Humanities: January 2003 Archive Page
The Geezer Speaks Weblog
"The Geezer loves film noir. These dark, taut, black and white films give the lie to the illusion that the forties and fifties were upbeat, positive decades. I like that." The Geezer --The Geezer Speaks WeblogGeezerSpeaks.com)An amusing personal website... and by a Geezer, too.
The Wheel, Masakati Episode 1: The White Queen
Your name is Masakati, which means "White Queen" in the language of the Scorpion People. You were named this before you were hatched, when the serpent witches foretold to your mother Essekunit, the Tangeri Queen, that her child would be as great a ruler as had been not seen in this Age: that you would be Queen not only of the Tangeri but of all the Scorpion People, and take back the lands stolen by the Empire.The beginning of a collaborative fantasy story. At the end of the chapter, readers vote on what happens next. Set in an interesting world that borrows mythology from the Zodicac. I rather enjoyed the multi-chapter story I read a few weeks ago... this is a new story.--The Wheel, Masakati Episode 1: The White QueenInterfable.net)
Olsen Twins Set to Attend University of Wisconsin in Eau Claire, WI
"It has been confirmed that Mary-Kate and Ashley Olsen, two of the richest teens in America, have decided to attend University of Wisconsin in Eau Claire, WI beginning in the Fall of the 2003-2004 academic year." --Olsen Twins Set to Attend University of Wisconsin in Eau Claire, WICNN?)Why the awkward passive that conceals who "confirmed" this claim? Why is this article in the "World" section of what appears to be the CNN website? Thanks, Sarah, for pointing it out!
Grade Inflation in Higher Education
Interesting discussion of grade inflation, party skewed by early comments that claimed that engineering and other technical majors are immune from the pressures that cause humanities professors to inflate student grades. Sparked by a Washington Post article that few people on Slashdot seem to have read (that's fine with me -- most are drawing on their own experience as students, graduates, or teachers). --Grade Inflation in Higher EducationSlashdot)
UN Orders Wonka to Submit to Chocolate Factory Inspections
"The chocolate-making capabilities of Wonka's heavily fortified compound have long been a source of speculation. Wonka, defying international calls for full disclosure, has maintained his silence regarding his factory's suspected capacity to manufacture confections of mass deliciousness....'Without full inspections, there's no earthly way of knowing which direction Wonka's going. Not a speck of light is showing, so the danger must be growing. And he's certainly not showing any signs that he is slowing. Are the fires of Hell a-glowing? Is the grisly reaper mowing? Who can provide the world with the answer to these pressing questions?'"'The candy man can,' Rumsfeld added grimly.'"
[An Oompaloompa writes: "Just wanted to let you know that the Wonka article in The Onion was a wonderful pick-me-up this morning. Since I work for the corporation that produces the Wonka brand, it probably tickled me even more than some others."] --UN Orders Wonka to Submit to Chocolate Factory InspectionsThe Onion)
Da Vinci: The Pith Behind the Man
"Leonardo figured things out by looking at them, thinking about them and taking them apart. That compulsion to tinker has led many modern hackers to claim Leonardo retroactively as one of their own." --Da Vinci: The Pith Behind the ManWired)Nice backgrounder for the Da Vinci exhibit at the Metropolitan Museum of Art.
Review finds Pervasive Medical Research-Industry Ties
"About one-fourth of university-based medical researchers receive funding from drug companies -- ties that sometimes distort study results, according to a review done by two researchers with industry connections of their own."Ohmigosh ohmigosh oh...my...gosh! Scientific research isn't completely objective? Scientists aren't lofty supreme beings of pure intellect, untouched by such human vices as pride and clumsiness? And when did corporations start funding scientific research? This is an outrage! I'm glad I'm in the humanities, where fraud never happens.--Review finds Pervasive Medical Research-Industry TiesAssociated Press)
Tracking Wikipedia Press Release
Wired has published an article about the open source encyclopedia Wikipedia reaching its 100,000th article. This item first started appearing in weblogs last week. Once it's made its way to Wired, it will be read by the editors of more mainstream publications, who may want to feature it in articles for the general public. (Blogdex lets you track blogger links to the wikipedia press release, to see who first thought it was newsworthy.) Any news editor who wants to serve young, technologically savvy readers had better be paying attention to weblogs. Tracking Wikipedia Press ReleaseLiteracy Weblog)I've contributed to the Wikipedia articles on interactive fiction, usability, Elia Kazan, and maybe a half dozen others.
Film Scientists Not All Mad, Bad
"It might seem like a stretch to compare scientists to, say, African Americans and Latinos, who have historically been targets of often viciously stereotypical portrayals in film and on TV. But Weber thinks the media has a blind spot when it comes to scientists." Jason Silverman --Film Scientists Not All Mad, BadWired)
Independent Content Provider
"Only cranks, mystics, revolutionaries and wealthy dilettantes wrote without some form of pecuniary support, whether patronage, salary, direct sales, residuals, or the penny-a-word piecework compensation offered by pulp-magazine editors.... The Internet changed all that." --Independent Content Providerv-2 Organisation)
I Appreciate The Muppets on a Much Deeper Level Than You
"Hear me now: Jim Henson was Kermit. Steve Whitmire is a Henson impersonator. Admittedly, a damn talented one -- his Ernie, in particular, nearly captures the affability and innocence of the original -- but the equal of Henson? Step back from the brink, Dennis." --I Appreciate The Muppets on a Much Deeper Level Than YouThe Onion)
Spoof of "Nigerian E-mail Scam"
If you've ever gotten a "CONFIDENTIAL" e-mail from a Nigerian official whose shift key seems to be stuck, you'll appreciate this spoof. --Spoof of "Nigerian E-mail Scam"Palnatoke)
Study says boys do read, they just don't read books
"The problem may be that they are simply bored with the conventional curriculum, says the study, titled Morphing Literacy: Boys Reshaping Their Literacy. The study found it is a myth that boys do not read. While they are less interested in fiction or traditional literature than girls are, they read more on the Internet and memorize vast amounts of detailed material from games or stories they read in the newspaper, the research showed." Julie Smyth summarizes an academic report, but doesn't say where it was published.Another telling quote, which reminds me of Sugata Mitra's minimally invasive teaching philosophy: " The researchers found boys are becoming literate "in spite of school instruction," and may end up better prepared for a career because their skills are more useful than being able to write a narrative or analyze a work of fiction....They found boys spend large amounts of time on chat sites and Web sites to get tips on how to "cheat" or compete at video games, read books about animals, sports and fantasy, and will pick up magazines and newspapers to read hockey scores, entertainment stories or news about things relevant to their lives, such as the death of Napster.--Study says boys do read, they just don't read booksNational Post)
Fifty Word Fiction
VocationClick the question mark to view a random story, click N to see the newest, or click S to submit your own.
"I want to be a Bohemian, Rachel."
"A what?"
"A Bohemian, a hanger onner around the arts"
"I thought you already were - all that cafe society poetry stuff"
"Yes, but it's kinda hard on your own - do you want to be one too?"
"Erm, can't I be a bum instead?"
Elin Merriman--Fifty Word FictionAlistair Fitchett)
Wikipedia, the Free Encyclopedia, Reaches its 100,000th Article
"Wikipedia ( http://www.wikipedia.org ), a community-built multilingual encyclopedia, is announcing that the English edition of the project has reached a milestone of 100,000 articles in development.... Wikipedia is a public WikiWikiWeb, a website where anyone can edit any article at any time. Users build upon each other's edits, and vandalized articles are quickly repaired by restoring an older version. In Wikipedia's second year, thousands of volunteer editors from around the world have added 80,000 entries to the English version and 33,000 more to the other language editions of Wikipedia. This surge in growth has made Wikipedia the world's largest and fastest growing open content encyclopedia and the largest WikiWikiWeb.'' --Wikipedia, the Free Encyclopedia, Reaches its 100,000th ArticleWikipedia.org)Inspired by Wikipedia, in July of 2002, I launched a collaborative open-content Glossary of Interactive Fiction, which seems to have plateaued at about 180 or so terms. Anyone is free to suggest or revise an entry.
Mickey Mouse Clubbed: Disney's Cartoon Rodent Speaks out...
"My first cartoon short, Steamboat Willie, was a direct parody of Keaton's movie Steamboat Bill, Jr. On the very first page of the script, it says, 'Orchestra starts playing opening verses of Steamboat Bill.' I remember what Eldred's lawyer Lawrence Lessig said when he read that: 'Try doing a cartoon take-off of one of Disney, Inc.'s latest films with an opening that copies the music.'" Jesse Walker --Mickey Mouse Clubbed: Disney's Cartoon Rodent Speaks out...Reason)
Al Hirshfeld, 99, Dies; He Drew Broadway
"To be the subject of a Hirschfeld drawing endowed one with a special cachet. To find the word 'Nina,' the name of his daughter, hidden several times in the lines of his caricatures, was a weekend pastime for millions of readers. Next to his signature he put the number of 'Ninas' in his drawings, creating a sort of pleasurable Sunday game for his admirers." --Al Hirshfeld, 99, Dies; He Drew BroadwayNYTimes)
Interesting Photo Caption...
Wow... that must have been some slideshow.Interesting Photo Caption...Yahoo News)
Copyright Ruling is a Ripoff of Consumers
"Walt Disney understood the value of the public domain, and used it precisely as other great artists had done. He updated an out-of-copyright character to create Mickey Mouse, for example, and launched an empire. The company he founded later used writer Victor Hugo's work, which was also no longer owned by anyone, to create a cartoon based on the Hunchback of Notre Dame saga. The Disney animators had every right to build new works on old ones -- and the public also got the benefit. Try the same thing with Mickey Mouse and you'll be hauled into court faster than you can say 'Goofy.' The court's 7-2 ruling betrayed some judicial discomfort, observing that Congress has the power to do 'arguably unwise'' things. Get ready for more unwise acts, in that case." Dan Gilmor --Copyright Ruling is a Ripoff of ConsumersSiliconValley.com)
Content is Crap
"The public water system is somewhat unpleasant to think about. Basically, the stuff you flush down the toilet gets sent through a filtering system. That system 'treats' the sewage until what remains is sufficiently pure to send back to you as drinking water.A rather icky image, but no Internet personality is known for subtlety. The title is a reference to Bill Gate's 1996 essay "Content is King."As content intermediaries, publishers perform an analogous function. Individual software writers, authors, and musicians produce something close to raw sewage. The computer programs, books, and music that people buy are closer to drinkable water." Arnold Kling
--Content is CrapTCS)
Vonnegut at 80
Cranky avant-garde novelist Kurt Vonnegut on George W. Bush: "He's in the same business I'm in. He's telling stories. It turns out this is the simplest of all stories to tell. I mean, I want to hold attention when I write something. What he wants to be is interesting. And revenge is interesting. I've said there are two radical ideas that have been introduced into human thought. One of them is that energy and matter are pretty much the same sort of stuff. That's Einstein. The other is that revenge is a bad idea. It's an enormously popular idea but, of course, Jesus came along with the radical idea of forgiveness. That was radical. If you're insulted, you have to square accounts. So this invention by Jesus is as radical as Einstein's." --Vonnegut at 80Nuvo)Thanks for the link, Jim. It is very hard to think of forgiveness when faced with images of North Korea's concentration camps.
Why Shakespeare is for All Time
"[T]he promise of a pill for every ill remains, as it always will, unfulfilled. Anyone who had read his Shakespeare would not have been surprised by this disappointment. When Macbeth asks a physician:Canst thou not minister to a mind diseased,"The physician replies laconically: 'Therein the patient / Must minister to himself.'
Pluck from the memory a rooted sorrow,
Raze out the written troubles of the brain,
And with some sweet oblivious antidote
Cleanse the stuffed bosom of that perilous stuff
Which weighs upon the heart?"Every day, several patients ask me Macbeth's question with regard to themselves-in less elevated language, to be sure-and they expect a positive answer: but four centuries before neurochemistry was even thought of, and before any of the touted advances in neurosciences that allegedly gave us a new and better understanding of ourselves, Shakespeare knew something that we are increasingly loath to acknowledge. There is no technical fix for the problems of humanity." Theodore Dalrymple --Why Shakespeare is for All TimeCity Journal)
Supreme Court Upholds Copyright Extension
"Hundreds of thousands of books, movies and songs were close to being released into the public domain when Congress extended the copyright by 20 years in 1998.... [That] would have cost entertainment giants like the Walt Disney Co. and AOL Time Warner hundreds of millions of dollars. AOL Time Warner had said that would threaten copyrights for such movies as Casablanca, The Wizard of Oz and Gone With the Wind." --Supreme Court Upholds Copyright ExtensionWired (AP))Disney doesn't want to lose hold of Mickey Mouse, so 20th century scholarship will suffer. I chose the years 1920-1950 as the time span for my dissertation, figuring that as I worked my way through my academic career, the plays I had studied would one by one come out of copyright, and I could publish critical editions that would be available at an affordable rate. Looks like that ain't gonna happen. Since hundreds of millions of dollars are at stake, I figure it would be sensible to tax old copyrighted materials, making it more and more expensive for copyright holders to maintain their monopoly on a particular title. The money gained could support the scholars who will work on the material that copyright holders feel is not worth paying the extra money to protect beyond a reasonable limit (say, 25 years free, another 25 years if you're still alive and you still want it, then another 25 years for a modest fee, after which each 10 years the company has to report how much money they made off of the material, and pay a user fee that supports the common domain. Sigh. Dream on, Jerz.
The Word Doctor
"A serious literary magazine published by a hospital? Sounds unlikely. But the Bellevue Literary Review, published by the New York University department of medicine at Bellevue Hospital, is drawing on a long literary heritage. Bellevue has nursed William Burroughs, Eugene O'Neill and many other close-to-the-edge writers and artists. Danielle Ofri, the review's editor-in-chief and a doctor at Bellevue, believes scientists and doctors too often dismiss the power of language." --The Word DoctorNew Scientist)Ofri asks her medical students to write up patient histories as a first-person narrative, I presume in order to encourage greater empathy with the human patient. Several years ago, I found NYU's excellent Medical Humanities website. Georgetown also has a site on Disability Studies in the Humanities, an interest that has arisen in part due to the near-obsession humanities scholarship developed in the study of "the body" in the 90s.
"Israeli geologists say a purportedly ancient stone tablet detailing repair plans for the Jewish Temple of King Solomon is genuine... Our findings show that it is authentic... If officially authenticated, the find would be the first piece of physical evidence backing up biblical texts. It could also intensify competing claims to the site in Jerusalem's Old City, where the stone is said to have been found, which go to the heart of the Arab-Israeli conflict." --Biblical Technical Writing: Plan for Repairing Solomon's Temple FoundBBC)Update, 20 May -- Scientists: its a fake.
The Curse of Pooh
"Pooh would no doubt scratch his fluff-stuffed head in disbelief at what's going on. Shirley and her daughter, Pati, are embroiled in an epic legal battle with the Walt Disney Co. over the merchandising rights to the world's most beloved bear. Shirley's former husband, Stephen Slesinger, acquired the merchandising rights to Winnie the Pooh in 1930 from his creator, A.A. Milne. After Slesinger died, Shirley granted the rights to Walt Disney himself." --The Curse of PoohFortune [annoying pop-up])
Games-to-Teach Research
"From an educator's perspective, games may be the most fully realized educational technology produced to date. Tom Malone (1981) showed how games use challenge, fantasy, player control, and curiosity invoking designs to create intrinsically motivating environments. More recently, Lloyd Rieber (1996) has argued that digital games engage players in productive play -- learning that occurs through building microworlds, manipulating simulations, and playing games. Rieber argues that historically, educational games have relied heavily on exogenuous game formulas, meaning that content is inserted into a generic gaming template, like hangman, rather than seamlessly integrated with gaming mechanisms as in SimCity .(He calls this endogenuous game design)." Kurt Squire --Games-to-Teach ResearchMIT)The artificial world of the college campus is, itself, a kind of simulation of real life. Via thinking with my fingers.
Games * Design * Art * Culture
"Why is this a hobby horse of mine? Largely because I've been trying to promote the idea that games are an artform since I was a teenager, when I first started designing them professionally. Also because the rest of the world, both inside and outside the game industry, is starting to realize the validity of the idea--with increasing academic attention to games, increasing press coverage of them, and an increasing interest among game developers in thinking about design on a theoretical level. And finally, because so much nonsense is written about games that I think there needs to be a venue for a viewpoint that both values games and realizes their limitations--and the often stringent limitations of the sometimes soul-crushing engine we call the games industry." Greg CostikyanAnother comment from Costikyan: "Games are art. Most of them are bad art, to be sure." See also Costikyan's "I Have No Words and I Must Design. BTW, it was pretty easy figuring out which categories to use when I posted this entry.--Games * Design * Art * Culture G*D*A*C)
Titles for Web Pages: In-Context and Out-of-Context
"Most writers know the value of an informative title, but many beginning web authors don't know that each web page needs two kinds of titles. The in-context (IC) title always sits at the top of a page, with the rest of the document immediately beneath it.... The out-of-context (OOC) title is frequently displayed by search engines or archive pages, as part of a long sorted list." Dennis G. Jerz --Titles for Web Pages: In-Context and Out-of-ContextLiteracy Weblog)The document referenced above is indebted to a 1998 AlertBox column, "Microcontent," which is far too geeky for my newbie web author students who need the excellent lessons it contains.
Elvis Again
"The commemoration of the twenty-fifth anniversary of August 16, 1977 seemed more than anything a media mirage churned up by Graceland smoke machines. A Graceland spokesman had recently discussed the problem facing the operation: if Elvis Presley was indeed immortal, his fans were not. Many of Elvis's original fans were dying off; if the enormously successful marketing of Elvis Presley over the last twenty-five years were to continue, they would have to be replaced by people who were not even born when Elvis Presley died." Greil MarcusIt's not often that you read an article about the decline of a pop culture phenomenon, unless it's simply a passing reference like, "Whatever happened to Garbage Pail Kids?" At the beginning of a literature course, I enjoy telling my students that the movies and recording stars that seem to be the center of their world right now -- and that may seem much more interesting than the "old" works we well be studying in class -- will soon be as dated as the pop culture icons that were canonical among youth when I was an undergrad. During the 80s, the "cool" kids watched Miami Vice and lyp synched to Falco's "Rock Me, Amadeus." And when I'm in a nursing home, they will try to placate me by piping in Muzak versions of Michael Jackson and Madonna songs. The horror! The horror!--Elvis AgainThreepenny Review)
Montreal English is a "Linguistic Laboratory"
"Some people prefer 'sneakers' to 'running shoes,' others 'soda' to 'pop.' But it's in Montreal - where many people use the French 'liquor douce' instead of 'soft drink' - that some Canadian language scholars are really bubbling with enthusiasm over the nature of English. 'It's so special because it's the only major city in North America where English is a minority language.'" Interview with Charles Boberg --Montreal English is a "Linguistic Laboratory"CBC)Thanks for the link, Jim.
Music in English Detective Fiction
"Music, a social and artistic activity of the first importance, inevitably makes its way, often quite a substantial way, into literature of all kinds. Monographs have been, or could be, written on music in Jane Austen's novels, or Thomas Hardy's, or J. B. Priestley's, or on music in Galsworthy's FORSYTE CHRONICLES, to name a few instances at random. It may, then, be of some interest to recall (and I do not believe it has been done previously at length) some of the musical associations of the vast bulk of British crime fiction." Philip L. Sowcroft via Waterboro Public Library --Music in English Detective FictionMusicweb)Naturally, the article starts with Arthur Conan Doyle, due to Sherlock Holmes's love of the violin and the opera.
Someone Writing about Their Reading of Google
"An act of reading electronic language involves:I'm reminded of Espen Aarseth's definition of Cybertext -- a system that includes not only the array of bits in memory or phosophors on a screen, but the whole thing -- including the software used to create and view the text, the hardware (keyboard, mouse, monitor), the power grid that runs the whole system, and even (without stretching the point too much) the whole system of laws, guidelines and practices that control what sort of text gets created, distributed, rewarded, penalized, etc.
- Setting up an electronic language environment;
- Selecting particular input into the electronic text;
- Receiving the output;
- Analyzing what the electronic text does."
--Someone Writing about Their Reading of GoogleTechnacy Weblog)
According to Jenkins, "Technacy primarily is about a new consciousness, an extended consciousness beyond oracy and literacy that encompasses the problems posed by a new language order - electronic language." I'm very happy I found this website. As soon as I get my course syllabi set up next week I'm goint to spend more time here.
In Praise of Clutter
"Although office clutter is usually almost entirely work-related, it tends nevertheless to be treated as though it consisted of the dirty socks and crisp packets of an adolescent. Workers are confused. They know that creating clutter is an essential part of the way they work, but they are made to feel guilty about it." --In Praise of ClutterThe Economist)The paperless office isn't.
"Here ye -- let thine site visitors speak" discussion on Webword
Amusing WebWord thread about awful headlines and the misuse of "Ye Olde English" grammar. This particular awful title detracted from a very sensible article by Peter Seebach. --"Here ye -- let thine site visitors speak" discussion on WebwordWebword)
In Departure For Catholic Church, Pope Adding 'Blue Stars' to Rosary
"As his twenty fourth year as Pontiff comes to a close, the physically frail yet still forceful Pope John Paul II has told his clergy to add 'Blue Stars' to the revered rosary beads. These stars will replace every fifteenth bead on the traditional talisman." --In Departure For Catholic Church, Pope Adding 'Blue Stars' to RosaryBroken Newz [satire])The article creates an alternate history timeline in which the introduction of Lucky Charms to Poland inspires the collapse of the Communist empire. Not quite as good as The Onion's "Aged Pope 'Just Blessing Everything in Sight,' Say Concerned Handlers".
Fans Outraged at New Character in The Return of the King
"A recently leaked trailer for The Return of the King has Tolkien fans outraged over the apparent addition of a new character - Jar-Jaromir. The scene depicted in the trailer shows Jar-Jaromir shouting, 'Gondora gonna fallsa'; he then trips over a corpse and knocks down a couple of Uruk-hai." Brian Biggs --Fans Outraged at New Character in The Return of the KingBBspot [satire])The comedy bits added for Gimli's scenes in The Two Towers do seem to have been a bit much, though I have to admit I laughed (or at least chuckled) when I first saw them. But if Lucas had done Tolkien, the satirical article linked above might not be too far-fetched. "Gondora gonna fallsa"? You could have come up with better spoof dialogue than that, Mr. Biggs. Still, the fake quote from a fan trying to rationalize the connection between Middle Earth and Star Wars is hilarious.
2002 Year-End Zeitgeist
"2002 Year-End Zeitgeist offers a unique perspective on the year's major events and hottest trends based on more than 55 billion searches conducted over the past year by Google users from around the world."This listing indicates that the world is moving beyond the events of 9.11.2001. I had toyed with the idea of making Morrowind my next comptuer game purchase... the fact that it's 9th on the "gaining" list makes me more confident it will be a good use of my limited free time. The singers on this list mean nothing to me, though I've used Eminem (7th gaining) in class when my students complained that the rhymed verse of Moliere's 1660's play Tartuffe was unrealistic. Thanks for the link, Rosemary.Top 5 gaining Google queries from 2002:
Top 5 declining Google queries from 2002:
- spiderman
- shakira
- winter olympics
- world cup
- avril lavigne
--2002 Year-End ZeitgeistGoogle)
- nostradamus
- napster
- world trade center
- anthrax
- osama bin laden
Fantasy Illustration by Luis Peres
"Creating imaginary worlds while trying to do it in a personal style to at least be able to retain some originality in my work, was always an enjoyable challenge for me and my favorite thing while drawing Fantasy themes." Luis Peres --Fantasy Illustration by Luis Peresworld4mysheep.com)
"The evidence that mother-only families contribute to crime is powerful. When two scholars studied data from the National Longitudinal Study of Youth, they found that, after holding income constant, young people in father-absent families were twice as likely to be in jail as were those in two-parent families. And their lives did not improve if their mother had acquired a stepfather. Fill-in dads don't improve matters any more than do fatter government checks." James Q. WilsonSome bold statements that you don't hear people making every day; one hopes that this article won't simply be dismissed as being "reactionary", and that the important pro-fatherhood message won't be drowned out by voices accusing the author of wanting to bring the woman-oppressing 50s back. Of course there are families that are better off without a father, but most single mothers aren't Rosie O'Donnell or Jodie Foster. This article calls for active, involved fathers, not lord-of-the-manor breadwinners who demand the food on the table when they come home from the local bar so that they can spend the evening reading the paper and watching sports.--The Family Way: Treating Fathers as Optional has Brought Big Social CostsOpinion Journal)
Google didn't find anything on the "National Longitudinal Study of Youth," but it did return a National Longitudinal Survey of Youth. It's annoying that I can't check Wilson's sources -- it wouldn't have taken up much space to give the names of the two scholars he mentions.
The article also paraphrases advice from William Galston, a former assistant to Clinton: "To avoid poverty, do three things: finish high school, marry before having a child, and produce the child after you are 20 years old. Only 8% of people who do all three will be poor; of those who fail to do them, 79% will be poor." Wilson's use of the statistics seems to confuse causality with correlation, which is something I'm sure Wilson wouldn't permit his philosophical opponents to do. Still, it sure looks like a strong correlation.
Anti-green Author Dishonest, Says Scientific Panel
Bjorn Lomborg - the director of Denmark's Environmental Assessment Institute and a leading would-be debunker of mainstream scientific opinion on issues like global warming and overuse of natural resources - has been found guilty by a Danish government committee of 'scientific dishonesty'. --Paul Brown --Anti-green Author Dishonest, Says Scientific Panel (Guardian)This is the peer-review process at work. Somebody will doubtless publish a rebuttal, and the debate will continue. The panel concluded "Based on customary scientific standards and in light of his systematic one-sidedness in the choice of data and line of argument, [he] has clearly acted at variance with good scientific practice." I'm a little troubled by the idea that a particular "line of argument" is equated with "dishonesty," but I'm not an expert in the subject matter.
Non Scents
"Apparently Jennifer Lopez is coming out with a new 'fragrance' (which is what they call perfume these days, I guess) called Glow by J-Lo. Here's some others that will follow on its heels.BTW, I get a lot of links from Jorn Barger's Robot Wisdom.Matthew Baldwin
- Mince by Prince
- This Is How You Should Smell by Martha Stewart
- Texas Tea by G.W.B.
- Free For The Taking by Winona
- Affair by Cher
- I Am Led To Understand That This Has An Agreeable Odor But, Lacking A Nose, I Cannot Vouch For It Myself by Michael Jackson
- Stink by N*Sync
- Attack of the Colognes by Lucas
- Drool by Jewel
- I Hereby Command You To Purchase This by Oprah
- Republic of Sudan by Alan Greenspan
- Stench by Judi Dench"
--Non ScentsDefective Yeti)
"Welcome to Google Village. This is part of a wider project exploring, analyzing, detailing and educating people on the issues to do with the new skills required to communicate now and in the next century. Literacy is no longer the key attribute to desire, work for and acquire in this world of electronic language (where people communicate across the internet). What we require now is Technacy." Elwyn Jenkins"Google Village" is a play on Marshal McLuhan's concept of the "Global Village." I'm glad I found this site. Perhaps fittingly, I stumbled across it while searching Google for new references to my own name.--What Does it Mean for Internet Dwellers to Live in the Google Village?Technacy Log)
William Gibson's Weblog
"There may well be people who abandon Neuromancer on the grounds that it's riddled with sentence-fragments, but, in a sense, the sentence-fragments are there to scare off readers who aren't ready for that, and to encourage those who want to see the envelope of language pushed even further, the pedal taken even closer to the metal? I do know how to write formal standard English without making a great many mistakes." --William Gibson's WeblogWilliamGibsonBooks.com)In his novel Neuromancer, Gibson coined the term "cyberspace". Now Mr. Gibson has a weblog. Welcome to the blogosphere!
York Mystery Plays -- Illumination: From Shadow into Light
"This is the story of the revival of York Mystery Plays from the Festival of Britain in 1951 to the present day told by the many individuals who have been involved with the Plays - whether as actors, stage hands or front of house - through their personal memories, photographs and press cuttings."A wonderful site that focuses on the music that accompanied these wonderful devotional and instructive plays from the Medieval town of York, England. (See my own York Corpus Christi Simulator.) Thanks for the suggestion, Heidi Johnson of the National Centre for Early Music, in York, England.--York Mystery Plays -- Illumination: From Shadow into LightNational Centre for Early Music)
1 January 1659/60 (Lord's Day) [Samuel Pepys' Diary]
Blessed be God, at the end of the last year I was in very good health, without any sense of my old pain, but upon taking of cold.1 I lived in Axe Yard having my wife, and servant Jane, and no more in family than us three. My wife . . . . gave me hopes of her being with child, but on the last day of the year . . . .[the hope was belied.]2 The condition of the State was thus; viz. the Rump, after being disturbed by my Lord Lambert, was lately returned to sit again. The officers of the Army all forced to yield. Lawson lies still in the river, and Monk is with his army in Scotland. Only my Lord Lambert is not yet come into the Parliament, nor is it expected that he will without being forced to it. The new Common Council of the City do speak very high; and had sent to Monk their sword-bearer, to acquaint him with their desires for a free and full Parliament, which is at present the desires, and the hopes, and expectation of all. Twenty-two of the old secluded members3 having been at the House-door the last week to demand entrance, but it was denied them; and it is believed that [neither] they nor the people will be satisfied till the House be filled. My own private condition very handsome, and esteemed rich, but indeed very poor; besides my goods of my house, and my office, which at present is somewhat uncertain. Mr. Downing master of my office.Weblogs have gotten a lot of people excited about historical diaries. Perhaps the most famous is that of Samuel Pepys, who kept a diary from 1659-1669, a span that includes the Great Fire and the Great Plague. The diary will be posted online in chunks, and readers can comment on the postings, just like a weblog. The online verison is slightly edited, leaving out the bits perceived by previous editors as too salacious or unseemly for respectable audiences. (Thanks for the link, Ben.)This morning (we living lately in the garret,) I rose, put on my suit with great skirts, having not lately worn any other, clothes but them. Went to Mr. Gunning's chapel at Exeter House, where he made a very good sermon upon these words:--"That in the fulness of time God sent his Son, made of a woman," &c.; showing, that, by "made under the law," is meant his circumcision, which is solemnized this day. Dined at home in the garret, where my wife dressed the remains of a turkey, and in the doing of it she burned her hand. I staid at home all the afternoon, looking over my accounts; then went with my wife to my father's, and in going observed the great posts which the City have set up at the Conduit in Fleet-street. Supt at my, father's, where in came Mrs. The. Turner and Madam Morrice, and supt with us. After that my wife and I went home with them, and so to our own home.
--1 January 1659/60 (Lord's Day) [Samuel Pepys' Diary]PepysDiary.com)
Tech Industry to Take on Hollywood over Digital Rules
"The high-tech industry plans to launch a sophisticated new lobbying campaign later this month to strike back against Hollywood in a battle to shape rules of the road for new digital technologies. The Business Software Alliance and Computer Systems Policy Project....hope to convince Congress that strict copy-protection legislation that sets technological mandates would stifle innovation, harm consumers and threaten an already suffering tech industry." Heather Fleming --Tech Industry to Take on Hollywood over Digital RulesMercury News)Before you jump up and down cheering, note that Microsoft is one of the companies behind this new legal strategy. The end result will be to put more power in the hands of technology monopolists, instead of the publishers of entertainment media. So either way, you'll still have to pay to let Hollywood entertain you.
Global Media
"Big media barons are routinely accused of dominating markets, dumbing down the news to plump up the bottom line, and forcing U.S. content on world audiences. But these companies are not as big, bad, dominant, or American as critics claim. And company size is largely irrelevant to many of the problems facing today's Fourth Estate." Benjamin CompaineSince I've devoted class time and blog bits to lamenting the reach of multimedia corporations, it seems only fair to link to this opposing view. Interesting quotation from the article: "A merger of Time Inc. with Warner Communications and then with America Online dominates headlines, but the incremental growth of smaller companies from the bottom does not." Weblogs are apt vehicles for promulgating the "media convergence is bad" meme, but if Compaine is right, then the growth of weblogs themselves is an argument against the idea that convergence is the dominant model. Another quote from the article: "Make no mistake: an activist with a dial-up Internet connection and 10 megabytes of Web server space cannot easily challenge Disney for audiences. But an individual or a small group can reach the whole world and, with a little work and less money, can actually find an audience." That sounds more like the point of view expressed in the blogosphere.--Global MediaForeign Policy)
Godotmania [50-Year Appreciation of Waiting for Godot]
"I heard of the play when it opened in Paris. But I am ashamed to say I did not see it. I had no idea that it would shortly dominate my life....My 16-year-old daughter was baffled by the programme material detailing the play's controversial history. 'What on earth is there to understand?' she said. 'It's perfectly clear what it is about. You only have to listen.' How stupid it seems now that, 50 years ago, people denied that this play was a play." --Godotmania [50-Year Appreciation of Waiting for Godot]Guardian)
