Posts Tagged ‘Pacific Ocean’
Sunday Morning Links!
* One might, it’s true, wonder how cultural capital has survived the last half century’s apotheosis of pop, the rollback of the old patrician-bourgeois culture of the West, postmodernism’s putative muddling of low and high. But the sociologists have gone and checked, and the answers are not hard to find: Fancy people are now more likely to consume culture indiscriminately, that is, to congratulate themselves on the expansiveness of their tastes; indistinction has become distinction. They are more likely to prefer foreign culture to their own, at least in some who-wants-takeout? kind of way. And they are more likely to enjoy culture analytically and ironically, belligerently positing a naïve consumer whose imagined immersion in the object will set off everything in their own approach that is suavely arms-length and slaunchwise. Such, point for point, is the ethos of the new-model English department: of cultural studies, new media, the expanded canon, of theory-courses-without-objects. To bring new types of artifacts into literature departments is not to destroy cultural capital. It is merely to allow new things to start functioning as wealth. Even here, the claim to novelty can be overstated, since it is enough to read Bourdieu to know that the claim to interpret and demystify has always been an especially heady form of symbolic power. The ingenious reading confers distinction, as do sundry bids to fix the meanings of the social. Critical theory is cultural capital. Citing Judith Butler is one of the ways in which professional people outside the academy understand and justify their own elevation. Bickering recreationally about the politics of zombie movies is just what lawyers and engineers now do.
* The Kindle edition of The Best of Kim Stanley Robinson is (still) on sale for $1.99. Here’s the LARoB review!
* Meanwhile, LARoB also reviews Paradoxa 26, which has my essay on Snowpiercer in it.
* Extrapolation 56.1 is now available.
Sherryl Vint, “Skin Deep: Alienation in Under the Skin”
Isiah Lavender, “Reframing Heart of Darkness as Science Fiction”
Sharon DeGraw, “Tobias S. Buckell’s Galactic Caribbean Future”
Karen May and David Upton, “‘Ser Piggy’: Identifying an Intertextual Relationship between William Golding’s Lord of the Flies and George R. R. Martin’s A Game of Thrones
Lee Braver, “Coin-Operated Doors and God: A Gnostic Reading of Philip K. Dick’s Ubik”
* Baltimore after Freddie Gray.
* The good inequality. Policy debate in the age of neoliberalism.
* Gene Wolfe, sci-fi’s difficult genius.
* The slow apocalypse and fiction.
* In the meantime, we will all have to cope with the fact that education technology has just become weaponized. Arizona State is now the first predator university. They are willing to re-define what education is so that they can get more students from anywhere. If they don’t kill other universities by taking all their students with a cheap freshmen year, they’ll just steal their fish food by underselling 25% of the education that those schools provide and leaving them a quarter malnourished. The result is that schools which stick to reasonable standards with respect to the frequency and possibility of teacher/student interaction now have to fear for their very existence.
* The Invented History of ‘The Factory Model of Education.’
* I’m seeing it mostly mocked and dismissed, but I think the Columbia case (K.C. Johnson summary at Minding the Campus) will be important flashpoint in Title IX law. My sense is that the wind on this is really changing strongly against the feminist left; we’re going to see many of the received truths of campus anti-rape policies coming under serious challenge. It’s going to be difficult, and it’s going to require some unpleasant reconsideration of the way we talk about this issue.
* New Simulation Shows How The Pacific Islands May Have Been Colonized.
* Incredibly, the percentage of parents throughout the state who engaged in the civil disobedience of refusing the test for their kids is higher than the 15 percent of eligible voters who cast a ballot for Andrew Cuomo in the low-turnout election last year.
* All of the juniors at Nathan Hale High School refused to show up for state testing this week.
* Against the creative economy.
* What if Man of Steel was in color?
* Gasp! The Apple Watch May Have a Human Rights Problem.
* Microsoft Word Spells the Names of Game of Thrones Characters Better Than You Can.
* Yes please: Telltale is making some kind of Marvel game.
* The Feds Say One Schmuck Trading From His Parents’ House Caused a Market Crash. Here’s the Problem.
* See, Dad? I knew you could survive on girl scout cookies.
* There’s always money in the banana stand: The Fed’s Cold War Bunker Had $4 Billion Cash For After The Apocalypse.
* Won’t you give? What you can? Today? Poetry is going extinct, government data show.
* I believe any crazy story with China in the headline. That’s my policy.
* Kid, I’ve flown from one side of this galaxy to the other, and I’ve seen a lot of strange stuff, but I’ve never seen anything to make me believe that there’s one all-powerful Force controlling everything.
Written by gerrycanavan
April 26, 2015 at 8:00 am
Posted in Look at what I found on the Internet
Tagged with academia, ADHD, adjunctification, adjuncts, adminsitrative blight, algorithms, Andrew Cuomo, apocalypse, Arizona State University, Baltimore, body cameras, books, bunkers, childhood, China, class struggle, climate change, Columbia, comics, contingency, Cornel West, creative economy, cultural capital, DC Comics, delicious Girl Scout cookies, disasters, do what you love, earthquakes, ecology, English departments, Eric Garner, Extrapolation, finance capital, flash crashes, Frank Miller, Freddie Gray, funerals, Game of Thrones, games, gender, Gene Wolfe, George R. R. Martin, high-frequency trading, How the University Works, inequality, Jedi, journals, kids today, Kim Stanley Robinson, Man of Steel, Marquette, Marvel, medicine, meritocracy, Microsoft Word, money, MOOCs, my scholarly empire, NBA, necrofuturism, neoliberalism, Nepal, New York, nuclear war, nuclearity, NYPD, over-educated literary theory PhDs, Pacific Ocean, pedagogy, poetry, police, police brutality, police violence, Polynesia, protest, race, racism, rape, rape culture, science fiction, Seattle, slow violence, Snowpiercer, sports, standardized testing, strippers, student movements, Superman, Telltale Games, The Dark Knight Returns, the Force, the wisdom of markets, theory, there's always money in the banana stand, Title IX, Won't somebody think of the children?, Yoda, Zack Snyder, zombies
Monday Morning Links
* CFP: SFRA 2015: The SF We Don’t (Usually) See: Suppressed Histories, Liminal Voices, Emerging Media.
* CFP: Paradoxa: The Futures Industry.
* Concerned about the Eaton SF/F archive at UCR.
*Ferguson, Missouri Community Furious After Teen Shot Dead By Police. Family of Michael Brown, Teenager Shot to Death By Ferguson Police, Talks About His Life. Michael Brown remembered as a ‘gentle giant.’ Now, riots.
* Black Life, Annotated. Further reading.
* Life as a victim of stalking.
* The Obligation to Know: From FAQ to Feminism 101.
Abstract: In addition to documenting and sharing information geek culture has a complementary norm obliging others to educate themselves on rudimentary topics. This obligation to know is expressed by way of jargon-laden exhortations such as ‘check the FAQ’ (frequently asked questions) and ‘RTFM’ (read the fucking manual). Additionally, the geek lexicon includes designations of the stature of the knower and the extent of what he or she knows (e.g., alpha geek and newbie). Online feminists, especially geek feminists, are similarly beset by naive or disruptive questions and demonstrate and further their geekiness through the deployment of the obligation to know. However, in this community the obligation reflects the increased likelihood of disruptive, or ‘derailing’, questions and a more complex and gendered relationship with stature, as seen in the notions of impostor syndrome, the Unicorn Law, and mansplaining.
* Ursula K. Le Guin talks to Michael Cunningham about genres, gender, and broadening fiction.
* What Makes Nigel Richards The Best Scrabble Player On Earth.
* What It’s Like to be a Doctor in a Supermax Prison.
* Teaching The Merchant of Venice in Gaza.
* Inside online communities for non-offending pedophiles.
* While emailing with a colleague yesterday, I realized that I had never really written about the so-called “spacecraft cemetery” of the South Pacific, a remote patch of ocean water used as a kind of burial plot for derelict satellites.
* Dispute Between Amazon and Hachette Takes an Orwellian Turn. Amazon Gets Increasingly Nervous. In which Amazon calls you to defend the realm.
* What happens when a female writer asks a question on Twitter about women’s health.
* BREAKING: The NCAA Still Doesn’t Care About Athletes. The lawsuit that could change everything. The NCAA in Turmoil. How the O’Bannon Ruling Could Change College Sports.
* “The alternative to partition,” he said, “is a continued U.S.-led effort at nation-building that has not worked for the last four years and, in my view, has no prospect for success. That, Mr. Chairman, is a formula for war without an end.”
* World War I, as Paul Fussell famously argued, discredited what Wilfred Owen in a classic poem called “the old lie”: that it is sweet and honorable to die for one’s country. But what it has meant to shift allegiances from nation to “humanity” has changed drastically over the 20th century among those flirting with wider and cosmopolitan sensibilities. Namely, the highest goal shifted from the abolition to the humanization of war.
* Nothing Says “Sorry Our Drones Hit Your Wedding Party” Like $800,000 And Some Guns.
* Scenes From COCAL: A Conference for Contingent Faculty Looks to Seize Its Moment.
* Why Does the United States Have 17 Different Intelligence Agencies?
* Why not a three-day work week?
* What was it like to be on Supermarket Sweep?
* I was told on numerous occasions that I was going to face a general court martial on six or seven charges. Then word came down from Washington to discharge me quietly. An honourable discharge. Maybe the thinking was that the peace movement didn’t need a martyr.
* Yes, the Myers-Briggs test is totally meaningless.
* Elon Musk Reveals Open Source Design for 14,000 Mile-an-Hour Vacuum Tube Railroad.
* So much dBilown the memory hole: Reconsidering the Legacy of Bill Clinton.
* Philip K. Dick’s only children’s book finally back in print – with many subtle nods to his most famous SF work. But not in the US!
* Where’s the Diversity, Hollywood? Sci-Fi and Fantasy Blockbusters Overwhelmingly White, Male.
* John Oliver’s Search for New Voices in Late Night.
* The New York Public Library’s hilarious archive of librarians’ harsh children’s book reviews.
* Peter Frase talks Vonnegut’s Player Piano on the Old Mole Variety Hour.
* The A.V. Club is celebrating Clone High.
* Party Like It’s 1999: Japanese Retrofuturism and Chrono Trigger.
* One of the weirdest episodes of Star Trek ever.
* Critical Theory after the Anthropocene.
* Tennessee Drug Tests Welfare Applicants, Discovers Less Than One Percent Use Drugs.
* Drilling Company Owner Gets 28 Months In Prison For Dumping Fracking Waste Into River. Sad that this would be so shocking.
* The Scott Walker Hypothesis. The Scott Walker Paradox.
* Giant urban sprawl could pave over thousands of acres of forest and agriculture, connecting Raleigh to Atlanta by 2060, if growth continues at its current pace, according to a newly released research paper from the U.S. Geological Survey.
* Island In Upstate New York Taken Over By Cats.
* Dream to revolutionize ostrich industry crumbles.
* What could possibly go wrong? Armed Right-Wing Militias Amassing Along Texas Border With State Lawmaker’s Blessing.
* But it’s not all bad news: Yellowstone Is Not Erupting And Killing Us All.
Written by gerrycanavan
August 11, 2014 at 8:00 am
Posted in Look at what I found on the Internet
Tagged with academia, adjunctification, adjuncts, amateurism, Amazon, America, Atlanta, Barack Obama, Bill Clinton, capitalism, cats, CFPs, child abuse, children's literature, Chrono Trigger, CIA, Clone High, college sports, comedy, diversity, Don't mention the war, drones, drugs, Durham, Elon Musk, FAQs, FBI, feminism, film, forever war, futurity, games, Gaza, Gunsmoke, immigration, Iraq, Israel, J. Lloyd Eaton Collection, Japan, John Oliver, Kindles, literature, male privilege, medicine, megapolis, Michael Brown, military-industrial complex, militias, misogyny, Missouri, moral panic, Myers-Briggs, NASA, NCAA, neoliberalism, NSA, nuclearity, NYPD, ostriches, outer space, Pacific Ocean, Palestine, Paradoxa, peace, peace movement, pedophilia, Peter Frase, Player Piano, police brutality, police state, police violence, prison-industrial complex, prisons, psychology, publishing, race, racism, Raleigh, retrofuturism, riots, satellites, science, science fiction, Scott Walker, Scrabble, Shakespeare, spacecraft cemetery, St. Louis, stalking, Star Trek, Supermarket Sweep, supervolcanoes, surveillance society, surveillance state, tasers, television, Tennessee, Texas, the 1990s, the abolition of work, the Anthropocene, the archives, the courts, the Internet, the law, The Merchant of Venice, The New Inquiry, the obligation to know, the South, theory, tracking, trains, Twitter, UC Riverside, unions, Ursula K. Le Guin, Utopia, Vonnegut, war huh good god y'all what is it good for? absolutely nothing say it again, war on drugs, war on the poor, What could possibly go wrong?, what it is I think I'm doing, white privilege, Wisconsin, writing, Yellowstone, Yemen
Clean, Safe, and Too Cheap to Meter
Written by gerrycanavan
October 14, 2013 at 11:12 pm
Posted in Look at what I found on the Internet
Tagged with ecology, Fukushima, Japan, nuclear energy, nuclearity, Pacific Ocean, pollution, radiation, too cheap to meter
Monday!
* ‘Democrats Gleeful at Prospect of Running Against Gingrich.’ That’s the first bit of Gingrich-related news that’s made me nervous.
* io9 has the trailer for Joss Whedon’s long-delayed The Cabin in the Woods.
* Duke University trustee Bruce Karsh and his wife Martha have donated $50 million to Duke for a permanent endowment to support need-based financial aid for undergraduate students from the United States and other countries, President Richard H. Brodhead announced Monday.
* Randy Balko vs. paramilitary creep.
* Aaron Bady on the Oakland Commune.
* Henry Aaron: So… here is my prediction. The Supreme Court will sustain the individual mandate, and it will do so not by the narrow 5 to 4 split that has become so familiar, but by a vote of 7 to 2. Or 8 to 1. Justices Breyer, Ginsburg, Sottamayor, and Kagan are virtually certain to find the mandate constitutional. But also voting to sustain it, I believe, will be Justices Scalia and Kennedy, based on reasoning similar to that of Silberman and Sutton. Justices Roberts and Kennedy are in play and I am assuming that either or both will vote to affirm the mandate. Justice Thomas, who has staked out a far-reaching opposition to federal regulation in many currently accepted forms, will say that the mandate exceeds Congress’s constitutional authority.
* Apocalypse now: Radioactive water from Fukushima might have found its way into the Pacific ocean and experts believe it could contain strontium.
* And today from America’s finest news source: Global Warming May Be Irreversible by 2006.
* But it’s okay that we’ve ruined this planet; after all, there’s always Keppler 22b.
Written by gerrycanavan
December 5, 2011 at 3:40 pm
Posted in Look at what I found on the Internet
Tagged with "Is Health Care Reform Constitutional?", climate change, death, Democrats, doctors, Duke, ecology, extrasolar planets, Fukushima, general election 2012, health care, horror, Joss Whedon, Kepler-22b, medicine, military urbanism, Newt Gingrich, nuclearity, Occupy Oakland, outer space, Pacific Ocean, places to invade next, police brutality, police state, politics, Supreme Court, The Cabin the Woods, zunguzungu