Posts Tagged ‘Westeros’
Friday Train Ride Links!
* I accidentally said something that went viral and now Twitter is absolutely useless to me.
* Seven-year-old Guatemalan girl dies of dehydration after being arrested by US Border Patrol. ICE Arrests 170 Immigrants Trying To Save Babies From Baby Jails. Trump is pushing Vietnam to accept deportees who have lived in the US for over 20 years.
* The New Authoritarians Are Waging War on Women.
* Is a Green New Deal Possible Without a Revolution?
According to the @climateactiontr, current climate policies have the world headed toward roughly 3.3°C of warming. Not a single major developed country has policies in line with 2°. https://t.co/lMbSnRMYar pic.twitter.com/UuhU4Iok68
— David Roberts (@drvox) December 13, 2018
As I keep saying, you're a climate change denier if you think it's going to happen in 50 years and isn't going to affect you or your children in a profound, civilization-ending way, without action. Fiction writers who write shit like that…same thing. https://t.co/Q4j53qNyw8
— Jeff VanderMeer (@jeffvandermeer) December 14, 2018
* ‘Carbon removal is now a thing’: Radical fixes get a boost at climate talks. Earth on course to match climate from 3 million years ago by 2030, UW study says. You, Too, Are in Denial of Climate Change. 40 million Americans depend on the Colorado River. It’s drying up. Harvard Quietly Amasses California Vineyards—and the Water Underneath. Urban Flooding Is Worryingly Widespread in the U.S., But Under-Studied. Welcome to the Eocene, where ice sheets turn into swamps. ”You are not mature enough to tell it like it is. Even that burden you leave to your children.”
* Can the liberal arts survive neoliberalism? Serving at Cross’s Purposes.
* We can’t pull down statues of slaveowners, while out there they’re pulling down statues of Gandhi.
* Got to have some mixed feelings.
* Nice work if you can get it: insider trading is legal when you’re in Congress.
i’m a socialist, although in america this mostly just means “i think it’s bad that you die broke when you have cancer” and “poor people should eat” and “it’s bad that corporations literally write laws”
— Talia Lavin (@chick_in_kiev) December 12, 2018
* Elsewhere in hyperexploitation: Uncompensated Special Assistant U.S. Attorney (one-year term).
* How The US Left Failed Brasil. You’re not going to pin this on me!
* Teach the controversy: It’s ridiculous that it’s unconstitutional for Alexandria Ocasio-Cortez to run for president.
* Why women have better sex under socialism, according to an anthropologist.
* There’s some wild shit going on in the far corners of the Game Of Thrones map.
* Fossils of the 21st century.
* Union solutions / management solutions.
Written by gerrycanavan
December 14, 2018 at 9:20 am
Posted in Look at what I found on the Internet
Tagged with academia, academic publishing, administrative blight, Alexandria Ocasio-Cortex, America, anthropology, apocalypse, at-will employent, authoritarianism, Bethlehem, border patrol, Brazil, California, carbon sequestration, Christmas, class struggle, climate change, Confederate monuments, Congress, corruption we can believe in, denialism, deportation, Donald Trump, ecology, fantasy, fascism, film, forensics, fossils, futurity, Game of Thrones, Gandhi, geoengineering, gig economy, Green New Deal, Guatemala, Harvard, How the University Works, hyperexploitation, ice, immigration, infrastructure, insider trading, It's a Wonderful Life, Jeff Vandermeer, kids today, landmines, liberal arts, management, maps, Mexico, misogyny, murder, my media empire, neoliberalism, Netflix, parenting, police, police corruption, politics, Ray Cross, revolution, Rushmore, sex, social media, socialism, statues, streaming, the Anthropcene, the Anthropocene, the Left, the presidency, the university in ruins, the wall, the Wisconsin Idea, totalitarianism, toxic masculinity, true crime, true crme, Twitter, unions, University of California, University of Wisconsin, Vietnam, vitality, Werner Herzog, Wes Anderson, Westeros, women, work
Christmas Eve Eve Links Links
* There’s a lovely review of my Butler book by Nisi Shawl in the new Women’s Review of Books. It’s not available online so you’ll have to take my word for it, unless your library subscribes…
* And I’m so happy to report that Extrapolation 58.2-3 is finally out, the special issue on “Guilty Pleasures: Late Capitalism and Mere Genre” I edited with Benjamin Robertson. Check out the intro to see what it’s all about, and then check out articles on Dragonlance, the Star Wars and Star Trek expanded universes, Sweet Valley High, Blondie, The Hunger Games, and Game of Thrones and fantasy roleplaying games…
* CFP: Academic Track at the 76th World Science Fiction Convention, San José, California. CFP: Punking Speculative Fiction. CFP: Histories of the Future: Proto-Science Fiction from the Victorian Era to the Radium Age. CFP: Chapter Proposals for “Ecofeminist Science Fiction.” CFP: Neukom Institute Literary Arts Awards.
* An Incomplete Timeline of What We Tried.
I wrote a very short story pic.twitter.com/hSO2nPtxq1
— Jason Ritter (@JasonRitter) December 23, 2017
* Consider: Who pursues their goals with monomaniacal focus, oblivious to the possibility of negative consequences? Who adopts a scorched-earth approach to increasing market share? This hypothetical strawberry-picking AI does what every tech startup wishes it could do — grows at an exponential rate and destroys its competitors until it’s achieved an absolute monopoly. The idea of superintelligence is such a poorly defined notion that one could envision it taking almost any form with equal justification: a benevolent genie that solves all the world’s problems, or a mathematician that spends all its time proving theorems so abstract that humans can’t even understand them. But when Silicon Valley tries to imagine superintelligence, what it comes up with is no-holds-barred capitalism. Ladies and gentlemen, the great Ted Chiang.
* Science fiction when the future is now. With appearances from Kim Stanley Robinson, Ken Liu, and Lauren Beukes.
* The best anti-Last-Jedi piece I’ve seen is Alyssa Rosenberg’s at the Washington Post. And the best pro-Last-Jedi piece from Dan Hassler-Forest at LARB. Somewhere in the middle is Abigail Nussbuam’s excellent piece at Asking the Wrong Questions.
* Lightsabers, by the numbers. Secret history of the porgs. Star Wars from below. Thank goodness somebody realized how terrible this would be. The Last Jedi and the necessary disappointment of epilogues. The films that inspired The Last Jedi. Behind the scenes. In defense of Canto Blight. Anti-nostalgia and anti-salvation. Star Wars without the Empire. How to Read Star Wars.
* Winter Is Coming: Climate Change in Westeros.
* How the Sesame Street Puppeteers Play Their Characters. It was only a year or three ago that I realized that on a basic level I’d still believed Big Bird was real; I had never thought or processed the fact that his lips were being moved by a puppeteer’s hands.
* So old I can remember when Sweet Briar was an inspiring story about a college being saved.
* On faculty and mental illness.
* Podcast alert: how does Samuel R. Delany work?
* Comedy writers name their most influential episodes: 1, 2.
* SHOCK REPORT: The tax bill is bad.
* This Congress’s clear priorities: corporations, not children.
* It’ll also tax large endowments. Meanwhile in the academy: We Will Not Be Your Disposable Labor: Graduate Student Workers’ Fight Goes Beyond the GOP Assault. ‘A Complete Culture of Sexualization’: 1,600 Stories of Harassment in Higher Ed.
* Defund every agency that had any part in this. Murder Convictions Overturned, Two Men Are Immediately Seized By ICE. What happens to children whose parents are deported? 92 Somali immigrants deported in “slave-ship” conditions. ICE is abusing immigrant detainees with strip searches and threats. Shock of shocks, it turns out legal immigration is bad too.
* Why Doug Jones’s narrow win is not enough to make me confident about American democracy.
Unofficial results, but #ALSen by Congressional District. Left is 2016, right is 2017. Doug Jones turned HRC's 28% loss into a 1.5% win while *only* carrying #AL07. Suburban #AL06 has the biggest swing to Jones (he improved 40% from Clinton). pic.twitter.com/ZUi550C4XN
— J. Miles Coleman (@JMilesColeman) December 13, 2017
* First #J20 defendants found not guilty.
* The media wealth of African Americans in Boston is $8.
* People are using Uber instead of ambulances.
* The Adult Bodies Playing Teens on TV.
* Monopolies are bad, no matter how much you like the brands involved. Avengers vs. monopoly.
* “Neoliberalism” isn’t an empty epithet. It’s a real, powerful set of ideas.
* The madness of prison gerrymanders.
* Desegregation never happened.
* Climate refugees in Louisiana. Disability and disaster response in the age of climate change. Losing the wilderness.
* The FoxConn boondoggle gets worse and worse.
* The Next Crisis for Puerto Rico: Foreclosures.
* Revising agricultural revisionism.
* Your Favorite Superhero Is Probably Killing the Planet.
* The Daily Stormer’s style guide.
* Opoids and homelessness. 3,000,000 pills to 3,000 patients in two years. The Opioid Crisis Is Getting Worse, Particularly for Black Americans. What happens after an American city gives a homeless person a one-way ticket out of town.
* The US gymnastics scandal somehow gets worse and worse.
* ‘The World’s Biggest Terrorist Has a Pikachu Bedspread.’
* The Forgotten Life of Einstein’s First Wife.
* WHAT YEAR IS IT: How to prepare for a nuclear attack.
* Lumberjanes’ Noelle Stevenson is Rebooting She-Ra for Netflix. Sir Ian McKellen Would Totally Play Gandalf In Amazon’s TV Tolkien Adaptations. The Next Bechdel Test.
* “Paradox,” by Naomi Kritzer.
* The Journal of Prince Studies.
* 80% of workers think managers are unnecessary. The other 20% mistakingly think they are managers.
* It’s not a perfect system, but it’s the one our Founders built: The Donald Trump droid is live at Disney World’s Hall of Presidents.
* ‘Trump, Trump, Trump!’ How a President’s Name Became a Racial Jeer. 55 Ways Donald Trump Structurally Changed America in 2017. Fascism has already come to America. Life expectancy declines for the second straight year. On brand.
* Heartbreaking interview with Heather Heyer’s mother.
* Still, it does make you ponder all the ways this industry works in service of power, and by extension those who abuse it. So many of comedy’s institutions are, at their core, PR machines. Branded content is Funny Or Die’s bread and butter. Every week SNL promotes someone’s new movie or TV show or album. Late night talk shows, with few exceptions, use jokes to bookend celebrity press tours. Comedians host awards shows because otherwise we might see them for the rituals they are—the wealthy and famous celebrating their own wealth and fame. Comedy normalizes power; it’s so successful at normalizing power that it feels weird to even write that as a criticism. Well, what’s wrong with normalizing power? Lots of things, but to start it lets monsters play the straight man in comedy sketches. It makes them relatable, which makes them less threatening. But power is always a threat, even more so when it seems innocuous, even more so when it seems… funny.
* 2018 is already terrible: there’ll be no more Zelda DLC.
* And remembering the reason for the season: Behold the official policy for destroying the head of Chuck E Cheese.
Written by gerrycanavan
December 23, 2017 at 10:06 am
Posted in Look at what I found on the Internet
Tagged with #J20, academia, academic jobs, agriculture, Alabama, aliens, alt-ac, Amazon, anti-natalist, apocalypse, artificial intelligence, Avengers, Bechdel, Benjamin Robertson, Blondie, Bojack Horseman, bullshit jobs, capitalism, CFPs, Charlie Brown, Charlottesville, CHIP, Chuck E. Cheese, class struggle, climate change, climate refugees, comedy, cyberpunk, Daily Stormer, deportation, desegregation, Dilbert, disability, Disney, Disney World, DLC, Donald Trump, Doug Jones, Dragonlance, drug addiction, ecofeminism, ecology, Einstein, Episode 8, expanded universes, Extrapolation, fantasy, fascism, foreclosures, Fox, Foxconn, Fred Moten, free speech, Game of Thrones, Gandalf, gerrymanders, Get Out, gig economy, graduate student movements, guns, gymnastics, Hall of Presidents, Harry Reid, health care, Heather Heyer, homelessness, How the University Works, How to Read Donald Duck, ice, immigration, Jared Diamond, jobs, Jordan Peele, kids today, labor, leaks, life expectancy, lightsabers, Louisiana, management, Marvel, McKayla Maroney is not impressed, mere genre, monopolies, monopsonies, Muppets, my scholarly empire, Nazis, neoliberalism, Netflix, Nintendo, Nintendo Switch, Nisi Shawl, nostalgia, NSA, nuclear war, nuclearity, Octavia Butler, opioids, optimism, outer space, parenting, Peanuts, podcasts, police state, politics, porgs, prescription drugs, primitivism, Prince, prison, prison-industrial complex, Professor X, protest, Puerto Rico, race, racism, rape, rape culture, Reality Winner, Rick and Morty, Samuel R. Delany, Sandy Hook, science, science fiction, Scott Adams, Sesame Street, sex, sexual harassment, She-Ra, Star Trek, Star Wars, superheroes, Sweet Briar, Sweet Valley High, taxes, Ted Chiang, teenagers, television, temp jobs, temp workers, the humanities, The Hunger Games, The Last Jedi, the Moon, the worst mistake in the history of the human race, time travel, UFOs, Westeros, Wisconsin, workers, Worldcon, writing, X-Men, Zelda
Tuesday Links!
* I put up my Fall syllabi yesterday, if you missed it! Courses on Tolkien, Hamilton, and “Utopia in America” this time out.
* Jaimee has two new poems out in Mezzo Cammin: “Good Women” and “Perseveration.”
* SFRA Review 321 is out, with a interview with Cory Doctorow.
* Octavia Butler, remembered by her friend Shirlee Smith.
* A bar joke. Simulationism. Dadproof. Honestly, how did you miss this?
* A nice interview with Adam Kotsko about his book on the devil.
Somewhat surprisingly, in the early centuries of Christianity, there was a durable minority position to the effect that the devil would be saved. Ultimately that view was condemned as heretical, and what interests me is how vehemently theologians rejected it—the emotional gut reaction always seemed out of proportion to me. And the argument, such as it is, always boils down to the same thing: if the devil can be saved, that misses the whole point of having the devil in the first place. It is as though Christian theology gradually came to need a hard core of eternal, unredeemable blameworthiness, a permanent scapegoat who can never escape.
* CFP: Utopia and Apocalypse (SUS 2017, Memphis). And there’s still time jump on our “After Suvin” roundtable at SUS, if you get something in to us ASAP…
* Gender Issues in Video Games.
* Tenure track job in carceral studies.
* Professional romance novelists can write 3,000 words a day. Here’s how they do it.
* Yes, Your Manuscript Was Due 30 Years Ago. No, the University Press Still Wants It.
* The backfire effect failed to replicate, so it’s safe to be a know-it-all again.
* The grad school horror story of the moment: Why I Left Academia.
* http://academiaiskillingmyfriends.tumblr.com.
* Undergraduates Are Workers, Too.
* “Grade Inflation” as a Path to Ungrading.
* The idea of white victimhood is increasingly central to the debate over affirmative action.
* UCI has reversed itself on rescinding admissions. Good!
* “The Loyal Engineers Steering NASA’s Voyager Probes Across the Universe”: As the Voyager mission is winding down, so, too, are the careers of the aging explorers who expanded our sense of home in the galaxy.
* A Trip To The Men’s Room Turned Jeff Kessler Into The NCAA’s Worst Nightmare.
* Race and reaction gifs. Race and speeding tickets. Race and dystopia. Race and police dogs.
* Google Employee’s Anti-Diversity Manifesto Goes ‘Internally Viral.’ Google Fires Author of Divisive Memo on Gender Differences.
There’s way more empirical evidence that men can’t be trusted with power than that women are bad at math. [gestures broadly, to everything]
— Gerry Canavan (@gerrycanavan) August 5, 2017
* The guiding principle in Mr. Trump’s government is to turn the politics of white resentment into the policies of white rage — that calculated mechanism of executive orders, laws and agency directives that undermines and punishes minority achievement and aspiration. No wonder that, even while his White House sinks deeper into chaos, scandal and legislative mismanagement, Mr. Trump’s approval rating among whites (and only whites) has remained unnaturally high. Washington may obsess over Obamacare repeal, Russian sanctions and the debt ceiling, but Mr. Trump’s base sees something different — and, to them, inspiring.
* We have a political problem no one wants to talk about: very old politicians.
* No One Should Have Sole Authority to Launch a Nuclear Attack. No one should have that authority, period.
* Rules don’t matter anymore, stupids. What the Trump-Russia grand jury means. The very thing that liberals think is imperiled by Trump will be the most potent source of his long-term power and effects. If you want a vision of the future.
* 2018 won’t save you. Really. And obviously the Democrats won’t. Obviously.
* But sure I guess everything is fine now.
* Abolish ICE. Abolish ICE. Abolish ICE. Abolish ICE. Abolish ICE. Abolish ICE. Abolish ICE. Shut these guys down too.
* Also it’s weird how we don’t have a State department anymore and no one cares.
* Big Data Is Coming to Take Your Health Insurance.
* Y’all ready for debt ceiling? Democrats should do exactly what is described here.
* Hey Marvel, please don’t take away female Thor’s hammer. Don’t give Confederacy the benefit of the doubt.
* For the dinosaurs, ten minutes separated survival and extinction.
* Neurolinguistic programming: how to win an argument edition.
* More on Amazon and anti-trust.
* A short film about Chris Ware.
* “Karate Kid but the bully is the hero” has been a go-to joke for years, but only Netflix could make it real.
* Disconnect your Internet-connected fish tank now.
* “Adversarial perturbations” and AI.
* How close are we to a Constitutional Convention?
* The Only Place in the World Where Sea Level Is Falling, Not Rising. American Trees Are Moving West, and No One Knows Why. Wildfires in Greenland. Coming Attractions. The Atlas for the End of the World.
* Yes, we’re angry. Why shouldn’t we be? Why aren’t you? Why Does Being a Woman Put You at Greater Risk of Having Anxiety? Suicides in teen girls hit 40 year high.
* Your labor in the process of being replaced. Your opinion is increasingly irrelevant. Your presence on Earth will soon no longer be required. Thank you for your service; the robots are here.
* Jeff Goldblum is The Doctor in Doctor Who (dir. John Carpenter, 1983).
* The question of Klingon head ridges has officially become pathological.
* Agricultural civilization may be 30,000 years older than we thought.
* A People’s History of the Gray Force.
* A People’s History of Time Lord Regenerations.
* A People’s History of Westeros.
* The Dark Tower: What The Hell Happened?
* Pitching Battlestar Galactica.
* Littlefinger for New Jersey is tough to argue.
* When Will Humanity Finally Die Out? There’s always death to look forward to.
* Smartphones and The Kids Today.
* More scenes from the collapse of the New York City subway system.
* Africa has entered the space race, with Ghana’s first satellite now orbiting earth.
* Reminder that Kurt Russell probably wrote the IMDB trivia section for Escape from L.A.
* Same.
* And please consider this my resignation.
Written by gerrycanavan
August 8, 2017 at 10:10 am
Posted in Look at what I found on the Internet
Tagged with #dads, #TheResistance, academia, academia jobs, academic writing, actually existing media bias, Adam Kotsko, affirmative action, Africa, Afrofuturism, agricultural civilization, agriculture, aliens, Amazon, America, anti-trust, anxiety, apocalypse, Are we living in a simulation?, arguments, artificial intelligence, asteroids, backfire effect, bar jokes, Battlestar Galactica, Big Data, Bob Mueller, books, carceral studies, CFPs, charts, Chris Ware, Christianity, cities, class struggle, Cleveland, climate change, cognitive presses, college basketball, comics, Confederacy, Constitutional Convention, Cory Doctorow, courts, CWRU, dark side of the digital, Darko Suvin, debt ceiling, Democrats, deportation, digitality, dinosaurs, Doctor Who, Donald Trump, dystopia, Escape from LA, FCC, film, friendship, Game of Thrones, game theory, games, gender, gerontocracy, Ghana, GIFs, Google, grad student nightmares, grade inflation, grading, grand juries, Greenland, hacking, Hamilton, health care, health insurance, How the University Works, human extinction, humanity, humor, ice, immigration, Internet-connected fish tanks, interviews, iPhones, Jaimee, Jedi, John Carpenter, John Kelley, Karate Kid, kids, Klingons, Kurt Russell, labor, love, machine learning, maps, Marquette, Marvel, mass extinction, midterm election 2018, milkshakes, misogyny, murder, my teaching empire, names, NASA, NCAA, Netflix, neurolinguistic programming, New Jersey, New York City, nuclear war, nuclearity, Octavia Butler, outer space, parenting, pedagogy, perpetual motion, Planetary Protection Officer, poetry, Poland, police, police dogs, police violence, politics, prehistory, prison, prison-industrial complex, private prisons, privilege, Putin, race, racism, regenerations, relationships, Rex Tillerson, robots, Rotten Tomatoes, Russia, Saturday Morning Breakfast Cereal, sea level rise, self-driving cars, sexism, SFRA, SFRA Review, simulations, Sinclair Broadcasting, smartphones, social media, Space Race, speeding tickets, Star Trek, Star Trek: Discovery, Star Wars, State department, student athletes, student labor, subalternity, suicide, syllabi, Ta-Nehisi Coates, teaching, teen girls, the Constitution, The Dark Tower, the Devil, the Force, the Internet, the law, the subway, the truth is out there, Thor, Tolkien, Tommy's, trees, true crime, Tumblr, Twitter, undergraduates, University of California Irvine, university presses, Utopia, voting, Voyager, Voyager 2, Voyager spacecraft, walking, Westeros, white victimhood, whiteness, wildfires, women, words, work, writing, you are the product, young adult literature
Seven Pounds of Sunday Links in a Three-Pound Bag
* If you missed it, my contribution to the thriving “Star Trek at 50″ thinkpiece industry: “We Have Never Been Star Trek.” And some followup commentary on First Contact and the Rebootverse from Adam Kotsko.
* Elsewhere: To Boldly Imagine: Star Trek‘s Half Century. 13 science fiction authors on how Star Trek influenced their lives. 50 Years of Trekkies. Women who love Star Trek are the reason that modern fandom exists. What If Star Trek Never Existed? In a World without Star Trek… The Star Trek You Didn’t See. How Every Single Star Trek Novel Fits Together. What Deep Space Nine does that no other Star Trek series can. Fighter Planes vs. Navies. Fifty years of Star Trek – a socialist perspective. Star Trek in the Age of Trump. Star Trek Is Brilliantly Political. Well, It Used To Be. Sounds of Spock. A Counterpoint. Catching Up with Star Trek IV’s Real Hero. The Workday on the Edge of Forever. A few of the best images I gathered up this week: 1, 2. And of course they did: CBS and Paramount Royally Screwed Up Star Trek‘s 50th Anniversary.
Happy birthday #StarTrek50, celebrating fifty years of unforgettable fashion for men. pic.twitter.com/LpWHv39ozU
— RedScharlach (@redfacts) September 8, 2016
* And some more Star Trek: Discovery teasing: Time to rewatch “Balance of Terror.” And Majel might even voice the computer.
* Deadline Extended for the 2016 Tiptree Fellowship. The Foundation Essay Prize 2017.
* CFP: Speculative Finance/Speculative Fiction. Editors David M. Higgins and Hugh Charles O’Connell. Call for Chapters: Transmedia Star Wars. Editors Sean A. Guynes and Dan Hassler-Forest.
* Not a CFP, but I’m glad to see this is coming soon: None of This is Normal: The Fiction of Jeff VanderMeer.
* Polygraph #25, on sound and the modes of production, is now available.
* Tolkien once said that fantasy can’t work on stage. Katy Armstrong argues that The Cursed Child only works on stage. Harry Potter and the Conscience of a Liberal.
* This LARB essay on scholars fighting about King Lear is as spellbinding as everyone said.
* Here is a list of things that I am including in this book. Please send me my seven-figure advance. An Easy Guide to Writing the Great American Novel.
* Concerns Over Future of UMass Labor Center.
* Lockout at LIU. The Nuclear Option. Unprecedented. This is the first time that higher-ed faculty have ever been locked out. Lockout Lessons. Students Walkout. As Lockout Continues at Long Island U., Students Report Meager Classroom Instruction. This has been, to say the least, an amazing story.
7. Otherwise, what Middle States is saying is that all a university is is a bunch of buildings, a bank account, and administrators.
— Jacob Remes (@jacremes) September 10, 2016
* Decline of Tenure for Higher Education Faculty: An Introduction.
* Salaita’s Departure and the Gutting of American Indian Studies at the University of Illinois.
* Inmates Are Planning The Largest Prison Strike in US History. ‘Incarcerated Workers’ stage nationwide prison labor strike 45 years after 1971 Attica riot. Your Refresher on the 13th Amendment.
* The long, steady decline of literary reading. History Enrollments Drop. Werner Herzog Narrates My Life as a Graduate Student. My dirty little secret: I’ve been writing erotic novels to fund my PhD.
* The First Trans*Studies Conference.
* Donna Haraway: “Tentacular Thinking: Anthropocene, Capitalocene, Chthulucene.”
The unfinished Chthulucene must collect up the trash of the Anthropocene, the exterminism of the Capitalocene, and chipping and shredding and layering like a mad gardener, make a much hotter compost pile for still possible pasts, presents, and futures.
A bit more here.
* Elsewhere in the Anthropocene: Montana declares state of emergency over pipeline spill, oily drinking water. The Gradual Atlantis (and see Dr. K.S. Robinson for more). Fast Fashion and Environmental Crisis. The Planet Is Going Through A ‘Catastrophic’ Wilderness Loss, Study Says. The Oceans Are Heating Up. A Monument to Outlast Humanity. New genus of bacteria found living inside hydraulic fracturing wells. And from the archives: Louisiana Doesn’t Exist.
* The Joyful, Illiterate Kindergartners of Finland. What Should a Four-Year-Old Know? How to Raise a Genius.
* Michael R. Page on the greatness of The Space Merchants. Bonus content from University of Illinois Press: Five Quotes from Frederik Pohl.
* The problem with this reasoning, at least as it relates to graduate students, is that we have had fifty years to find out if unions destroy graduate education. They don’t.
* How Unions Change Universities. Scabbing on Our Future Selves.
* Of Moral Panics, Education, Culture Wars, and Unanswerable Holes.
* The Death of ITT Tech, Part One: What Happened?
* Audrey Watters on the (credit) score.
* Clemson’s John C. Calhoun Problem. And Jack Daniels’s.
* Welcome to Our University! We’re Delighted to Have You, But If You Think We’re Going to Cancel the Ku Klux Klan Rally, You’ve Got Another Think Coming. Cashing in on the Culture Wars: U Chicago.
* The things English speakers know, but don’t know they know.
Things native English speakers know, but don't know we know: pic.twitter.com/Ex0Ui9oBSL
— Matthew Anderson (@MattAndersonBBC) September 3, 2016
* Raymond Chandler and Totality.
* Slapstick, Fordism and the Communist Avant-Garde.
* Why ‘The Stranger’ Almost Didn’t Get Published.
* It’s Getting Harder and Harder to Deny That Football Is Doomed.
* After Richmond Student Writes Viral Essay About Her Rape Case, the University Calls Her a Liar.
* Milwaukee vs. Pikachu. The World’s Most Dangerous Game: Pokémon’s Strange History with Moral Panics.
* Weapons of Math Destruction: invisible, ubiquitous algorithms are ruining millions of lives.
* British artist Rebecca Moss went aboard the Hanjin Geneva container ship for a “23 Days at Sea Residency.” But the company that owns the ship went bankrupt on August 31, and ports all over the world have barred Hanjin’s ships because the shipping line is unable to pay the port and service fees. Artist-in-residence stuck on bankrupt container ship that no port will accept.
* Christopher Newfield talks his new book on the collapse of the public university, The Great Mistake.
* Bill de Blasio’s Pre-K Crusade.
* The Plight of the Overworked Nonprofit Employee.
* FiveThirtyEight: What Went Wrong?
* The Lasting Impact of Mispronouncing Students’ Names.
* The law, in its majestic equality: Black Defendants Punished Harsher After A Judge’s Favorite Football Team Loses.
* Fred Moten on academic freedom, Palestine, BDS, and BLM.
* The Night Of and the Problem of Chandra.
* The Book of Springsteen. Relatedly: Bruce Springsteen’s Reading List.
* New research suggests that humans have a sixth basic taste in addition to sweetness, sourness, saltiness, bitterness, and umami. It’s starchiness.
Differently from philosophy, which functions under long, frustrating timings, and very rarely reaches any certainty, theory is quick, voracious, sharp, and superficial: its model is the “reader,” a book made to help people make quotations from books that are not read.
* The largest strike in world history?
* The Walrus has an absolutely wrenching piece on stillbirth.
* How to Tell a Mother Her Child Is Dead.
* “Science thought there was one species and now genetics show there are four species,” Dr. Janke said. “All zoos across the world that have giraffes will have to change their labels.”
* The Mysterious Ending of John Carpenter’s The Thing May Finally Have an Answer.
* Teach the controversy: No Forests on Flat Earth.
* Wisconsin appeals Brendan Dassey’s overturned conviction.
* Abolish the iPhone. How Apple Killed the Cyberpunk Dream. It’s not much better over there.
Fuck it, let's do a planned economy pic.twitter.com/KYwvQ3wPeM
— Luke Savage (@LukewSavage) September 9, 2016
* The NEH’s chairman, Bro Adams, tries to make a case for the humanities. Is anyone listening?
* Britain isn’t doing a super great job with Brexit.
* No other image has better captured the struggle that is simply living every day: Drunk Soviet worker tries to ride on hippo (Novokuznetsk, in Kemerovo, 1982). Yes, there’s still more links below.
* The DEA vs. Kratom. Why Banning the Controversial Painkiller Kratom Could Be Bad News for America’s Heroin Addicts.
*Never-Ending Election Watch: How Donald Trump Retooled His Charity to Spend Other People’s Money. Trump pays IRS a penalty for his foundation violating rules with gift to aid Florida attorney general. A Tale of Two Scandals. That Clinton Foundation Scandal the Press Wants Exists, But they Won’t Report it Because it’s Actually About the Trump Foundation. Inside Bill Clinton’s nearly $18 million job as ‘honorary chancellor’ of a for-profit college. No More Lesser-Evilism. And Vox, you know, explaining the news.
* Dominance politics, deplorables edition.
* And put this notion in your basket of deplorables: Darkwing Duck and DuckTales Are in Separate Universes and This Is Not Okay.
* How Fox News women took down the most powerful, and predatory, man in media.
* Corporal Punishment in American Schools.
* I say jail’s too good for ’em: US library to enforce jail sentences for overdue books.
* Bugs Bunny, the Novel, and Transnationalism.
* The Perilous Lure of the Underground Railroad. The Atlantic Slave Trade in Two Minutes.
* What’s the Matter with Liberals?
* Alan Moore Confirms Retirement from Comic Books. An interview in the New York Times where, lucky for me, he talks a lot about David Foster Wallace.
* The Need For Believable Non-White Characters — Sidekicks, Included.
* What Your Literature Professor Knows That Your Doctor Might Not.
* Geologic Evidence May Support Chinese Flood Legend.
* Fully Autonomous Cars Are Unlikely, Says America’s Top Transportation Safety Official.
* Saturday Morning Breakfast Cereal roundup: The Clockmaker. Science Journalism. I Am No Longer a Child. Teach a Man to Fish. How Stress Works. On Parenting. You haven’t hit bottom yet. Keep scrolling!
* Today in unnecessary sequels: Mel Gibson confirms Passion Of The Christ sequel. And elsewhere on the unnecessary sequel beat: We Finally Know What the Avatar Sequels Will Be About.
* At least they won’t let Zack Snyder ruin Booster Gold.
* Poe’s Law, but for the left? Inside the Misunderstood World of Adult Breastfeeding.
* The Revolution as America’s First Civil War.
* What Happens When We Decide Everyone Else Is a Narcissist.
* 45,000 Pounds of Would-Be Pennies Coat Highway After Delaware Crash.
* ‘Illegal’ Immigration as Speech.
* Second Thoughts of an Animal Researcher.
* Conspiracy Corner: Obama and the Jesuits.
* On Sept. 16 the opera “Happy Birthday, Wanda June,” based on Vonnegut’s play, will have its world premiere in Indianapolis. A dayslong celebration of, and reflection on, the best-selling author’s works called Vonnegut World will precede it.
* The Unseen Drawings of Kurt Vonnegut.
* The Science of Loneliness. Loneliness can be depressing, but it may have helped humans survive.
* Once more, with feeling: On the greatness of John Brunner.
* Let us now praise Let Us Now Praise Famous Men.
* Look Upon My Works, Ye Mighty, and Despair: Man Dies, Leaving Behind a Sea Of Big-Boobed Mannequins. Yes, it’s a Milwaukee story.
* Play The Hitchhiker’s Guide to the Galaxy Video Game Free Online, Designed by Douglas Adams in 1984.
* Taking a Stand at Standing Rock. Life in the Native American oil protest camps.
* The Subtle Design Features That Make Cities Feel More Hostile.
* Rebel propaganda. All the Ewoks are dead.
* Finally.
* Salvador Dali Illustrates Alice’s Adventures in Wonderland.
* Where the Monsters Are. The Wonderful World of Westeros.
* And I’ll be bookmarking this for later, just in case: A lively new book investigates the siren call—and annoying logistics—of death fraud.
Written by gerrycanavan
September 11, 2016 at 9:00 am
Posted in Look at what I found on the Internet
Tagged with academia, academic freedom, accreditation, Adam Kotsko, adjectives, adjunctification, adjuncts, administrative blight, Alan Moore, alcohol, algorithms, Alice in Wonderland, America, animal personhood, animal research, animals, Apple, art, Art Spiegelman, austerity, Avatar, Balance of Terror, Barack Obama, basket of deplorables, Benjamin Robertson, Bill Clinton, Bill de Blasio, Black Lives Matter, Booster Gold, breastfeeding, Brexit, Britain, Bro Adams, Bugs Bunny, Camus, capitalism, Catholicism, CFPs, charity, China, Christopher Hitchens, Christopher Newfield, Chronic Traumatic Encephalopathy, cities, Civil War, class struggle, Clemson University, climate change, college majors, comics, communism, concussions, conspiracies, container ships, corporal punishment, credit scores, cryptozoology, cultural preservation, Dakota Access Pipeline, Dan Hassler-Forest, Darwing Duck, David Foster Wallace, DC Cinematic Universe, death, debt, deep time, Disney, Disney afternoon, Donald Trump, Donna Haraway, Douglas Adams, drama, Drug Enforcement Agency, drugs, DuckTales, Duke, Earth First, ecology, education, English, English departments, eschatology, eviction, Ewoks, faking your own death, fan culture, fantasy, fashion, first contact, FiveThirtyEight, flame trombones, Flat Earth, floods, FOIA, football, for-profit schools, Fordism, Fox News, Fred Moten, Frederik Pohl, Fredric Jameson, free speech, freedom of speech, games, gay issues, Gene L. Coon, Gene Roddenberry, general election 2016, genius, giraffes, graduate student life, graduate students, guns, Happy Birthday Wanda Jane, Harry Potter, Harry Potter and the Cursed Child, HBO, Hellboy, Henry Jenkins, heroin, Hillary Clinton, hippos, history, homelessness, hydrofracking, illegal immigration, India, Infinite Jest, iPhones, Israel, ITT Tech, J.K. Rowling, Jack Daniels, James Tiptree Jr., Jeff Vandermeer, Jesuits, John Brunner, John C. Calhoun, John Carpenter, kids today, Kim Stanley Robinson, kindergarten, King Lear, Klu Klux Klan, Kratom, labor, language, Let Us Now Praise Famous Men, Lewis Carroll, liberals, libraries, literature, lockouts, loneliness, Long Island University, magic, Majel Barrett-Roddenberry, Making a Murderer, maladministration, mannequins, maps, Margaret Atwood, Maus, medical humanities, Mel Gibson, Milwaukee, Modern Masters of Science Fiction, monsters, Montana, monuments, moral panic, Mother Theresa, musicals, my media empire, Nadja Spiegelman, names, narcissism, Nate Silver, Native Americans, NEH, neoliberalism, New York, NFL, nonprofit-industrial complex, nonprofits, nostalgia, novels, obituary, oil spills, over-educated literary theory PhDs, Palestine, parenting, pedagogy, pennies, philanthropy, philosophy, Poe's Law, poetry, Pokémon Go, police, police brutality, police violence, politics, polls, Polygraph, pre-K, pregnancy, prison, prison-industrial complex, protest, public universities, Quebec, queer readings writing themselves, race, racism, rape culture, Raymond Chandler, reaction, reactionaries, reading, religion, retirement plans, Richmond, rising sea levels, Roger Ailes, Romulans, sabotage, saints, Salvador Dali, Samsung, Saturday Morning Breakfast Cereal, scabs, science, science fiction, science fiction studies, self-driving cars, Shakespeare, slave trade, slavery, socialism, sound, Soviet Union, speculation, speculative fiction, speculative finance, sports, Stand on Zanzibar, Standing Rock, Star Trek, Star Trek: Discovery, Star Wars, Steven Salaita, stillbirth, Stranger Things, strikes, student debt, student loans, student movements, surrealism, taste, teaching, tech trash, tenure, text adventures, textual histories, the Anthropcene, the avant-garde, the Capitalocene, the Chthulhucene, The City on the Edge of Forever, the courts, the Flood, The Hitchhiker's Guide to the Galaxy, the humanities, the law, The Night Of, the oceans, The Passion of the Christ, the revolution, The Space Merchants, The Stranger, The Thing, the university in ruins, theater, theory, Thirteenth Amendment, TIAA-CREF, TNG, Tolkien, totality, trans* issues, transmedia, trees, trigger warnings, true crime, Trump TV, UIUC, Underground Railroad, unions, University of Chicago, Utopia, Virginia, Vonnegut, Vox, waste, water, Werner Herzog, Westeros, white people, wilderness, Wisconsin, words, WPA, writing, Zack Snyder
Blogging from the Mid-Atlantic, But the Other Way
* An awakening anatomy of the average life’s two years of boredom, 6 months of watching commercials, 67 days of heartbreak, and 14 minutes of pure joy. 14 minutes of joy seems low even for a single day. What are you people doing with yourselves?
* The Voyager records, as art.
* I’m With™ Clinton’s ‘Innovation Agenda’ for Higher Ed.
murder shouldn’t be *legal* for entrepreneurs but it shouldn’t exactly be illegal either
— Gerry Canavan (@gerrycanavan) June 30, 2016
entrepreneurs should get to run three red lights every six months, no questions asked
— Gerry Canavan (@gerrycanavan) June 28, 2016
* Republicans seem pretty obviously right about this one. I don’t see how there’s any case for its propriety, but here’s a try.
* The Humiliating Practice of Sex-Testing Female Athletes.
* Estimate of U.S. Transgender Population Doubles to 1.4 Million Adults.
* For 20 years, the center has blocked off female-only hours to accommodate the area’s large Hasidic population. The pool has no male-only hours, and some Hasidic men swim during the hours that are open to all genders. An anonymous complaint was lodged recently with the city’s Human Rights Commission, which sent a notice to the parks department this spring saying that the policy might violate a city law barring gender discrimination in public accommodations.
* Using the budget usually reserved for the committee, they created a program called Dudes Understanding Diversity and Ending Stereotypes, or DUDES.
* He said he’s glad colleges have found the research useful, but he is cautious about the institutions that are taking it as an absolute. Mr. Sue said his goal had always been to educate people, not punish or shame them, if they engage in microaggressions.
* Boris Johnson and the Cuckoo Nest Plot. Now even Gove says he won’t Brexit before the end of the year. Sanders and Corbyn: The Survivors. Brexit Might Never Happen. Brexit: a disaster decades in the making. So you want to con a country. Based on a close reading of Frank Bruni’s Brexit commentary, “A Bachelor Named Britain, Looking for Love” (reproduced below the question), please describe the bearing of the New York Times op-ed staff on the collapse of serious political argument in American establishment institutions in the early 21st century.
* How J.R.R. Tolkien Found Mordor on the Western Front. Bonus Tolkien! How To Tell If You Are In A J.R.R. Tolkien Book.
A wizard has roped you into a quest because one of your ancestors invented golf.
* Westeros Is Poorly Designed. A Followup: It’s Okay That Westeros Is Poorly Designed. Some more nerdery on the subject.
When asked how fast the ships in Babylon 5 travel, creator J. Michael Straczynski replied that they travel “at the speed of plot.”
How big is Westeros? “Plot-sized.” How many people live there? “Plot thousand.” How do they make their living? “Tilling the plot.”
* Game of Thrones season 6 was good TV that shows why the series will never be great.
* Why did the Stars Wars and Star Trek worlds turn out so differently? Please Stop Marrying Fictional Characters to People They Met as Children, It’s Creepy. I started thinking absently about Steve Rogers’ jogging route during my run today and then i couldn’t STOP thinking about it because there’s literally NO WAY it makes sense unless you accept that he is specifically fucking up his entire morning routine to get another look at the cute boy he clocked on his run.
* How to Get Tenure. Counterpoint: You Probably Won’t Get Tenure.
* How to Give a Conference Paper.
* Elsewhere on the academic beat: Study Finds First-Year Students Who Take 15 Credits Succeed. Why Can’t My New Employees Write? The New McCarthyism. Right-Wing Elites Love Your Abigail Fisher Hot Take.
* Rationalia has already garnered some powerful enemies.
Sadly, there is no solution to the #Rexit crisis save the formation of a new country, South Rationalia, which I must reluctantly lead.
— Gerry Canavan (@gerrycanavan) June 30, 2016
* Amazing, awful: Author Gay Talese disavows his latest book amid credibility questions.
* Unprecedented’: Scientists declare ‘global climate emergency’ after jet stream crosses equator. The Window for Avoiding a Dangerous Climate Change Has Closed. The Day After Tomorrow Happened 30,000 Years Ago. Geoengineering at the CIA.
* Physicists just confirmed a pear-shaped nucleus, and it could ruin time travel forever. Not if I undiscover it yesterday!
* America is lying about its involvement in Africa: AFRICOM’s reports simply don’t add up.
* Secret History of the AOL Disc Campaign.
* More from the twilight of the law schools.
* “This is the single greatest panel ever published in a Transformers comic.”
* Trumpocalypse watch! Another boondoggle. And another. And another. And another. This one is probably the best yet. 4 Ways Cleveland’s Colleges Are Bracing for the Republican Convention. Who will win the presidency? Why not play along at home! And if you want a vision of the future: imagine Trump’s vice-presidential candidates stomping on a human face, forever.
Written by gerrycanavan
July 1, 2016 at 9:00 am
Posted in Look at what I found on the Internet
Tagged with academia, actually existing media bias, affirmative action, Africa, America, AOL, Battle of the Somme, Bernie Sanders, Bill Clinton, books, boondoggles, boredom, Boris Johnson, Brexit, Britain, bullying, Captain America, Chris Christie, CIA, class struggle, Cleveland, climate change, college, comics, conferences, debt, Department of Justice, Donald Trump, ecology, economics, education, emails, England, entrepreneurs, fantasy, first-year students, Friendship Is Magic, Game of Thrones, Gay Talese, gender, general election 2016, geoengineering, geography, George R. R. Martin, Harry Potter, HBO, Hillary Clinton, How the University Works, if you want a vision of the future, imperialism, innovation, Jeremy Corbyn, journamalism, joy, kids today, law schools, Lord of the Rings, Loretta Lynch, love, maps, marriage, masculinity studies, McCarthyism, Michael Gove, microaggressions, misogyny, Mordor, My Little Pony, NASA, Neil deGrasse, neocolonialism, New Journalism, New York Times, Newt Gingrich, outer space, plot, politics, polls, race, racism, Rationalia, Republican National Convention, running, scams, science, science fiction, sexism, sports, Star Trek, Star Wars, student debt, swimming, television, tenure, the 1990s, The Day After Tomorrow, The Hobbit, the law, the speed of plot, they say time is the fire in which we burn, time travel, Tolkien, Tories, Transformers, transgender issues, Tyler Cowen, United Kingdom, veepstakes, Voyager spacecraft, Washington DC, Westeros, World War I, worldbuilding, writing
Saturday Morning’s All Right for Linking
* Bryan Fuller Reveals New ‘Star Trek’ Details, Says Series Will ‘Eventually’ Revisit Characters. Interesting interview that suggests a lot of what is circulating about this series is wrong.
* On the deep, abiding, and highly dispersed influence of Gordon Lish.
* West Virginia in the Anthropocene: At least 23 people have been killed after powerful storms swamped West Virginia on Thursday night, forcing high water rescues across the state and leaving thousands of customers without power through Friday evening, officials said.
#Flood water pushes a burning #home down a creek in #WestVirginia. #wvwx
🎬 Amanda Carper pic.twitter.com/zJSMe95nLk— AMHQ (@AMHQ) June 24, 2016
* CDC: Flint water crisis “entirely preventable.”
* Why Brexit Is Much Scarier Than You Think. Brexit: The Crisis Begins. The Sterling Depreciation of 2007-2008 and Its Implications for Brexit. A timeline of the coming slow-motion car-crash. “Clusterfuck.” We will never know the full extent of the lost opportunities, friendships, marriages and experiences we will be denied. Freedom of movement was taken away by our parents, uncles, and grandparents in a parting blow to a generation that was already drowning in the debts of our predecessors. David Cameron Has Secured His Place as One of the Worst Prime Ministers Ever. Boris already flinching. Article 50 as Stalemate. No Takebacks. Brexit and the university. The A-Z of Brexit. Brexit Impact Will Be Felt in Wisconsin. The United Kingdom is the fourth-largest export market for Wisconsin goods, with $824.2 million worth of products shipped from the Badger State last year, or about 3.7% of the state’s exports. Morexit?
* “Worst ‘Zombie States’ in America ‘Deteriorate Faster, Further.’
* Oil Made Venezuela Rich, And Now It’s Making It Poor.
* The central problem is that employment policies that are gender-neutral on paper may not be gender-neutral in effect. After all, most women receive parental benefits only after bearing the burden of pregnancy, childbirth, nursing, and often, a larger share of parenting responsibilities. Yet fathers usually receive the same benefits without bearing anything close to the same burden. Given this asymmetry, it’s little wonder some recently instituted benefits have given men an advantage.
* Six weeks before the Summer Olympics open in Rio de Janeiro, the laboratory that was set to handle drug testing at the Games has been suspended by the World Anti-Doping Agency in a new escalation of the doping crisis in international sports.
* FBI Says There’s No Evidence Orlando Gunman Omar Mateen Had Messaged Men or Had Secret Gay Affairs.
* Can Daenerys Fly to Westeros on Her Dragons?
* What’s The Matter With Poetry?
* This is near my neighborhood, and I can confirm this intersection is singularly terrible.
* And I know things seem bad, but here’s a preview of Civilization 6‘s gameplay. Hang in there!
[breathing extremely heavily]
…Washingtoff
West Virginiain’t
Wisconout
WyomedARE YOU HAPPY NOW
— Gerry Canavan (@gerrycanavan) June 24, 2016
Written by gerrycanavan
June 25, 2016 at 9:00 am
Posted in Look at what I found on the Internet
Tagged with academia, America, Anthropocene, apocalypse, Article 50, Boris Johnson, Brazil, Brexit, Britain, Bryan Fuller, catastrophe, CBS, Civilization 6, class struggle, crisis, Daenerys Targaryen, David Cameron, depression, drugs, ecology, England, European Union, fathers, FBI, Flint, flooding, Game of Thrones, games, George R. R. Martin, Gordon Lish, grit, guns, How the University Works, immigration, infrastructure, intelligence, intergenerational warfare, lead, lead poisoning, literature, mass panic, mass shootings, neoliberalism, oil, Olympics, Omar Mateen, Orlando, paternity leave, poetry, politics, poverty, race, recession, Rio de Janeiro, science fiction, Sid Meier, sports, Star Trek, talent, television, theft, trails, true crime, United Kingdom, Venezuela, water, West Virginia, Westeros, white people, Whitefish Bay, Wisconsin, writing, xkcd, zombie states
Sunday Links for the Sunday Reader
* This president delivers compassion with a kind face and from a decorous and understated height. And that seems to be the role he prefers to play in the world too. It was doubtless the posture from which he would have liked to address the Arab Spring, and for that matter the civil war in Syria, if only Assad had obeyed when Obama said he must go. Obama has a larger-spirited wish to help people than any of his predecessors since Jimmy Carter; though caution bordering on timidity has kept him from speaking with Carter even once in the last five years. Obama roots for the good cause but often ends up endorsing the acceptable evil on which the political class or the satisfied classes in society have agreed. He watches the world as its most important spectator.
* Meanwhile: Obama Steps Up Efforts To Deport Unaccompanied Children Crossing The Border. And all at the low, low cost of just $2 billion!
* Local news: Wisconsin second only to Alabama in cuts to education funding, study shows.
* On college debate, race, and the very idea of rules.
* …the only definitive statement I can make about Game of Thrones has less to do with what was happening on screen, and more with the popular and critical reaction to it, the fact that the fourth season was the one in which a critical mass of people suddenly noticed just how rapey this show is.
* Academia and disability: Why Are Huge Numbers of Disabled Students Dropping Out of College?
* The New York Times has a followup Q&A on its controversial piece about student debt from last week.
* In November 2012, when Kamel’s lawyers showed the video evidence to the assistant district attorney handling his case, the prosecutor dropped the charges immediately, motioning for a dismissal. The case was built on police testimony that was clearly false. But though Perez’s untrue statement had forced Kamel to endure months of anxiety and trial preparation, and sent prosecutors most of the way towards trying him, the officer suffered no consequence for his actions. On police perjury.
* Arizona State Universities takes the side of a cop abusing one of its own professors on video. Arizona Professor Body Slammed By Police During Jaywalking Stop, Now Charged With Assaulting Officer.
* Today, the UCPD is, as the university told me in a statement, “a highly professional police force,” and one of the largest private security forces in the country. Hyde Park “remains one of the safest neighborhoods in the city,” according to the statement sent to me by the University, and, “All of the neighborhoods patrolled by the University of Chicago benefit from the extra service.”
* Three Ways (Two Good, One Bad) to Fight Campus Rape.
* It Took Studying 25,782,500 Kids To Begin To Undo The Damage Caused By 1 Doctor.
* An illustrated history of Westeros.
* Independent Weekly catches Counting Crows phoning it in in Raleigh.
* Advocacy in the Age of Colorblindness.
* This is a land of peace, love, justice, and no mercy: Hate Crimes Against The Homeless Jumped 24 Percent Last Year.
* U.S. Pledges To Stop Producing New Landmines. The dream of the 1990s is alive.
* Mexico tried giving poor people cash instead of food. It worked.
* How Sci Fi Visionary Octavia Butler Influenced This Detroit Revolutionary.
* Britain’s Nuke-Proof Underground City.
* “Can anyone say no to this?”
* The Golden Gate Bridge will get suicide nets.
* Psychologists Find that Nice People Are More Likely to Hurt You. I knew those dicks were hiding something.
* On Facebook science: The real scandal, then, is what’s considered “ethical.”
* Why Are All the Cartoon Mothers Dead?
* Ripped from the pages of the Colbert Report: NC General Assembly Allows Possum Drop Exception.
* And Martin Freeman says no more new Sherlock until December 2015.
Written by gerrycanavan
June 29, 2014 at 1:14 pm
Posted in Look at what I found on the Internet
Tagged with academia, Alabama, America, animal cruelty, Arizona State University, autism, Barack Obama, Britain, bunkers, campus police, cartoons, cash transfers, Chicago, class, class struggle, Colbert, Counting Crows, debate, deportation, Detroit, disability, Disney, Dr. Andrew Wakefield, empire, ethics, Facebook, Fermi paradox, film, Game of Thrones, Godzilla, Golden Gate Bridge, hate crimes, homeless, How the University Works, immigration, income inequality, Invasion of the Body Snatchers, jaywalking, landmines, lies and lying liars, maps, metadebate, Mexico, Milgram experiment, military-industrial complex, Milwaukee, mothers, nice people, North Carolina, nuclearity, Octavia Butler, oil, perjury, police brutality, police state, police violence, politics, post-raciality, psychology, race, rape, rape culture, revolution, rules, San Francisco, scams, science, science fiction, Sherlock, student debt, suicide, television, the Amish, the BBC, the courts, the law, the Left, Title IX, underground cities, University of Chicago, vaccines, war on education, Westeros, Wisconsin, Won't somebody think of the children?
All the Thursday Links
* Shocking police overreach haunts Southern city: Racial profiling, quotas and secret “conviction bonuses.” Yes, of course it’s Durham.
* Nazis! Me no like those guys. Neo-Nazis Are Using Cookie Monster to Recruit German Children.
* The charter school scam in action.
* Congratulations, University of Connecticut.
* BREAKING: Governing boards don’t care about adjuncts.
* All of which is just to say that it’s a handy thing, should you ever get elected to anything, to think a little about who’ll replace you when your term is done. Because you should leave. It’s good for your brain, and it’s good for the university. It’s also good for the soul to know that you’re not irreplaceable.
* Voices from the Student Fossil Fuel Divestment Movement.
* Rethinking carceral feminism.
* Now the head women’s basketball coach is out at Marquette. Second-highest-paid employee on campus.
* New Analysis Shows Problematic Boom In Higher Ed Administrators.
* Northwestern University fights back against NCAA football unionization.
* Drone art: Drone Operators Now Have a “Bug Splat” Staring Them in The Face.
* Former Taco Bell interns claim they invented Doritos tacos in 1995.
* The Legend of Vera Nabokov. The old days, guys, am I right?
* Meanwhile, everything old is new again: Adam Terry, McAllister’s chief of staff, said Peacock was taken off of the payroll during the past 24 hours.
* “Duke Collective” now Internet-famous for wage-sharing idea that if you knew the institutional context you’d realize isn’t really oh forget it.
* I’d like to tell you what was wrong with the tests my students took last week, but I can’t. Pearson’s $32 million contract with New York State to design the exams prohibits the state from making the tests public and imposes a gag order on educators who administer them. So teachers watched hundreds of thousands of children in grades 3 to 8 sit for between 70 and 180 minutes per day for three days taking a state English Language Arts exam that does a poor job of testing reading comprehension, and yet we’re not allowed to point out what the problems were.
* St. Michael’s in Vermont plans to survive by shrinking.
* Student Social Network Use Declines as Social Apps Move to Take Their Place.
* More Khaleesis were born in 2012 than Betsys or Nadines.
* Superficially plausible readings of fuzzy demographic signifiers: The Muppets and Generation X.
* The Vermont solution: single-payer. I don’t have a ton of hope in the American system, but I think this plan could actually work.
* Battlestar Galactica Is Getting Rebooted As A ZZZZZzzzzzzZZZzzzzzzzz
* Jon Stewart cursed me out: I dared question a “Daily Show” warm-up comic’s racist jokes.
* The birth of Thanaticism. As neologisms to describe our era go, I prefer necrocapitalism.
* Milwaukee Art Museum unveils design for building addition.
* What has been seen can never be unseen.
* Tolkien, Martin, and politics.
* Carbon Dioxide Levels Just Hit Their Highest Point In 800,000 Years.
* And I still think this is more a heat map of imperial ideology (don’t kill people in Europe!) than of “knowledge” per se. I think you’d see the opposite effect about a country in the Global South.
Written by gerrycanavan
April 10, 2014 at 9:27 am
Posted in Look at what I found on the Internet
Tagged with 2048, ableism, academia, academic jobs, adjuncts, administrative blight, apocalypse, art, austerity, Battlestar Galactica, capitalism, carbon, carceral feminism, charter schools, class struggle, climate change, college basketball, college football, comedy, Congress, Cookie Monster, Daily Show, democracy means that my ignorance is just as good as your knowledge, disability, divestment, Don't mention the war, drone art, drones, Duke, Durham, ecology, Europe, Facebook, fantasy, fossil fuels, Game of Thrones, games, Generation X, George R. R. Martin, Germany, health care, How the University Works, hyperrealistic masks, imperialism, interns, jai alai, Khaleesis, labor, learn to code, liberalism, longevity, Lord of the Rings, major tectonic plate boundaries, maps, Marquette, Milwaukee, Milwaukee Art Museum, misogyny, monarchy, Muppets, Nabokov, Nazis, NCAA, necrocapitalism, neoliberalism, NLRB, North Carolina, Northwestern, oil, places to invade next, police brutality, police state, police violence, politics, prestige economy, prison-industrial complex, race, reboots, scams, science fiction, service, Sesame Street, sexism, sexual harassment, single payer, social networking, St. Michael's, standardized testing, student athletes, student movements, Taco Bell, tectonic plates, thanaticism, the graveyards are filled with indispensable men, Tolkien, Twitter, UConn, Ukraine, unions, Vera Nabokov, Vermont, violence, Vonnegut, wage-sharing, war on education, Westeros