Trees Welcome Detroit Free Press Motion Towards Exclusively Digital Issues 4x Weekly

The Detroit Free Press and the Detroit News (both owned by the same corporation) have announced another nail in the coffin of print journalism. Home delivery will be available on Thursdays, Fridays and Sundays. Subscribers will have access to an electronic “e-edition” seven days a week as part of their subscription. This “e-edition” allows you…

Iraq Shoe Tosser Guy: The Animated Gifs

That didn’t take long. BoingBoing assembles a collection of digital interpretations of the shoe-tossing incident. Similar:What happens to local news when there is no local media to cover it?The pressures on local news outlets have…CultureSomewhere Nearby is Colossal Cave: Examining Will Crowther's Original ''Adventure'' in Cod…Because so little primary historical wor…AcademiaPICT Classic Theatre brings The…

What Ails Literary Studies: Leaving Literature Behind: The professionalization of the field is turning students off

We’re not teaching literature, we’re teaching the professional study of literature: What we do is its own subject. Nowadays the academic study of literature has almost nothing to do with the living, breathing world outside. The further along you go in the degree ladder, and the more rarified a college you attend, the less literary…

Tropes – Television Tropes & Idioms

Tropes are storytelling devices and conventions that a writer can reasonably rely on as being present in the audience members’ minds and expectations. The site’s name is misleading… while there are plenty of TV tropes, you’ll also find examples from journalism, comics, video games, etc. From the “air vent escape” to “loser archetypes” to the…

Annals of Education: Most Likely to Succeed

After a long anecdote about how hard it is to predict the pro playing ability of college quarterbacks, this New Yorker article focuses on details that characterize effective teachers. While I was initially bored by the sports introduction, I ended up being fascinated by the play-by-play commentary of scenes from the classroom. Another teacher walked…

Virtual Worlds News: Holocaust Museum Launching Kristallnacht Second Life Exhibit with Involve

The US Holocaust Memorial Museum has cooperated with a game developer to produce a Second Life memorial to Kristallnacht (“Night of Broken Glass,” a series of state-sponsored anti-Jewish riots in 1938). I haven’t visited the site yet, but it looks like there’s a deliberate attempt to distance the player from the experience, by casting the…

Full Circle

Last week, as one of my classes was wrapping things up for the last day, a student who has finished all his coursework noted that I was his professor for the first and last classes of his undergraduate career. He blogged his thoughts, and e-mailed the old student roster, inviting his former classmates to share…

Clive Thompson on How T-Shirts Keep Online Content Free

Increasingly, creative types are harnessing what I’ve begun to call “the T-shirt economy”–paying for bits by selling atoms. Charging for content online is hard, often impossible. Even 10 cents for a download of something like Red vs. Blue might drive away the fans. So instead of fighting this dynamic, today’s smart artists are simply adapting…

[Harvard] English Dept. Approves Overhaul of Undergraduate Requirements

Harvard redesigns its English major, removing required entry-level surveys and sophomore seminars. In their place, courses in the four new categories–“Arrivals,” “Poets,” “Diffusions,” and “Shakespeares”–would interweave literary history with textual analysis. At a gathering for prospective concentrators on Tuesday, English professor Stephen J. Greenblatt said that these courses will most likely be small seminars. […]…