Posts Tagged ‘Karl Marx’
Wednesday Links!
* The Department of English invites candidates holding the rank of Associate or Full Professor to apply for the inaugural Stephen E. King Chair in Literature honoring the department’s most celebrated graduate.
* Next week at Marquette: Cuban science fiction authors Yoss and Orlando Luis Pardo Lazo!
* 2016 James Tiptree, Jr. Symposium: A Celebration of Ursula K. Le Guin.
* Inside The Octavia Butler Archives With L.A. Writer Lynell George.
* I am writing to apply for the job–or rather “fellowship”–advertised on your website. As a restless member of the creative class, I agree that secure employment, renewable year-to-year, can be a suffocating hindrance. And besides, you specify “tons of snacks and beverages” as part of your benefit package. As a job-seeker motivated by a combination of desperation and snacks, I am an ideal candidate for this position.
* The report finds that the cost of forgoing tuition revenue from two- and four-year public institutions could run into the billions for some states: $4.96 billion in California, $3.89 billion in Texas and $2.53 billion in Michigan.
* Pence and gaslighting. Kaine’s tactical defeat. A Con Man of Epic Proportions. Donald Trump Tax Records Show He Could Have Avoided Taxes for A Mere Two Decades. The mind-blowing scale of Trump’s billion-dollar loss, in one tweet. Trump Foundation ordered to stop fundraising by N.Y. attorney general’s office. I want to believe! This seems legitimate. If Donald Trump Published an Academic Article. If you want a vision of the future.
yeah, just give it a good whack, it’ll turn back on https://t.co/baDF0VocTR
— Gerry Canavan (@gerrycanavan) October 4, 2016
* Bananas possible endings to the election, New Mexico edition.
* The Jet Propulsion Laboratory’s Visions of the Future.
* All told, however, Xiberras feels Louise could have done better. “We hoped for more followers to take notice of Louise’s behavior,” he says. “There were a few people who sensed the trap—a journalist among others, of course—but in the end, the majority just saw a pretty young girl of her time and not at all a kind of lonely girl, who is actually not at all that happy and with a serious alcohol problem.”
* Here’s a piece we can all get mad about, regardless of our pedagogical inclinations: Are We Teaching Composition All Wrong?
* The Luke Cage Syllabus. 15 Essential Luke Cage Stories.
* Teaching the controversy: The Identity of a Famous Person Is News. The outing of Elena Ferrante and the power of naming. Ars longa, vita brevis.
* Yahooooooooooo: Yahoo built email spying software for intelligence agencies, report says.
* Tracing the path of one of the world’s most in-demand minerals from deadly mines in Congo to your phone. More here.
* That’s a hell of an act! What do you call it? The Mets. Relatedly: in search of the Korean bat flip.
* Nostalgia for World Culture: A New History of Esperanto.
* Harvard loses a mere $2 billion from its endowment. My favorite part of these stories is always the comparison to passive management by an index fund.
* More running it like a sandwich: More than ever, college football programs are finding it difficult to draw and retain the young fans who grow up to be lifelong season-ticket holders. In many athletic departments, the reasons can practically be cited as catechism: high-definition televisions, DVRs, diffuse fan bases and higher ticket and parking costs.
lol maybe you shoulda thought of that before you spent all that money on your new stadium https://t.co/zz8WUHyK9j
— reclaim UC (@reclaimuc) October 3, 2016
* American University Student Government Launches Campaign in Support of Mandatory Trigger Warnings.
* Grand Hotel Abyss: The Lives of the Frankfurt School.
* Karl Marx, Yesterday and Today.
* The last days of Robin Williams, as told by his wife Susan Schneider Williams.
* ‘Killer Clowns’: Inside the Terrifying Hoax Sweeping America.
* No one knew then that Springsteen, like Smith, would provide a through-line for his fans as things got worse, shifted in unimaginable ways, shifted again. Springsteen has himself changed with the times, becoming more sensitive to the issues his most-adored music still raises. Born To Rundemonstrates that. The decency at the heart of his memoir is a balm. He’s not only survived a life in rock and roll; he shows how a true believer doesn’t have to get stuck within its illusions, no matter how much they also attract him. After all, to Springsteen, a worthwhile dream isn’t an illusion; it’s a form of work.
* Unusually Murderous Mammals, Typically Murderous Primates: You know, humans.
* One of the most important lessons of Ghosh’s book is that the politics of climate change must not tiptoe around the questions posed by colonial encounters. Issues of climate justice cannot be solved without first addressing questions of equitable distribution of power, historically rooted in imperialism. And therein lies Ghosh’s disagreement with those who find the source of the problem in capitalism itself (Naomi Klein, for example). For him, even if “capitalism were to be magically transformed tomorrow, the imperatives of political and military dominance would remain a significant obstacle to progress on mitigatory action.”
* Wealth of people in their 30s has ‘halved in a decade.’ Probably definitely totally unrelated: Federal student loans facilitate a pernicious profit motive in higher education.
* Patent application for a method of curing kidney stones.
* I think it’s 50/50 at this point that the Purge is a real thing before I’m dead.
* So You Want to Adapt The Tempest.
* No country on Earth is taking the 2 degree climate target seriously. Climate Change And The Astrobiology Of The Anthropocene.
* The secret lives of New Jerseyans.
* On our phenomenal (recent) accomplishments in space.
Written by gerrycanavan
October 5, 2016 at 12:46 pm
Posted in Look at what I found on the Internet
Tagged with #FreeCommunityCollege, 30 Rock, academia, academic jobs, adaptation, administrative blight, alcohol, alcoholism, Alison Bechdel, America, animals, apartheid, baseball, books, class struggle, climate change, college sports, comics, con artists, Cuba, D.B. Cooper, debates, domestic surveillance, Donald Trump, ecology, Electoral College, Elena Ferrante, endowments, English departments, entropy, Esperanto, feminism, foundations, Frankfurt School, fraud, frenemies, futurity, general election 2016, girls, Harvard, Hillary Clinton, Horkheimer and Adorno, horror, How the University Works, It, James Tiptree Jr., Jet Propulsion Laboratory, justice, Karl Marx, kidney stones, kids today, killer clowns, Korea, language, leftism, Luke Cage, Mad Men, Maine, Marla Maples, Marquette, Marxism, mass incarceration, McMansions, Mike Pence, millennials, NASA, NCAA, New Jersey, New Mexico, nonprofit-industrial complex, NSA, Octavia Butler, Orlando Luis Pardo Lazo, outer space, patents, politics, primates, race, racism, rhetoric and composition, Robin Williams, run it like a sandwich, scams, science, science fiction, Shirley Jackson, snacks, South Africa, sports, Springsteen, Stephen King, student debt, surveillance society, taxes, teenage sweetheart of the 21st century, the Anthropocene, the archives, the Congo, the courts, the law, the Mets, the Purge, the smartest kid on Earth, the suburbs, The Tempest, Tim Kaine, time, trees, trigger warnings, Ursula K. LeGuin, Utopia, Venn diagrams, Walter Benjamin, werewolf bar mitzvah, writing, Yahoo, Yoss
Tuesday Morning Links!
* The University of Wisconsin-Madison Mellon Postdoctoral Program invites recent PhDs to apply for its three two-year postdoctoral fellowships. The theme for 2017-2019 applicants is Translation, Adaptation, Transplantation.
* A message from the Marquette administration: Milwaukee, our home. And a letter from MUPD. Decades of grievances come to a head in Milwaukee after police shooting. The “unrest” in this city began decades ago. The Racial Segregation And Economic Devastation That Made Milwaukee A ‘Powder Keg.’ Powder keg. Decades in the making. Decades in the making. Ongoing tensions. Not a surprise. No one can deny. Outsider agitators! The radicalism of Black Lives Matter. “What can I do to help Milwaukee?” What It’s Like To Experience Black Pain In Milwaukee. Half of Wisconsin’s Black Neighborhoods Are Jails.
* Scientists say the US is facing the strongest hurricane season since Sandy hit the East Coast. California is in flames right now, with fires fueled by historic drought. A first-strike against climate change is the only solution.
* The 10 Most Overly-Specific Supervillains in Comics.
* The story no one asked for will finally become the series no one can watch. And when I made that joke on Facebook a friend reminded me of the goddamn forehead ridge thing that will be totally inescapable.
* I told you, Dad! New research from the Journal of Health Psychology seems to supports the theory that intelligent people spend more time being lazy than people who are more active.
* Racial Politics After Obama.
* Insurers say they’re losing money under the Affordable Care Act and are fighting for double-digit rate increases. This week Aetna announced it is pulling back from most exchanges.
for every problem there is a solution that is complex, market-based and far worse than the government just doing it https://t.co/lRJsJ72z5c
— sean. (@SeanMcElwee) August 16, 2016
* When the Hospital Is Covered but the Health Care Isn’t.
the hospital is in network, and the doctor is in network, ha ha very clever you caught that one! but that room is NOT part of the hospital
— Felix Gilman (@felixgilman) August 15, 2016
* Why the Next President Should Forgive All Student Loans.
* Area Man’s Wife Achieves Lifelong Dream Through Dedicated, Drive, and Incredible Physical Prowess. It gets worse, my friends. (It gets better too.)
* Juanita Broaddrick Wants To Be Believed. Right wing ratfucking though it may be, the cognitive dissonance required to simultaneously honor contemporary norms about sexual consent and the 90s-era “none of our business” defense of Bill Clinton’s predatory behavior seems increasingly difficult to sustain.
* The amount of effort this took was the most alarming thing given his history,” the guy told the Post. Anthony Weiner’s Back at It Again With the Saucy Twitter DMs. I’m still saying it:
I’d really love to see a documentary called ABEDIN just with the footage of Huma they cut from WEINER. She’s the enigma.
— Gerry Canavan (@gerrycanavan) June 4, 2016
* This Andrew Cuomo fan fiction is now totally my head canon.
* Comedy Central Cancels Larry Wilmore’s Late-Night Show. Comedy Central’s decision this week to cancel “The Nightly Show With Larry Wilmore” was a surprise. The reason it was a surprise is that Wilmore isn’t the real problem with the cable channel’s late-night offerings. Wilmore gone, but Comedy Central’s late-night problem is Noah.
* The Life Aquatic’s Seu Jorge Announces David Bowie Covers Tour. Chicago on (the day after) my birthday!
* NeverEnding Story Returns To Movie Theaters For Limited Run. I wish my kids were just a little bit older so we could do this.
* The Election Won’t Be Rigged. But It Could Be Hacked.
* How Cuba’s greatest cartoonist fled from Castro and created ‘Spy vs. Spy.’
* Their goal: Meet the Beatles on tour in 1966. Their solution: Impersonate the opening act.
* Hidden Figures really does look good.
* Suicide Squad and the bitter future of the DC Cinematic Universe.
* Why Colleges Still Scarcely Track Ph.D.s.
* How to make your office gun-free. Why, it couldn’t be simpler!
in order to make my office a gun-free zone, i have to tell every person they can't bring a gun in, every time pic.twitter.com/muJ5KUmrxF
— Gavin (@gavinsaywhat) August 15, 2016
* “People think a computer could run index funds—and they’re so wrong,” says Brian Bruce, a former index fund manager who’s now chief executive officer of Hillcrest Asset Management in Plano, Texas, and editor-in-chief of the Journal of Index Investing. Five years, tops.
* The rise of neuroprosthetics.
* Augmented reality games and ethics. And just for instance: Mich. couple suing Pokémon Go for ruining their quality of life.
* It is easier to imagine the end of dads than the end of capitalism.
* How legroom on major airlines compare to one another.
* “People don’t realize there is effectively no regulation of cosmetics.” Their Hair Fell Out. Should the F.D.A. Have the Power to Act?
* Don’t Bring Your Dog to Work.
* Donald Once Turned Down a Million-Dollar Bet on “Trump: The Game.” Trump Could Sweep Toss Up States And Still Lose The Election. Right now polls show Donald Trump losing every single swing state. The kids are all right. Hell, even their parents are all right. The Great GOP Divide.
The good news is
1) Trump is unpopular
2) His positions are unpopular
3) He's a nutcase
4) His party hates him
5) He has no infrastructure— HR-Compliant Freddie (@freddiedeboer) August 15, 2016
* Technology and Liberty in French Utopian Fiction.
* Taken in cumulative, these data suggest two unusual possibilities:
A. Karl Marx is the single most important, influential, and far-reaching thinker who ever lived, and his empirically attested syllabus presence accurately reflects this extreme degree of influence that he has over virtually all aspects of human knowledge.
-or-
B. Karl Marx enjoys a grossly outsized presence on college syllabi relative to his importance as a thinker, owing to a similarly disproportionate affinity for his thought among university faculty and particularly those faculty outside of the economics profession.
I really think you could make a halfway legitimate case for some version of (A) — bracketing religious figures like Christ or the Buddha, and limiting the scope of influence to the mid- and post-20C milieu — but the later observations about the Manifesto as a kindergarten lesson probably poison that possibility.
* A genetic mutation that has been found to cause people to act outrageously when they’re drunk also appears to lower the risk of certain metabolic disorders such as diabetes and obesity. Peculiarly, the mutation has so far only been found in Finnish people, and is thought to affect around 100,000 people in the Nordic country.
* You’ll Get to See the Documentary About Roger Corman’s Fantastic Four This Fall. And keep your eye out for For the Love of Spock.
* Why I’m loving No Man’s Sky.
* Weird futurism watch: in the future, should everyone be a twin?
* And this is basically just a panel from The Flash.
Written by gerrycanavan
August 16, 2016 at 9:09 am
Posted in Look at what I found on the Internet
Tagged with #BlackLivesMatter, #dads, academia, adaptation, Aetna, Affordable Care Act, air travel, airplanes, alcohol, Andrew Cuomo, animals, Anthony Weiner, artificial intelligence, Barack Obama, Big Shampoo, Bill Clinton, black box voting, books, California, class struggle, classics, climate change, cognitive dissonance, Comedy Central, comics, computing, consent, cosmetics, Cuba, David Bowie, DC Comics, decolonizing the mind, democracy, diabetes, dogs, Donald Trump, elections, fan fiction, Fantastic Four, FDA, feminism, film, Finland, France, futurism, futurity, games, general election 2016, genetics, guns, hacking, head canons, health care, Hidden Figures, Hillary Clinton, hoaxes, How the University Works, Huma Abedin, hurricanes, index funds, insurance, intellectual history, intelligence, Juanita Broderick, Karl Marx, Klingons, Larry Wilmore, laziness, legroom, Leonard Nimoy, literature, Madison, maps, Marquette, Marx, Marxism, military-industrial complex, Milwaukee, misogyny, mutants, NASA, neoliberalism, neuroprosthetics, New York, nostalgia, Olympics, outer space, outside agitators, over-educated literary theory PhDs, pedagogy, photographs, Pokémon Go, police violence, politics, polls, postdocs, pranks, prison-industrial complex, protest, race, racism, rape, rape culture, regulation, Republicans, riots, Roger Corman, RPGs, running, Seu Jorge, sexism, sociology, Spock, sports, Spy vs. Spy, Star Trek, Star Trek: Discovery, stock market, strength, student debt, students fans, Suicide Squad, superheroes, supervillains, syllabi, teaching, television, the Beatles, the courts, The Daily Show, the Flash, the kids are all right, the law, The Life Aquatic with Steve Zissou, The Neverending Story, The Nightly Show, the suburbs, the wisdom of markets, time travel, translation, Trevor Noah, twins, University of Wisconsin, Usain Bolt, Utopia, wildfires
MLK Day Links!
* Do you have a Hugo nomination ballot? John Scalzi’s Author/Editor/Artist/Fan Awareness Page may be of use to you. You’ll note from the last comment that Green Planets is in fact eligible for a “Best Related Work” Hugo…
* What, To the Black American, Is Martin Luther King Jr. Day?
* What Taking My Daughter to a Comic Book Store Taught Me.
* The question is, can we afford not to send our basketball team on a $800,000 trip to the Bahamas, in these troubled times?
* There’s always money in the banana stand.
The state Board of Regents for Higher Education approved $761,181 in merit raises for presidents, vice presidents and top administrators in the Connecticut State Colleges & Universities, but not without questions raised on the wisdom of doing so in tough budget times.
* Four Ways Human Beings Are Endangering Life on Earth.
* “Marine Le Pen is president of the Front National party in France.” Wow, The New York Times.
* Is ‘SimCity’ Homelessness a Bug or a Feature?
“I have Community College and a University, plenty of police coverage, yet I still have a city with homeless ALL OVER….. so what the fix for this or do I just not worry about it?” asks a player on Simtropolis.
* The bizarre ESP experiments conducted on aboriginal children without parental consent.
* Mike Ditka: I Wouldn’t Want My Child To Play Football.
* Another BitCoin processor turns out to be a scam.
* Behind the scenes at TfL’s lost property office.
* Severed: A History of Heads Lost and Heads Found.
Even while it leaps forward with features in its operating systems, Apple has a huge installed base it drags with it. And even if, for instance, iTunes has been a terrible mishmash for a decade, the fact that it continues to be one with a major new release in 2015 is beyond the pale: Apple should be learning, not starting over and re-inventing when it comes to stability and experience.
* 14th Dalai Lama announces he is also the 2nd Karl Marx.
* An Internet of Treacherous Things.
* Old-School The Legend of Zelda art from Nintendo Power.
* Louie‘s Paula Adlon is getting an FX series.
* The theme-park chain where children pretend to be adults.
Written by gerrycanavan
January 19, 2015 at 8:15 am
Posted in Look at what I found on the Internet
Tagged with academia, administrative blight, All You Zombies, America, apocalypse, Apple, Arkansas, Bitcoin, class struggle, college basketball, college sports, comics, computer bugs, cultural preservation, Dalai Lama, daughters, don't say socialism, ecology, ESP, football, France, Front National, FX, games, Green Planets, historical memory, homelessness, How the University Works, Hugo awards, imposter syndrome, informed consent, Islam, Islamophobia, Karl Marx, lost property, Louie, Marxism, Mike Ditka, misogyny, MLK, NCAA, Nintendo, Paula Adlon, police, police violence, politics, prostitution, race, racism, rape, rape culture, scams, science fiction, severed heads, sexism, SimCity, socialism, software, the internet of things, theme parks, there's always money in the banana stand, Zelda
Sunday Night Links
* As I mentioned on Twitter earlier: If it weren’t for this, I’d say Mitt Romney had a better-than-even chance of being elected president next year. The Obama administration just seems hopelessly lost; every failure of their triangulation strategy is only proof they need to triangulate harder.
* The Obama for America fundraiser I spoke with tonight seemed totally unsurprised by my “I’m not giving you any money. I’ll vote for the guy but that’s it” stance. Judging from her response, as well as what people are saying to me on Twitter and Facebook, it’s a line she’s heard before.
* Guestbloggers doing great work during Glenn Greenwald’s vacation: Income inequality is bad for rich people too. Austerity and the roots of Britain’s turmoil. Why “business needs certainty” is destructive.
* Nouriel ‘Dr. Doom’ Roubini: ‘Karl Marx Was Right.’
* Who mourns for Tim Pawlenty?
* Is Verizon the next Wisconsin? Maybe, but I’m hoping Wisconsin is still Wisconsin for a while. Via LGM.
* Looks like the shine is off “Twitter revolutions.”
“Everyone watching these horrific actions will be struck by how they were organized via social media,” Cameron said in an emergency session of Parliament on Thursday, during which he announced that officials were working with the intelligence services and police to look at how and whether to “stop people communicating via these Web sites and services when we know they are plotting violence, disorder and criminality.”
Cameron said: “Free flow of information can be used for good. But it can also be used for ill. And when people are using social media for violence, we need to stop them.”
* “You can’t reach for the stars at this point”: Generation Vexed. Via MeFi.
Since mid-2008, unemployment in the 16-to-24 age group has been 13% and higher, according to the Bureau of Labor Statistics. Last month, it stood at 17.4%.
Dim job prospects have taken some of the sheen off advanced degrees.
…
The job situation could haunt young people for years, said Andrew Sum, director of the Center for Labor Market Studies at Northeastern University in Boston.
More than half of earnings growth over a lifetime happens in the first decade of a career, meaning that early unemployment can depress future wages for life, he said.
But older workers are staying longer in their jobs, forcing twentysomethings to fill up retail, fast-food and other part-time spaces that traditionally give teens their first paycheck. Without work experience, young job seekers will need to scramble for options, he said.
* Seven Creepy Experiments That Could Teach Us So Much (If They Weren’t So Wrong)—and the forbidden experiment doesn’t even make the list.
* And “urban renewal,” c. 1850: 19th-c. African-American village unearthed in what is now NYC’s Central Park.
Written by gerrycanavan
August 14, 2011 at 6:50 pm
Posted in Look at what I found on the Internet
Tagged with austerity, Barack Obama, bipartisanship is bunk, capitalism, Central Park, centrism, class struggle, general election 2012, inequality, intergenerational warfare, Karl Marx, mad science, Mitt Romney, New York, politics, Republican primary 2012, revolutions, riots, strikes, the economy, the forbidden experiment, Tim Pawlenty, triangulation, Twitter, unemployment, unions, United Kingdom, urban renewal, Verizon, Wisconsin