Of The Universe.
- Who will police Mars?
Every Gen Xer loves The Goonies, because we really wanted to believe there was some treasure or redemption or some kind of meaning in our abandonment
— The Actual, Real Cormac McCarthy (@_Shan_Martinez_) June 21, 2021
- Adjunct hell: the rise of the new campus novel.
- Generational politics is a socialism of fools.
- He Saved 31 People at Sea. Then Got a 142-Year Prison Sentence.
- There will be blood: women on the shocking truth about periods and perimenopause.
- The 20 Most WTF Magical Items in Dungeons & Dragons.
- The beauty of Earth from orbit.
- Aliens could have spotted Earth cross the sun from more than 1,700 star systems. A Possible Link between ‘Oumuamua and Unidentified Aerial Phenomena. The new American religion of UFOs. What if the truth isn’t out there?
- With UFO report making headlines, Wisconsin has its own history with the paranormal.
- Scientists are teaching drones to hunt down human screams.
- And don’t cry for me, I’m already dead.
— Against late capitalism ☭ Ⓐ (@Inhumansoflate1) June 26, 2021
Written by gerrycanavan
August 10, 2021 at 7:00 am
Posted in Look at what I found on the Internet, Look at what I put on the Internet
Tagged with 101 Dalmations, AAUP, academia, academic jobs, Achebe, Adam Kotsko, adaptation, adjunctification, adjuncts, African literature, air conditioning, aliens, Amazon, America, apocalypse, Arizona State University, artificial intelligence, basketball, Bill Clinton, Black Widow, board games, Cat Person, Catholic colleges, CFPs, Chapel Hill, Chinese science fiction, Chinua Achebe, Cixin Liu, class struggle, climate change, colonialism, comics, coronavirus, Dawn, debt, Doctor Who, drones, Dungeons and Dragons, Earth, ecology, English departments, Extrapolation, fandom, Fledgling, futurity, games, Goonies never say die, Grad School Achebe, graphic novels, Greensboro, gymnastics, He-Man, Heroes, How the University Works, immigration, intergenerational warfare, James Tate Hill, Jillian Weise, Jimmy Corrigan, Joe Biden, Juneteenth, Kareem Abdul-Jabbar, Kim Stanley Robinson, Kindred, liberalism, Loki, longtermism, Lord of the Rings, machine learning, magic, Marquette, Mars, Marvel, master's degrees, MCU, Milwaukee, Milwaukee Bucks, MLA, my media empire, Mystery Men, NBA, NCAA, neoliberalism, nostalgia, novels, Octavia Butler, oversights, Overview Effect, Parable of the Sower, perimenopause, podcasts, politics, quantum physics, queer theory, race, racism, regulation, run it like a sandwich, science, science fiction, SFFTV, SFRA, SFRA Review, slaves, social media, socialism, student debt, Sun Ra, surveillance, surveillance society, Ted Chiang, The Anarres Project, the Anthropocene, the cloud, the economy, The Falcon and the Winter Soldier, the Goonies, the humanities, The Simpsons, The Three-Body Problem, the truth is out there, the university in ruins, Things Fall Apart, time travel, Tolkien, trans* issues, trees, UFOs, UNCG, Utopia, WandaVision, Wild Seed, Wisconsin, worst financial crisis since the last one
GSA #3: NO LONGER AT EASE!
Sixty years later, Gerry and Aaron are joined by Keguro Macharia to talk about No Longer at Ease! Should it be illegal to teach Things Fall Apart without also teaching its sequel? Find out within…
Written by gerrycanavan
August 9, 2021 at 7:42 am
Posted in Look at what I put on the Internet
Tagged with Achebe, African literature, Chinua Achebe, Grad School Achebe, my media empire, novels, podcasts, Things Fall Apart
Grad School Achebe #2: 2 Things 2 Apart!
Gerry and Aaron are back for more Things Fall Apart, talking about parts two and three of the novel! We also talk The Sopranos, Watchmen, Breaking Bad, bad fans, The Things Fall Apart film, just a little Vonnegut, and Achebe’s 1973 essay “Named for Victoria, Queen of England”…
Written by gerrycanavan
July 1, 2021 at 9:22 am
Posted in Look at what I found on the Internet
Tagged with Achebe, African literature, Chinua Achebe, Grad School Achebe, my media empire, novels, podcasts, Things Fall Apart
GSA1: Things Fall Apart chapters 1-13
It’s all happening again…
Written by gerrycanavan
June 17, 2021 at 7:53 am
Posted in Look at what I put on the Internet
Tagged with African literature, Chinua Achebe, Grad School Achebe, my media empire, podcasts, Things Fall Apart, zunguzungu
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
Grad School Achebe: Episode Zero
The first episode of season two! Gerry and Aaron discuss the gameplan for Grad School Achebe, the history and reception of African literature inside and outside academia, Achebe’s place in the canon, his uncanny recurrent deaths on social media, the finer points of pronunciation, and more. Next week: the podcast falls apart.
Texts discussed:
Chinua Achebe in conversation with Bill Moyers (1988)
Chinua Achebe in conversation with Lewis Nkosi and Wole Soyinka (1964)
Chinua Achebe, No Longer at Ease (2015)
Written by gerrycanavan
June 1, 2021 at 8:12 am
Posted in Look at what I put on the Internet
Tagged with Africa, African literature, books, Chinua Achebe, Grad School Achebe, Grad School Vonnegut, my media empire, podcasts, Things Fall Apart, zunguzungu