Gerry Canavan's Blog, page 72

October 18, 2014

Saturday Night Links!

* I’ve had a nice bit of professional good news: I’ve been asked to join Extrapolation as an editor beginning with their Spring 2015 issue.


“Crutzen, who is not a geologist, but one of the modern great scientists, essentially Jan Zalasiewicz, chair of the ICS’s anthropocene working group, told the Guardian. “The word began to be used widely, well before geologists ever got involved.”


* That old-time religion: Now that science fiction is respectable, it’s lost almost all of the conceptual craziness and dubious sexual politics that made it both fanboy bait and of genuine interest.


* From AfricaIsACountry: Ebola and neo-imperialism. And from Jacobin: The Political Economy of Ebola.


* The arsenal of, well, let’s say democracy: The U.S. sold $66.3 billion in weapons last year –- more than three-fourths of the entire global arms market.


* Richest 1% of people own nearly half of global wealth, says report.


* Climate change: how to make the big polluters really pay.


Of Collaborators and Careerists.


* Whites are more supportive of voter ID laws when shown photos of black people voting.


* Meritocracy watch: Poor kids who do everything right don’t do better than rich kids who do everything wrong.


* The 21st century university: women’s only colleges and trans identity.


Since the sinking of the Titanic, there has been a widespread belief that the social norm of “women and children first” (WCF) gives women a survival advantage over men in maritime disasters, and that captains and crew members give priority to passengers. We analyze a database of 18 maritime disasters spanning three centuries, covering the fate of over 15,000 individuals of more than 30 nationalities. Our results provide a unique picture of maritime disasters. Women have a distinct survival disadvantage compared with men. Captains and crew survive at a significantly higher rate than passengers.


The Milwaukee police officer who killed Dontre Hamilton in Red Arrow Park is believed to be the first officer in the city fired as a result of a fatal on-duty shooting in at least 45 years.


* “Weird hobby.”


* More back-and-forth on carceral feminism from Amber A’Lee Frost and Freddie deBoer.


* Pieces like this are enough to make you nostalgic for the quietly understated narcissism of “job creators.”




like Uber but for poor people to sell their organs to rich people


— Gritty Rebootavan (@gerrycanavan) October 19, 2014





So old I can remember when technological progress was going to increase human happiness instead of helping everyone hustle 24 hours a day.


— Gritty Rebootavan (@gerrycanavan) October 19, 2014



* An oral history of The Wonder Years.


New Scrabble Dictionary Disrepects The Game.


* Stop worrying about mastermind hackers. Start worrying about the IT guy.


* And just for fun: How to die in the 18th century. Watch for for evil, and for the purples…


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Published on October 18, 2014 19:50

Weekend Links!

Marquette University invites applications for the Arnold L. Mitchem Dissertation Fellowship Program. Mitchem Fellowships seek to help increase the presence of currently underrepresented racial and cultural groups in the U.S. professoriate by supporting advanced doctoral candidates during completion of the dissertation. The fellowships provide one year of support for doctoral candidates who are well into the writing stage of their dissertation work, are U.S. citizens, and are currently enrolled in U.S. universities. In addition to library, office and clerical support privileges, Mitchem Fellows receive a $35,000 stipend plus fringe benefits, research and travel monies for the 2015-16 academic year. The teaching load is 1-0.


* UC-Riverside Call for Postdoctoral Fellow: “Alternative Futurisms.”


* NEH watch: Save the Overseas Seminars.


* When Harvard is one of the worst colleges in America: colleges ranked by social mobility index. Marquette doesn’t come out looking all that great by this standard either, though it does beat both Duke and Case Western by a good bit. (Greensboro, oddly, seems not to have been ranked at all.)


* If I can’t dance: U.C. Berkeley set to pull plug on anarchist’s archive.


* Student loan borrowers are not getting enough help avoiding default, according to a report released Thursday by the Consumer Financial Protection Bureau. Meanwhile, the Nation reports: Should You Go to College?


* Against Carceral Feminism. I agree with @DavidKaib that “carceral liberalism” is the more important frame here; there’s no reason to single out feminism when so much of liberalism across the board is carceral in its orientation.


* Then the drought ate all the sportsball.


* Youth Are on the Frontlines in Ferguson, and They Refuse to Back Down.


* The Adjunct Crisis Is Everyone’s Problem.


* A people’s history of Gamergate. The Routine Harassment of Women in Male Dominated Spaces. Brianna Wu: It Happened to Me. ‘We Have a Problem and We’re Going to Fix This.’


4 Reasons Why A Travel Ban Won’t Solve The Ebola Crisis. Why travel bans will only make the Ebola epidemic worse. Why An Ebola Flight Ban Wouldn’t Work. And yet I would guess one is only a few days off.


* Peak Meritocracy: Andrew Cuomo thinks being the son of a former governor has been a “net negative” for his political career. If only we could somehow harness the radical cluelessness of these people and use it for productive ends.


* Two reports on outcomes for humanities majors could serve to reinforce two disparate beliefs about the field: one where they are seen as a viable path to a successful career, and another where they are seen as a track to a low income and few job prospects. The gender gap is vitally important here.


* Italy Just Pulled Out of Recession Because It Began Counting Drug and Prostitution Revenue.


* John Grisham, completely full of shit.


* Report: Airbnb Is Illegal, Rapacious, & Swallowing Lower Manhattan.


* Rental America: Why the poor pay $4,150 for a $1,500 sofa.


* Podcast interview with out-of-character Stephen Colbert, as he transitions towards taking over The Late Show.


* Another great Superman deconstruction from Saturday Morning Breakfast Cereal.


* Paradise is always just five years off: 3D printed mud houses will soon be an option in impoverished countries.


* John Siracusa reviews OS Yosemite.


White House Seeks Advice On “Bootstrapping A Solar System Civilization.”


* And what has been seen cannot be unseen: Spider Burrows Into Dylan Thomas’s Appendix Scar & Up Into His Sternum.


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Published on October 18, 2014 06:00

October 16, 2014

Thursday Links!

* Marquette English Spring 2015 courses! I’m teaching a section of 3000 (our new intro to major — mine is themed around magic) and the second round of my NEH “Cultural Preservation” course. I’m also doing a honors seminar on “video game culture” that I’m really excited about, GamerGate notwithstanding.


* A rare spot of optimism: Lockheed announces breakthrough on nuclear fusion energy.


* But don’t hang on to it: It’s time to push the panic button on the global economy. Markets are panicking again. What’s going on?


Sea Level Rising Faster Than Anytime In 6,000 Years, Study Finds.


* WHO: 10,000 new Ebola cases per week could be seen. The CDC is apparently taking the over. One thing is certain: it’s time to panic.


* Another Obama triumph for the left: let a thousand wage thefts bloom.


The Assassination of Detroit.


* Charter School Power Broker Turns Public Education Into Private Profits. Neoliberalism, Higher Education, and the Rise of Contingent Faculty Labor.


* Identifying The Worst Colleges In America.


* Could Oculus Rift be the next great higher education boondoggle?


* In Taste of Autonomy, Sports Programs Now Battle for Athletes’ Bellies.


The most alarming thing I’ve heard from friends who’ve had miscarriages is their surprise (only upon miscarrying) at hearing about how many of their friends, aunts, cousins, sisters, mothers and grandmothers have had them, too. If miscarriages are so common, why do we hide them behind a wall of shame and silence?


* What It’s Really Like to Have an Abortion.


* The radical teamsters of Minneapolis showed what democratic unionism looks like.



* “Most schools’ internal judicial systems are the worst of both worlds,” Berkowitz said. “They don’t give the accused the protections of the criminal justice system, and they mistreat the victims, too.”


For example, even into the 1980s, some doctors didn’t believe that babies felt pain and so routinely did surgery on them using just muscle relaxants to keep them still. Pain and medicine.


* Guy Debord’s The Muppets. More links below Gonzo.


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* “You had one job” screwup of the week.


* South Carolina governor levels outrageous accusation against the nation’s CEOs, says they’re all white supremacists. Huge if true.


* Study claims that whales and dolphins can speak to one another.


* DC has a bit hit on its hands with The Flash, so of course the smart move here is to recast for the film.


* Father, there’s a gateway to Narnia in the closet!


The Absolute Weirdest Thing Ever To Happen At A Political Debate.


How A California Man Was Forced To Spend 100 Days In Prison For Being An Atheist.


* Next week: Civilization: Beyond Earth.


* Behold! The Counter-Intuitivist!


* And we are all Bartleby now.


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Published on October 16, 2014 06:39

October 15, 2014

Wednesday Links!

* Cura personalis: Whereas Arnold hoped culture would replace religion, Deresiewicz, though not religious himself, wonders if religion might rescue culture: Students are no longer “equipped to address the larger questions of meaning and purpose … that come so inevitably in young adulthood. Religious colleges, quite frankly—even obscure, regional schools that no one’s ever heard of on the coasts—often do a much better job in that respect.”


* Catholic Colleges Greet an Unchurched Generation.


* Alien vs. Predator: Harvard University says it can’t afford journal publishers’ prices.




Harvard could put out every academic journal in the country for free and wouldn’t notice the money was missing.


— Gritty Rebootavan (@gerrycanavan) October 13, 2014





“If we don’t work to cut costs now, in 200,000 years Harvard might be forced to make some cuts.”
-Harvard trustee


— Gritty Rebootavan (@gerrycanavan) October 13, 2014





It is the year 3,000,000. All life on Earth is extinct. The only monument left to Homo sapiens is Harvard’s endowment, currently valued at


— Gritty Rebootavan (@gerrycanavan) October 13, 2014



Video Gamers Are Having A Bizarre Debate Over Whether Sending Death Threats To Women Is A Serious Issue Or Not. #Gamergate Trolls Aren’t Ethics Crusaders; They’re a Hate Group. The Future Of The Culture Wars Is Here, And It’s Gamergate. Anita Sarkeesian has canceled a planned talk at Utah State University after university officials refused to secure the venue following a mass shooting threat. In which gamers yell at a dumb chat bot from 1966 that someone wired up to twitter, because they think it’s a woman.


* Another Obama triumph: Since 2008, the District’s homeless population has increased 73%.


* The Americas in 1491. 9 reasons Christopher Columbus was a murderer, tyrant, and scoundrel. The Real Christopher Columbus. And it gets worse: The Sopranos only ever made one bad episode and it was all Christopher Columbus’s fault.


* It’s Columbus Day. Let’s talk about geography (and Ebola).


* Ebola threatens world chocolate supply.


What if Columbus had sailed off the edge of the world? How would that have affected U.S. history and economic growth?


* White People Are Unironically Talking About the White Experience in New PBS Documentary.


For Indigenous nations to live, capitalism must die. And for capitalism to die, we must actively participate in the construction of Indigenous alternatives to it.


Where Should We Bury the Dead Racist Literary Giants?


* Quick, everybody switch positions about civility and academic freedom.


* The Gates Foundation has a plan to save higher education through creating artificial enrollment crises exciting new efficiency metrics!


* The For-Profit College That’s Too Big to Fail.


George Mason Grad Students Release Adjunct Study.


* The National Science Foundation has awarded grants of $4.8 million to several prominent research universities to advance the use of Big Data in the schools. Your dystopian term of art is “LearnSphere.”


Uber Calls Woman’s 20-Mile Nightmare Abduction an “Inefficient Route.”


What Do We Do With All These Empty Prisons? Oh, I’m sure we’ll think of something.


Cops Charge 10-Year-Old Boy as Adult in Slaying of 90-Year-Old Woman. Accused of Stealing a Backpack, High School Student Jailed for Nearly Three Years Without Trial. South Carolina Prosecutors Say Stand Your Ground Doesn’t Apply To Victims Of Domestic Violence. Why Are Police Using Military-Grade Weapons in High Schools?


* There’s always money for murder and torture, but we need to crowdfund Ebola research.


* Jimmy John’s has noncompete clauses. Jimmy John’s.


Comic Books Are Still Made By Men, For Men And About Men.


* SF short of the night: Forever War.


* The Kids These Days Know More Than You Probably Think. The meat of the post is about a bogus “declining vocabulary” test that is used to fuel critics of schools.


* The nation’s largest union of flight attendants took the Federal Aviation Administration to court on Friday, arguing that the agency should have upheld a ban on the use of smartphones and tablets during takeoff and landing. Lawyers for the Association of Flight Attendants-CWA argued that the devices distracted passengers from safety instructions and could fly out of their hands, becoming dangerous projectiles, the Wall Street Journal reports.


* Freddie de Boer against carceral feminism: The burden of expanding the police state’s power to prosecute sex crimes will fall on the poor and the black.


* Meanwhile, in utterly inexplicable results that will probably always be a mystery: Income is more predictive than race for early college success.


* We don’t even know which way solar panels should be facing.


* Naughty Marvel: It’s Tragic and Disappointing That Marvel Is Canceling Fantastic Four.


* Nice Marvel: And with Robert Downey Jr. signing on it sounds like Captain America 3 will be Civil War. I’d never have guessed that the Captain America movies would be the ones that really connected with me, but here we go…


* David Lynch’s Los Angeles.


* We are become old.


* Milwaukee’s incredible shrinking art scene.


* Karen Russell on the greatness of The Martian Chronicles.


[Stephanie Palumbo]: How does Bradbury use human activity on Mars as a metaphor?


KR: He’s writing against patriotism during the Cold War. Humans land on Mars and then destroy it. Not much time elapses between landfall on Mars and the annihilation of all Martians.


SP: There’s a haunting image in one story, where a little boy is playing with a white xylophone that turns out to be a Martian ribcage.


KR: The planet is basically wiped clean of its indigenous people. I was shocked by the descriptions of these ancient, bone-white cities on Mars, and it took me an embarrassing length of time to recollect that people can visit ruins anywhere on our planet, too. It’s a case where sci-fi holds up a funhouse mirror to our own history. In case we have amnesia about the horror of the frontier, here we see another frontier and xenophobia, paranoia, aggression, madness. But we see people be really good to each other too. Bradbury seemed to be such a humanist at the same time that he is calling us out on our most despicable qualities.


* And being the indispensable shining city on the hill is confusing. If you ask me we should just let the biker gangs handle this.


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Published on October 15, 2014 06:00

October 12, 2014

Sunday Night Links!

* Kenya sci-fi series imagines European immigrants fleeing to Africa. A very different premise, but it reminds me a bit of some of what happens in Abdourahman A. Waberi’s excellent short novel The United States of Africa.


* Map of the week: 57% of languages do not have gendered pronouns.


* How comics portray psychological illness.


* New Analysis Shows Problematic Boom In Higher Ed Administrators. With searchable database so you can see how your school has changed since the 80s.


UCLA spends 2% of its budget on sports, while UO spends 13%. 13%!


The Council of UC Faculty Associations did the math, and showed to get tuition back down to 2000-01 levels $5300 in today’s dollars), and state funding back up to spend 20001 amounts per student, would cost to the median individual California taxpayer, each year, a total of $50.  Restoring full quality and affordability for the state’s 1.6 million public college and university students would cost the state median taxpayer about the same as a holiday bottle of single malt scotch.  That would get us halfway back to a Free UC


Grad school’s mental health problem. When education brings depression.


* “Teachers can’t strike, so we’ll strike for them.”


* Functioning democracy watch: The rise of the blank-slate candidate.


* Lawrence Lessig: Only the super-rich can save us now.


But when it comes to the narcissism of war, as the example of Christopher Hitchens reminds us, no one has quite the self-deluding capacity of the intellectual.


* Friends, it gets worse: California aquifers contaminated with billions of gallons of fracking wastewater.


U.S. Emergency Rooms Are Bracing For An Ebola Panic. The nightmare Ebola scenario that keeps scientists up at night. ‘Breach of Protocol’ Led to 2nd Ebola Infection. Cuba leads fight against Ebola in Africa as west frets about border security. But don’t worry, we’re tweaking all our incentives: US government offers $1m for best hazmat suit design as demand surges.


* Prison to Table: The Other Side of the Whole Foods Experience. Pennsylvania’s addiction to prison-building a moral, economic disaster.


* BREAKING: White people are radically misinformed about just about every salient question in American politics.


Yes, they are killing young black males. Documents Show NYPD Has Paid $428 Million in Settlements Since 2009. Asset seizures fuel police spending.


* Why is the recovery so weak? It’s the austerity, stupid.


They did, however, find the case significant enough to notify their sergeant — “due to the fact that it was an F.S.U. football player,” the report said. The sergeant, a Florida State University sports fan, signed off on it and the complaint was filed away as “unfounded.” It was hardly the first time that the towering presence of Florida State football had cast a shadow over justice in Tallahassee.


* Cultural preservation watch: There Is A Nine-Foot Tall Statue Of Edward Snowden In New York City.


“When the story broke about Edward Snowden, I was thinking a lot about surveillance and monumentality and how we remember things,” Dessicino told BuzzFeed News on Friday. “How public space is used and how people in history are remembered.


“And I got the idea that maybe people who are major actants upon history aren’t always represented properly, and those people could be written out of history by not having something more permanent made of them.”


* Elsewhere in Snowdenmania: news that he has apparently inspired a second leaker, still at the agency, as well as a nice button on the love story that dominated so much of the early coverage.


* I’ve been a Moffat-skeptic and didn’t like Twelve’s introduction or first few episodes at all, but I have to admit the new Doctor Who is probably as good as it’s ever been. Each of the last few episodes has been better than the last. Sid & Nancy on the TARDIS.


* Nielsen: still the absolute worst.


* The oldest struggle: Hawk v. drone.


Yet, there is something incomprehensible and inconsistent about this brand of “evil.” Mordor presents these characters in incredibly high fidelity—and I mean that both aesthetically and narratively. Some of the Orcs wear visible jewelry. One dev pointed out during a video preview that “some of them are poets.” But we’re told again and again that these Orcs want to destroy beautiful things. It just doesn’t hold up, and this tension extends to every element of their narrative and systemic characterizations. These Orcs have fears, interests, values, rivalry and friendships. Some Orcs are lovingly protective of their bosses or underlings. But they are “savage creatures” that “hate beauty,” so go ahead and enslave them.


* Matt Yglesias is making sense: The real problem with Nate Silver’s model is the hazy metaphysics of probability.


* The LEGO Batman Movie is the moment reboot culture begins to learn at an algorithmic rate. In a panic, they try to pull the plug.


* “He soon resigned.” A chess column had run in the New York Times since 1855, until today.


* Here come the self-driving cars.


* Tech jobs: Minorities have degrees, but don’t get hired.


* This Is How Judges Humiliate Pregnant Teens Who Want Abortions.


* Marissa Alexander will have a new trial.


* Unpopular opinion watch: This is not a perfect article, but the proposition that universities are not equipped to be courts and shouldn’t try to be seems basically right to me. I can’t imagine how people are looking at the last few decades of Title IX implementation and saying the answer is to give schools a larger role in this.


* Dystopian road signs.


* Understanding Homestuck.


* Understanding the Great Zucchini, DC’s most in-demand clown.


* Well, that explains it. Hitler was ‘a regular user of crystal meth’, American Military Intelligence dossier reveals.


* The age of miracles: cure for type-one diabetes imminent.


* And I’m so old I can remember when “full of bees” seemed like the worst possible thing.


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Published on October 12, 2014 16:13

October 10, 2014

For His Unwavering Devotion to Weekend Links, Gerry Canavan Has Been Awarded the Nobel Prize for Linkblogging

* Every so often the Nobel Committee accidentally picks a genuinely deserving, genuinely inspiring recipient of the Peace Prize. This year was one. A 2013 profile of Malala Yousafzai. A speech to Pakistani Marxists. What did one Nobel laureate say to the other?




Obama: Look at this brave, strong woman.
Malala: Stop drone attacks.
Obama: Look at this cute little girl.


— Kumail Nanjiani (@kumailn) October 17, 2013



* Every so often the Supreme Court accidentally makes a good decision. Last night’s overturning of Wisconsin’s voter suppression law was one.


* What would the twentieth-century history of English studies look like if we had thought to preserve the records of our teaching? How could that history be different if we had institutional archives of syllabi, student notes, lecture drafts, handouts and seminar papers, just as we have archives of journal articles, drafts of novels, recordings of performances, and committee meeting minutes? What if universities had collected classroom documents alongside other records and traces of the knowledge they create and culture that they value?


* Another lovely Chomsky rant on the university.


So the university imposes costs on students and on faculty who are not only untenured but are maintained on a path that guarantees that they will have no security. All of this is perfectly natural within corporate business models. It’s harmful to education, but education is not their goal.


* Recent cuts have unfortunately made future cuts inevitable: The University of Wisconsin System is about to do some wholesale, strategic belt-tightening, according to its president. But it’s not all absolutely miserable news:


Regent Janice Mueller noted that of the $1.6 billion total paid to unclassified staff on UW campuses, faculty accounted for $550 million, leaving more than $1 billion going to non-faculty. “That seemed a little out of whack to me,” Mueller said. “I would think faculty salaries would be the larger share.”


I didn’t think Regents were allowed to notice things that like.


* A new law that more strongly prohibits discrimination against pregnant graduate students could be coming to a state near you.


The Excessive Political Power Of White Men In The United States, In One Chart.


* Phil Maciak on the greatness of Transparent.


* Why we need academic freedom: On Being Sued.


* Neoliberalism is the triumph of the state, not its retreat. The case of Mexico.


On the cultural ideology of Big Data.


It Would Actually Be Very Simple To End Homelessness Forever.


* It seems that all of Pearson’s critical foundational research and proven classroom results in the world couldn’t get the question 3 x 7 x 26 correct.


* Federal spending was lower this year than Paul Ryan originally asked for. Ha, take that Republicans! Another Obama-led triumph for the left!


* But things will be different once Obama finally becomes president. Obama Plans to Close Guantanamo Whether Congress Likes It Or Not.


* Nightmares: Could Enterovirus D68 Be Causing Polio-Like Paralysis in Kids?


* NYC airport workers walk off job, protesting lack of protection from Ebola risks.


* SF in everything: Malware needs to know if it’s in the Matrix.


* Lady Ghostbusters will be a reboot, almost assuredly a terrible one.


I love origin stories. That’s my favorite thing. I love the first one so much I don’t want to do anything to ruin the memory of that. So it just felt like, let’s just restart it because then we can have new dynamics. I want the technology to be even cooler. I want it to be really scary, and I want it to happen in our world today that hasn’t gone through it so it’s like, oh my God what’s going on?


* It’s happening again: Vastly Different Stories Emerging In Police Shooting Of St. Louis Teen. The Associated Press is On It:




Angry protesters yell abuse, accusations of racial profiling at stoic police in south St. Louis: http://t.co/Q3GFc12WzL


— The Associated Press (@AP) October 10, 2014



* Baton Rouge officer who texted about ‘pulling a Ferguson’ allowed to retire, can still work as a cop.


* Teenagers in prison have a shockingly high suicide rate.


* Roger Ebert: The Collected Wikipedia Edits.


* The many faces of capitalism.


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* The University of Wisconsin at Madison Police Department issued an apology Wednesday after a list of safety tips posted to the department’s website was criticized for appearing to blame victims of campus crimes, particularly survivors of sexual assault.


* What We Talk About When We Talk About Trigger Warnings.


* Today in theology: Europe’s history of penis worship was cast aside when the Catholic Church decided Jesus’s foreskin was too potent to control.


By the 15th century, the Holy Prepuce had become the desirous object of many mystics’ visions. Bridget of Sweden recorded the revelations she received from the Virgin Mary, who told the saint that she saved the foreskin of her son and carried it with her until her death. Catherine of Siena, the patron saint of Italy, imagined that her wedding ring—exchanged with the Savior in a mystical marriage—had been transmuted into the foreskin. In her Revelationes (c. 1310), Saint Agnes Blannbekin recounts the hours she spent contemplating the loss of blood the infant Christ must have suffered during the circumcision, and during one of her contemplative moments, while idly wondering what had become of the foreskin, she felt the prepuce pressed upon her tongue. Blannbekin recounted the sweet, intoxicating taste, and she attempted to swallow it. The saint found herself unable to digest the Holy Prepuce; every time she swallowed, it immediately reappeared on her tongue. Again and again she repeated the ritual until after a hundred gulps she managed to down the baby Jesus’ cover.


* LEGO, against oil.


* Two Bad Tastes That Taste Bad Together: The US Doesn’t Have Enough Railroads to Keep Up With the Oil Boom.


* For some unfathomable reason somebody handed Cary Nelson another shovel: A Civility Manifesto.


* Science proves that in female-dominated societies men have to work twice as hard to destroy everything with their bullshit.


* Another piece on the law and Tommy the Chimp.


* Trick or treat.


* And maybe there are some doors we just shouldn’t open: I’m Slavoj Žižek, AMA.


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Published on October 10, 2014 10:18

October 9, 2014

Thursday Morning Links

* Your poem of the day: Tracy K. Smith, “Sci-Fi.”


* Philosophical science fiction, 1, 2, 3. Via MeFi.


* Science fiction as white supremacist fantasy.


* Charlie Stross on why he thinks he’ll be writing more urban fantasy than science fiction in the coming years.


* If you want a vision of the future: Tenure-track jobs in YA lit and science fiction studies at the University of Calgary.


Feces on the Philosophy of History! A Manifesto of the MLA Subconference.


* For Safety’s Sake, Get Rid of Campus Cops.


* This is not to diminish the exuberant commitment of the participants. At the same time, we must reckon with the fact that pop culture really likes to be agreeable along with its thrills. It likes to say yes, and makes endless conciliations to do so. It is safer to say yes. Yes can be deeply pleasurable. History is made by those who say no. Extinction Pop.


* David Graeber has published the piece comparing Rojava to the Spanish Civil War that he and I argued about on Twitter the other day. I have to say I find Richard Seymour’s take much more persuasive.


So if we have no way to make the slogan effective, what is it for?  If it is genuinely intended to pressure imperialist states to “arm the Kurds”, then it is at best unthinking sentimentality.  At its most sophisticated, though, the idea could be to ‘intervene’ in an argument taking place in imperialist countries around the region’s uprisings and military intervention, to attack the weak points in the dominant ideology and open a space in which a leftist argument can be made to a popular audience.  In this view, Kobane represents both the most progressive front of struggle in the region at the moment, and the weakest point ideologically for imperialist ruling classes who have no desire to see the PYD/PKK prevail.  In this sense, the demand to “arm the Kurds” is a sort of feint, akin to a ‘transitional demand’ in that it is both seemingly ‘reasonable’ in light of the dominant ideology and also impossible for the ruling class to deliver.


* Malcolm Harris remembers the Milgram experiments.


* Who Why How are trolls?


* On the post-post-colonial.


“Post-post-colonial” — and that’s just because I can’t think of something wittier right now — I think is a new generation of, well, new-ish generation of writers, where we’re not driven by our dialogue with the former mother country [the United Kingdom]. The hovering power for us when growing up in the ’70s and ’80s was not the U.K. It was the States, it was America. And it wasn’t an imperialistic power, it was just a cultural influence. I’m sure if this book was written in the ’70s or the ’60s, the characters would have ended up in London. They wouldn’t have ended up in the Bronx.


For us [as opposed to the post-colonial writers], for example, identity is not necessarily how to define ourselves in the relation of colonial power, colonial oppressor — so now it’s a matter of defining who you are as opposed to who you’re not.


* Remember: Obama cannot fail, he can only be failed.


* BREAKING: Wall Street is still looting the whole country.


* Big news for a small number of academic writers and artists: Judge Overturns IRS on Artist Tax Deductions.


Open-Carrying Guy Has His Brand-New Pistol Stolen at Gunpoint.


* One high school’s insane quest to make students print “Redskins.”


* Football is a death cult.


* Ebola is the CNN of CNN.


* Finding a Video Poker Bug Made These Guys Rich—Then Vegas Made Them Pay.


* The battle to make Tommy the chimp a person.


* Here’s exactly how much monetary damage Calvin and Hobbes did together.


* Here’s the plot, in a nutshell: Sinatoro follows a necronaut who is sent into the afterlife to save Earth from destruction. It draws influences from the western genre and the classic American highway Route 66. It’s something Morrison considers his magnum opus of sorts, and we’re glad he’ll finally get a chance to tell it.


* Thomas Friedman is paid an incredible amount of money to write this dreck.


* This is literally unbelievable: Fracking company teams up with Susan G. Komen, introduces pink drill bits “for the cure.” I find it difficult to even conceive of anything more absurd than this.


* And judging from the resounding crickets that followed this announcement this feels like a year that maybe I really could have won the Nobel Prize in Literature.


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Published on October 09, 2014 05:02

October 8, 2014

If I Wrote It: The Harry Potter Sequel

J. K. Rowling doesn’t need my advice, but if I were going to write the Harry Potter sequel she may or may not eventually be writing I would definitely focus it on the way her fans have developed the Houses into distinct and co-equal entities (as opposed to Protagonist House, Villain House, and Extra Houses). There are two plot hooks that I think would work well for this:

1. Harry’s kid gets sorted into Slytherin and has to figure out what that means for him;

2. The Wizarding World has finally wised up and outlawed Slytherin House altogether, turning it into something like a banned frat that’s moved underground.

Or some version of both at the same time.


J. K., you can send the checks directly to my office.


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Published on October 08, 2014 08:50

Wednesday Links

* Marquette English’s medievalist search closes today! Get your applications in!


* Advice for academics: how to write a research statement.


* The digital humanities and the MLA JIL.


* Junot Diaz on academic freedom and Palestine.


* The Plot Against Public Education.


* Grooming Students for A Lifetime of Surveillance.


* Yet another roundup on the death of the faculty.


* Holy picket lines, Batman! Marxism and superheroes, part two: the struggle.


* Same-sex marriage crossed the 50% threshold yesterday, as it became legal as many as 30 states due to SCOTUS inaction.


* The right to die: Terminally Ill 29-Year-Old Woman: Why I’m Choosing to Die on My Own Terms.


* Is Rick & Morty the best cartoon since The Simpsons season four? Probably! You Need to Be Watching Rick and Morty. Seriously.


* Google Glass and facial recognition.


* American Empire, by the numbers.


* An open access book: Joanna Zylinska’s Minimal Ethics for the Anthropocene.


* Understanding reparations.




4. The people making the claim eventually die. At that point the claim is acknowledged as having been credible.


— Ta-Nehisi Coates (@tanehisicoates) October 5, 2014





5. But because the claimants are dead, it is said that nothing can be done. Society shrugs, moves on, because, uhm, black on black crime.


— Ta-Nehisi Coates (@tanehisicoates) October 5, 2014



* War is a racket, Prophet Samuel edition.


* Wealth of richest 400 Americans surges to $2.29 trillion.


* The mission of the humanities is to transmit questions about value – and to question values – by testing traditions that build up over centuries and millennia. And within the humanities, it is the discipline of history that provides an antidote to short-termism, by giving pointers to the long future derived from knowledge of the deep past. Yet at least since the 1970s, most professional historians – that is, most historians holding doctorates in the field and teaching in universities or colleges – conducted most of their research on timescales of between five and 50 years.


* We’re probably teaching math wrong.


* Daria Morgendorffer’s Reading List.


* Hey, you, get your damn hands off her.


* Venus Green, who was 87 when she was handcuffed, roughed up and injured by police, will receive $95,000 as part of a settlement with Baltimore City. The quote doesn’t even reflect the most bananas part: Woman, 90, locked officer in basement, settles with police.


Ga. Cops Who Blew Off Toddler’s Face With Grenade Won’t Be Charged.


* Did I do this one already? Infinite Jest, as it was meant to be read.


* Stay informed: Nicolet National Forest is Milwaukee’s “zombie safe zone.”


* National Adjunct Walkout Day Planned.


* The gum you like is going to come back in style.


* And that gum you like is going to come back in style.


Startups Did Not Get Last Month’s Memo To Stop Burning All Their Money.


MIT researchers are developing a “second skin” space suit lined with tiny coils that contract when switched on, tightening the garment around the body. The coils (image below) in the “BioSuit” are made from shape-memory alloy that “remembers” its shape when bent and returns to its original form if heated.


* Marvel will finally try to make some money off the Unbeatable Squirrel Girl.


* Boston Review on vulture capitalism.


* MetaFilter mega-post on sex work and consent.


* The United States and alcoholism. Some anti-big-data-journalism pushback.


* And now at last we see the violence inherent in the system.




The Life Aquatic with Steve Zissou Wikipedia article edited anonymously from US Senate http://t.co/8LS8TRMkAo


— congress-edits (@congressedits) October 7, 2014



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Published on October 08, 2014 07:00

October 5, 2014

Special Bonus Sunday Reading: ‘Keywords for an Age of Austerity’

On Twitter Adam Kotsko pointed me to a great blogging series from John Patrick Leary: “Keywords for an Age of Austerity.”


1 – Innovation


2 – Stakeholder


2.5 – Learning Outcomes


Like the other words in this series—innovation and stakeholder—learning outcomes is a superficial concept that crumbles under even slight scrutiny. But its empirically verifiable meaninglessness conceals the zeal for empirical measurability that it demonstrates. And in the education world, these kind of measurements are only ever about cutting back.


3 – Nimble


4 – Entrepeneur


5 – Curator


The word’s combination of moral purpose and creativity aligns it closely with the “innovator” and the “entrepreneur.” In the most enthusiastic celebrations of each, marketing ingenuity and aesthetic imagination are scarcely distinguishable from one another.


6 – Conversation


7 – Silo


8 – Accountability


Measurement is key in enfocring the notion of accountability in schools, and it is what many critics of NCLB fixate on: the high-stakes testing regimes, teacher evaluations,  school grades, and so on. And yet there is something persistently vague about its usage. In my cursory reading of the text of NCLB, the term is never defined more clearly than it is above, except to specify that it refers to common standards and enforcement provisions. The law at times also seems to conflate the sanctions for failure—that is, being “held accountable,” or punished—with meeting the standard itself, or “being accountable,” a big difference.


9 – Content


10 – Sustainability


As a lifestyle and marketing term, “sustainable” can paradoxically express the same capitalist triumphalism—of an ever-expanding horizon of goods and services, of “growth” without consequences—that the conservationist concept was once meant to critique. “Sustainable development,” fuzzy as it is, was intended to remind us of the limited supply and unequal exploitation of natural resources. But if “sustainable” most literally means an ability to keep on doing something, its popularity as a consumerist value suggests that there is a fine line between “sustainable” and “complacent.” We can “sustain” grossly unequal cities—that is, they won’t fall apart utterly—with Lyft and Airbnb, rather than mass transit and affordable housing. For a while, anyway. Whether we will sustain our desire to live in them is another question.


11 – Civility


12 – DIY


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Published on October 05, 2014 08:39

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