Posts Tagged ‘Shirley Jackson’
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
Closing Every Tab Because My Computer Will Barely Work Right Now Links
Sorry I’ve been so quiet! Between summer teaching and wrapping up a few big projects it’s been a very busy couple of weeks. Here’s every tab I had open!
* CFP: Hamilton: A Special Issue of Studies in Musical Theatre.
* 2016 World Fantasy Award Finalists and Shirley Jackson Award Winners.
* Graduate students in literary studies may often feel despair, even deadness and meanness, but an excess of cool seems like an especially implausible explanation. Far more damaging are bad mentoring, crippling overwork, social and geographic isolation, and the absence of opportunities to join the profession after spending a decade training. For too many graduate students, whether critical or postcritical, earning a PhD is the end — not the beginning — of a promising academic career. The skepticism that threatens graduate students and young faculty members results, therefore, not from the skepticism of academic theorists but from the skepticism of legislatures, administrators, donors, austerity-loving think tanks, and taxpayers. The Hangman of Critique.
* Jeff Vandermeer: Hauntings in the Anthropocene.
* The Legendary Ted Chiang on Seeing His Stories Adapted and the Ever-Expanding Popularity of SF.
* The Year’s Best American Science Fiction and Fantasy Stories Have Been Determined.
* The Best of Science Fiction (1946) and The Big Book of Science Fiction (2016).
* Cleveland Police Are Gearing Up for Mayhem at the GOP Convention. Case Western in the News: Changes to campus operations during RNC. What’s a University For? Meet the Student Fighting Case Western U. for Shutting Down Campus to House 1,900 Police Officers.
* At least the convention went great.
Seriously, this is the national equivalent of an all-campus read. That YouTube clip will be shown a billion times. https://t.co/GR0A6QW6Y6
— Gerry Canavan (@gerrycanavan) July 19, 2016
* “Secretary Clinton Is A Different Person Than Donald Trump,” Says Bernie Sanders in Ringing Endorsement. GOP Establishment Relieved After Conventionally Abhorrent Beliefs Make Way Onto Presidential Ticket.
trump at rnc: the rivers of blood are only the beginning
hillary at dnc: ghostbusters was [squinting at teleprompter] on fleek?— raandy (@randygdub) July 22, 2016
* Clinton has 945 Ways to Win. Trump Has 72.
* A Brief History of Turkey and Military Coups. The view from inside the bunker. Turkey ‘suspends 15,000 state education employees’ after attempted coup, including 1,577 deans at all universities.
* US air strike in Syria kills nearly 60 civilians ‘mistaken for Isil fighters.’
* Bleeding the poor with fees and fines, Virginia edition.
* The end of Roger Ailes. The Drudge Era.
* Now, Baton Rouge. A 538 Special on Gun Deaths in America. The Tamir Rice Story: How to Make a Police Shooting Disappear. “One group is responsible for America’s culture of violence, and it isn’t cops, black Americans, Muslims or rednecks.” No lives matter. And from the archives: A Manifesto from People Reluctant to Kill for an Abstraction.
* Donald Trump’s Deals Rely on Being Creative with the Truth. Donald Trump Heads Into The Convention With Barely Any Campaign At All: Many of the numbers listed for his state offices don’t even work. Did you ever have to make up your mind? Donald Trump’s Announcement of Mike Pence in 18 Tweets. “Trump’s campaign logo mocked on Twitter.” He’s Really Pretty Bad at This. Being Honest about Trump. Jeb! We Play the Trump Board Game So You Don’t Have To. Republicans Keeping Their Dignity. Teach the controversy: Is Trump Working for Russia? Understanding Trump Supporters: The Machine of Morbius. Back to the Future in Cleveland. The Last GOP President?
still the best Pence take https://t.co/EO1RrNpNby
— Gerry Canavan (@gerrycanavan) July 21, 2016
* Won’t it be great when Donald Trump becomes president because you wrote a fucking BuzzFeed article daring him to run? Confessions of Donald Trump’s Ghostwriter.
* Donald Trump Said Hillary Clinton Would ‘Make a Good President’ in 2008. Donald Trump should talk about Hillary Clinton’s email all the time. Here’s why. Pollster Frank Luntz: GOP has ‘lost’ the millennial generation.
* There are about 20 households where she now lives. Like Susie, most of the residents in Snowflake have what they call “environmental illness”, a controversial diagnosis that attributes otherwise unexplained symptoms to pollution.
* Newborn Ducklings Judge Shape and Color.
* Small Arms, Long Reach: America’s Rifle Abroad.
* Education Department’s proposed rule for student debt forgiveness could threaten traditional colleges as well as for-profits, particularly over its broad view of what counts as misrepresentation. College and the Class Divide. Wicked Liberalism.
* As a result, in one of the richest countries that has ever existed, about 15 percent of the population faces down bare cupboards and empty refrigerators on a routine basis.
* Dying in America, Without Insurance.
* When Not to Get Married: Some 19th Century Advice.
* The Ontology of Calvin and Hobbes.
* The Fight Between Berkeley’s Academics And Its Football Team Is Getting Ugly.
* A Modest Proposal: Eliminate Email.
* Black Dishwasher at Yale University Loses Job After Shattering “Racist, Very Degrading” Stained-Glass Panel. Yale Rehires. Broken window theory: Corey Menafee and the history of university service labor.
If Calhoun is smart, will preserve window in shattered state & build exhibit round it on college's history w race https://t.co/bDZPtlscjK
— Leo Carey (@LeoJCarey) July 12, 2016
* Ghostbusters (2016) and The Fan. Fake Controversy, Terrible Comedy. Ghostbusters‘ nostalgia problem. And from the archives!
Ghostbusters more than any other film highlights the growing devaluation of public-sector jobs at the hands of privatized for-profit entities operating for mercenary reasons. The protagonists of this movie spend their time removing unwanted, unpaying residents from spaces they occupied their whole lives (and longer) and placing them into a form of prison at the behest of the current owners who can get more rent from more affluent persons and don’t like the neighborhood being ‘brought down’ by those now-undesirable who lived there first. Not only that, but budget cuts have forced the New York Public Library to retain the dead as current employees, cutting into what should have been their final retirement, and the entire crux of the film comes from belittling and mocking elected officials’ uselessness in the face of corporations who can solve the city’s problems for cash and without all the useless regulation tying up the mayor, firefighters and police. Ghostbusters is essentially Blackwater for the dead, cleaning up the town of its unwanted past, making life safe for the corporate oligarchies.
* A Zero Star Review of The Secret Life of Pets.
* ‘Pokémon Go’ and the Persistent Myth of Stranger Danger. If Pokémon Go could resemble the best of childhood, it might have some value. What it actually does is very different.
* Did Wes Anderson Design North Korea?
* How Sexual Harassment Halts Science.
* Why rich parents are terrified their kids will fall into the “middle class.”
* Prepare to cry: Appleton teen makes heartbreaking decision to die.
* To recap, the idea behind the Reverse Turing Test is that instead of thinking about the ways in which machines can be human-like we should also think about the ways in which humans can be machine-like.
* “He noted that further research is needed”: Women Wearing Low-Cut Tops In Application Photos Are 19 Times More Likely to Land a Job Interview.
* Penn State Football really should have gotten the NCAA death penalty.
* Am I a man, dreaming he is a Pokémon, or am I a Pokémon dreaming he is a man? Here’s All the Data Pokémon (Was) Leeching From Your Phone. Resist Pokémon Go. And as Adorno said: To catch Pokémon after Auschwitz is barbaric.
* OK, just take my money: Nintendo’s next assault on nostalgia is a mini-NES with 30 built-in games.
I completely lost all enthusiasm for it when my brother pointed out no BLADES OF STEEL. https://t.co/ImIuOChce3
— Gerry Canavan (@gerrycanavan) July 14, 2016
* Canon Police: Sulu’s Sexuality. But, you know, let’s not lose our heads. J.J. Abrams Won’t Re-Cast Anton Yelchin’s Role in ‘Star Trek’ Movies. For Some Baffling Reason, This Star Trek Beyond TV Spot Spoils the Big Twist. But the next one will be good, we swear.
WOK
FC
TVH
TUC
ST(2009)
TSFS
—> STB
STID
TMP
TFF
GEN
NEM
INS(I think)
— Gerry Canavan (@gerrycanavan) July 22, 2016
* That piece I’m writing on Star Wars and canonicity will just never, ever be finished: Grand Admiral Thrawn Joins Rebels and the New Star Wars Canon.
* The headline reads, “Gonorrhea may soon be unbeatable.”
* Cancer, or, death by immortality.
* Hacking the brain in Silicon Valley.
* This blind Apple engineer is transforming the tech world at only 22.
* Comic Books Are More Popular Now Than They’ve Been in 20 Years.
* Presenting the Apollo 11 Code.
* 67 Years of LEGO — by the numbers.
* Darwin’s Kids Doodled All Over His “Origin of Species” Manuscript.
* Neanderthals Ate Each Other and Used Their Bones as Tools.
* The Films Rian Johnson had the Episode 8 Cast Watch.
* This sizzle reel from Rogue One is the best.
* Treaty loophole might let someone claim ownership of the Moon.
* Should You Quit Your Job To Go Make Video Games?
* A civil servant missing most of his brain challenges our most basic theories of consciousness.
* And Mightygodking pitches the dark, gritty Sesame Street reinterpretation you didn’t know you needed.
Written by gerrycanavan
July 22, 2016 at 4:10 pm
Posted in Look at what I found on the Internet
Tagged with academia, actually existing media bias, adaptation, Africa, Afrofuturism, animal intelligence, animals, anthologies, antibiotic resistant bacteria, Apollo 11, Apple, apps, Arizona, artificial intelligence, Auschwitz, austerity, Baton Rogue, being the difference, Berkeley, Bernie Sanders, Blades of Steel, books, Bush, Calvin and Hobbes, cancer, cannibalism, canonicity, Case Western, CFPs, childhood, Chris Christie, class struggle, Cleveland, code, college football, college sports, comics, Cosby Show, coups, Cousin Pam, critique, CWRU, Darwin, data, Department of Education, design, disability, Donald Trump, drones, Drudge, ducks, Electoral College, email, endings, environmental disease, Episode VII, equality, euthanasia, evolution, Expanded Universe, fandom, fans, fantasy, fines, first-year composition, Fox News, Gamergate, games, gay rights, general election 2016, General Thrawn, George Saunders, Ghostbusters, ghostwriters, gonorrhea, graduate students, guns, hacking the brain, Hamilton, haunting, health insurance, Hillary Clinton, How the University Works, iPhone, J.J. Abrams, Jeff Vandermeer, kids, LEGO, liberalism, literature, loopholes, machine intelligence, Manifesto from People Reluctant to Kill for an Abstraction, Marquette, marriage, masculinity, Mike Pence, millennials, misogyny, musical theater, musicals, Mystique, narrative, NCAA, Neanderthals, neoliberalism, Newt Gingrich, Nintendo, North Korea, nostalgia, our brains work in interesting ways, over-educated literary theory PhDs, Penn State, plagiarism, plot, Pokémon, Pokémon Go, police, police state, police violence, politics, polls, postmodernism, poverty, queerness, race, racism, Republican National Convention, Republicans, Reverse Turing Test, Rian Johnson, rich people, Roger Ailes, Rogue One, science, science fiction, service, service labor, Sesame Street, sexism, sexual harassment, sexuality, Shirley Jackson, slavery, Snowflake, Star Trek, Star Trek 4, Star Trek Beyond, Star Wars, story, student debt, suburbs, suicide, Sulu, surveillance society, Syria, Tamir Rice, Ted Chiang, the Anthropocene, the Count, the middle class, the Moon, The Origin of Species, The Secret Life of Pets, theory, Tom Gauld, treaties, Turing Test, Turkey, unions, vampires, veepstakes, Virginia, voting, Wes Anderson, white flight, whiteness, workers, Yale, zero stars
All the July 4th Links You Wanted — And More!
* The Declaration of Independence has a typo; America is abolished. Happy Fourth of July.
* America at 238, by the numbers.
* Hobby Lobby as Pandora’s Box. The icing on the cake.
* Like the Founders intended, an investigation into Blackwater was squashed after a top manager threatened to murder a State department official. Checks and balances. The system works.
I cannot accept this invitation, for I do not believe that the meaning of the Constitution was forever “fixed” at the Philadelphia Convention. Nor do I find the wisdom, foresight, and sense of justice exhibited by the Framers particularly profound. To the contrary, the government they devised was defective from the start, requiring several amendments, a civil war, and momentous social transformation to attain the system of constitutional government, and its respect for the individual freedoms and human rights, we hold as fundamental today. When contemporary Americans cite “The Constitution,” they invoke a concept that is vastly different from what the Framers barely began to construct two centuries ago.
* As a Canadian I rather like the idea of the American Revolution being aborted and our Yankee cousins staying within the Empire. Among other things it would have meant that slavery would have ended in America a generation earlier and without violence (the British outlawed the slave trade in 1807 and abolished slavery in 1834).
* Meanwhile, a great moment in American democracy.
* Great new web comic from Jason Shiga, whose Fleep and Meanwhile I’ve praised here before.
* Some Dawn of the Planet of the Apes prequels.
* A new China Miéville short story.
* Gynofuturism: Zoe Saldana says the best roles for women are in space.
* Here’s a List of What Junot Díaz Wants You to Read.
* Judy Clarke defends the indefensible.
* Maria Bamford’s new web series wants to put you in The Program.
* Philosophy Job Placement 2011-2014: Departments with Relatively High Placement Rates.
* Lionel Messi Is Impossible. More.
* How Belgium built one of the top contenders for the 2014 World Cup, and what the team means to this fractious nation. How Tourette’s-afflicted Tim Howard went from international ridicule to World Cup history. Really, All Hail Tim Howard. How Spain Succumbed to the Innovator’s Dilemma. Why the last group stage game is played simultaneously. Who Won the World Cup of Arm-Folding?
* Zwarte Piets were once openly characterized as Santa’s slaves. Man, Santa’s legacy is complicated.
* Cop Keeps Job After Violently Shoving Paraplegic Man From Wheelchair. The search continues for something a cop can do that will actually cost them their job.
* At time of austerity, 8 universities spent top dollar on Hillary Rodham Clinton speeches.
* The European Court of Human Rights has upheld the basic human right we all know about to see other people’s faces in public.
* A radical reply to Hobby Lobby: Take Away the Entire Welfare State From Employers. And another: Hobby Lobby, Student Loans, and Sincere Belief.
* The rules underpinning Porky Pig’s stutter.
* Shirley Jackson reads “The Lottery.”
* Have We Been Interpreting Quantum Mechanics Wrong This Whole Time?
* Oklahoma is now the earthquake capital of the country, thanks to tracking.
* Membership has its privileges: African leaders vote to give themselves immunity from war crimes.
* A Brief History of the Smithsonian.
* A People’s History of the Peeing Calvin Decal.
* In 1990 this nation faced a horrifying outbreak of Richard Nixon rap parodies. This is that story. (via @sarahkendzior)
* Facebook Could Decide an Election Without Anyone Ever Finding Out.
* The arc of history is long &c: Oakland Raiders Will Pay Cheerleaders Minimum Wage This Season.
* American Gods is alive! It’s on Starz, but it’s alive!
* “Exclamation points have played a distinguished role in the history of Marxism.” Why We’re Marxists.
* SMBC on fire: If God is omniscient and omnipotent, how could he let this happen? Telepathy machines were created. Check Your Bat-Privilege. I’m the superfluous female protagonist.
* Scenes from the next Paolo Bacigalupi novel: An abandoned mall in Bangkok has been overtaken by fish.
* The UNC fake-classes scandal has gotten so outrageous even the NCAA has been forced to pay attention.
* Should “free college” be framed as a right or a privilege?
* When two good guys with guns confront one another.
* The Hard Data on UFO Sightings: It’s Mostly Drunk People in the West.
* Let’s colonize ourselves by 3D printing ourselves on other planets.
* Catfish and American Loneliness.
* The Hooded Utilitarian has been running an Octavia Butler Roundtable.
* Another Pixar conspiracy theory: the truth about Andy’s Dad.
* All about the miraculous Community revival. And more. Yay!
* Introducing the Critical Inquiry Review of Books.
* And some more good news! Bear rescued after head gets stuck in cookie jar. Happy Fourth of July!
Written by gerrycanavan
July 4, 2014 at 8:00 am
Posted in Look at what I found on the Internet
Tagged with 3D printing, a new life awaits you in the off-world colonies, abolition, academic jobs, Africa, alcohol, alternate history, America, American Gods, animals, austerity, Bangkok, Batman, bears, Belgium, Blackwater, books, Calvin and Hobbes, cartoons, Catfish, checks and balances, cheerleaders, China Miéville, class struggle, climate change, college sports, community, contraception, cookie jars, Critical Inquiry, cultural preservation, Dan Harmon, Dawn of the Planet of the Apes, Declaration of Independence, defense attorneys, democracy, Demon, depression, disability, earthquakes, exclamation points, Facebook, fish, Fleep, football, Fourth of July, guns, gynecology, gynofuturism, heroines, Hillary Clinton, Hobby Lobby, human rights, hydrofracking, Islamophobia, Jason Shiga, Judy Clarke, Junot Díaz, Lionel Messi, loneliness, Looney Tunes, malls, Maria Bamford, Marxism, Meanwhile, medicine, mercenaries, military-industrial complex, misogyny, Mississippi, museums, NCAA, Neil Gaiman, neuroeconomics, NFL, Oakland Raiders, Octavia Butler, Oklahoma, outer space, Paolo Bacigalupi, pelvic exams, philosophy, Pixar, police, police brutality, police violence, politics, Porky Pig, problem of evil, quantum mechanics, rap, religion, Richard Nixon, Santa, Saturday Morning Breakfast Cereal, science fiction, sexism, Shirley Jackson, short stories, slavery, Smithsonian, soccer, Spain, sports, student debt, Tea Party, teaching, Teenage Mutant Ninja Turtles, telepathy, television, the Constitution, the courts, the Founders, the law, The Lottery, The Program, the West, theory, Thurgood Marshall, Tim Howard, Toy Story, typos, UFOs, UNC, war crimes, web comics, welfare state, women, World Cup, Zoe Saldana, zoos, Zwarte Piet
Friday Links!
* ‘We Come from the Future’: a short piece on African SF.
* Zadie Smith says her next novel is SF.
As for her own next move, she says it will be a total departure: a science-fiction romp. She has been reading a lot of Ursula K Le Guin. ‘It’s a concept novel. It’s the only novel I’ve ever written that has a plot, which is thrilling. I don’t know if I can do it. Those books are incredibly hard to write.’
* Giant, oil-belching sinkhole dooms more than 100 homes in Louisiana.
* Valences of the IRS scandal.
* I believe this is explicitly against the law governing the CIA: Four Central Intelligence Agency officers were embedded with the New York Police Department in the decade after Sept. 11, 2001, including one official who helped conduct surveillance operations in the United States, according to a newly disclosed C.I.A. inspector general’s report.
* A nation of temps: 15% of job growth since 2009, 40% or more in many urban areas.
Temp jobs accounted for whopping 116 percent of job growth in Memphis (that means that one sector added more jobs than all other industries together), 66 percent in Birmingham, 65 percent in Cincinnati, 58 percent in Hartford, 51 percent in Milwaukee, 46 percent in Kansas City, and 40 percent or more in Cleveland, Chicago, and Philadelphia.
* The Expendables: How the Temps Who Power Corporate Giants Are Getting Crushed.
* ‘Black Babies Cost Less’: The Racial Realities of Adoption in America. Can’t help trying to pair this with the Baby Veronica nightmare still making its way back and forth through the courts.
* More nightmares: Worker Sues Employer For The Death Of Her Baby.
* Obama at the door of no return.
* Cleveland State figures out inventive way to punish students it’s already failing.
Cleveland State University undergraduates will see a 2-percent tuition increase this fall but can get it back as a credit on the next year’s tuition through an innovative program approved Wednesday by university trustees.
Beginning in the fall, students who complete 30 course credits in an academic year in good standing can earn the rebate for the following year. Students also will receive $100 per semester in book credits.
Meritocracy! Catch the fever.
* Land of the God-Men: Inside the Wild Movement to Turn Us All into Immortal Cyborgs. I’m listening…
* And Rick Perry, wow. I mean wow.
During his remarks, the Texas governor also described Davis’ filibuster as “hijacking of the Democratic process” and said of the pro-choice movement, “the louder they scream, the more we know that we are getting something done.”
Written by gerrycanavan
June 28, 2013 at 8:10 am
Posted in Look at what I found on the Internet
Tagged with abortion, adoption, Africa, Afrofuturism, America, art, austerity, autism, Barack Obama, books, CIA, class struggle, Cleveland State, futurity, Great Recession, How the University Works, immortal robot bodies, immortality, IRS, kids, longevity, Louisiana, meritocracy, misogyny, neoliberalism, New Yorker, oil, politics, race, rape culture, Rick Perry, scandals, science fiction, sexism, Shirley Jackson, sinkholes, slavery, temp jobs, Texas, The Lottery, the Met, the Singularity, tuition, unemployment, war on terror, Wendy Davis, writing, Zadie Smith
Sunday, Sunday
(some links via Aaron’s Sunday Reading, which as always has so much more)
* The greatest nation in the world: A few nights a year, Tennessee holds a health care lottery of sorts, giving the medically desperate a chance to get help.
* A Truly Devastating Graph on State Higher Education Spending.
* In sentencing the boys to a minimum of one year in juvenile jail, Judge Thomas Lipps doled out some advice to their peers on how to avoid the same fate. He urged them “to have discussions about how you talk to your friends; how you record things on the social media so prevalent today; and how you conduct yourself when drinking is put upon you by your friends.” Tweeting wasn’t exactly the problem in Steubenville, though, now was it.
* Stunning narrative of decades-long abuse (of all kinds) in a New York City high school. The level of administrative incompetence (shading into malice) is just one of the shocking parts of this story; I finally watched Bully last night and couldn’t believe this was how school administrators would act in general, much less when they knew they were being filmed.
* March Madness as class struggle.
* Do Corporations Enjoy a 2nd Amendment Right to Drones?
* So what exactly was in all those old fallout shelters?
* The Iraq war is notable not only for journalistic weakness, but for journalistic futility: the futility of fact itself. Fact could not match the fabrications of power. Eventually, our reality shifted to become what they conceived. “I could have set myself on fire in protest on the White House lawn and the war would have proceeded without me,” wrote Bush speechwriter David Frum. That was the message of the Iraq war: There is no point in speaking truth to power when power is the only truth.
* Rand Paul Is Right On Marijuana, And That Should Scare Democrats Into Action.
* University of Wisconsin professor warns of dangers of reintroducing extinct animals. Spoilsport!
* The world’s first LEGO museum is coming.
* And all about the next board game I’d like to learn to play, Twilight Struggle.
Written by gerrycanavan
March 24, 2013 at 4:41 pm
Posted in Look at what I found on the Internet
Tagged with academia, animals, austerity, bullying, charts, child abuse, class struggle, college basketball, college sports, corporate personhood, documentary, drones, empire, extinction, Facebook, facts are stupid things, fallout shelters, games, health care, How the University Works, income inequality, Iraq War, LEGO, lottery, March Madness, marijuana, military-industrial complex, museums, NCAA, New York, nuclearity, politics, power, Rand Paul, rape, rape culture, reality-based community, Second Amendment, Shirley Jackson, Steubenville, Tennessee, Twilight Struggle, Twitter, war on drugs, Wisconsin
Goodbye Dublin Airport Links
* Not in My Country: A Tale of Unwanted Immigrants. From Joe Sacco. (Update: link fixed now.)
* Don’t be alarmed, but the latest race-baiting Fox News controversy is nonsense. Not that it matters.
* Ta-Nehisi Coates: The NAACP is right.
* If the GOP takes back the House, can we look forward to the shutdown of 2011?
* Has science fiction lost its world-transformative mojo? More from MetaFilter.
* And old but good: Women and The Wire.
In one of the first season’s early episodes, McNulty tells Kima that all the good women police officers he’s ever met were gay. It is only in retrospect that this assertion seems like more than just characterization. Through poor old fuck-up McNulty, the writers were able to voice this wee-bit contentious idea without fear of reprisal. Maybe what McNulty claimed about female police is true—like I said before, positive images are not good politics. But The Wire gained my trust for exploring the reality behind everyday inequalities. Using flawed characters as a mouthpiece for unhip opinions is a betrayal of the show’s own tireless morality. Instead of confronting the gender politics of the Baltimore police, The Wire gives us Beadie Russell. A capable but dull port cop, Beadie plays a small part in the second season’s action before fading to black in the third season. In the fourth season she’s back and blonde and suddenly significant for her role in “saving” McNulty from “himself”. Cue the strings—if The Wire needs to read up on women’s issues for one reason alone it should be that the most anti-feminist parts of the show are usually the most cringeworthy. There’s more than a hint of the jealous-best-friend syndrome in the fact that McNulty being saved also involves him leaving high-end police work—what he does best!—for home life and an easy day-to-day as a beat cop, not to mention markedly fewer scenes. Don’t ditch us for a broad, McNulty! Look what they did to Randy!
(via zunguzungu, who also deftly takes down some bizarre anti-Shirley-Jackson snobbery).
Written by gerrycanavan
July 18, 2010 at 7:28 am
Posted in Look at what I found on the Internet
Tagged with Barack Obama, comics, Fox News, government shutdowns, immigration, Joe Sacco, literature, misogyny, politics, race, Republicans, science fiction, Shirley Jackson, The Wire, Utopia