Theory's Empire

As theorists became endowed chairs, department heads, series editors, and MLA presidents, as they were profiled in the New York Times Magazine and invited to lecture around the world, the institutional effects of Theory displaced its intellectual nature. It didn’t have to happen, but that‘sthe way the new crop of graduate students experienced it. Not…

John Lovas

As did many others, I received the sad news this morning that John Lovas, recent chair of CCCC, passed away June 21, 2005. He was 65. —Doug Hesse —John Lovas (Community College English) I’m still catching up on all that happened during my offline week. This is a shock, and it certainly puts my own little…

Vacation June 18-25

Vacation June 18-25 (Jerz’s Literacy Weblog) Sometime this weekend, I’ll be taking the wife and kids to a cabin for a week in Amish country. Actually, that phrasing is misleading. It’s more accurate to say I’ll accompany my family to a cabin that my in-laws booked. At any rate, I’ll be offline the whole time… and…

A Room and a View

The students were deliciously amused as the blinds fell. . . but the screen rose — or else the video was out-of-focus, or the sound intermittent, or worse. How I hoped to orchestrate the class! Instead, the room orchestrated me, and the technology orchestrated the room. Are lecture halls more vulnerable to the lure of…

The Fading Memory of the State

Imagine losing all your tax records, your high school and college yearbooks, and your child’s baby pictures and videos. Now multiply such a loss across every federal agency storing terabytes of information, much of which must be preserved by law. That’s the disaster NARA is racing to prevent. It is confronting thousands of incompatible data…

Archbishop hits out at web-based media 'nonsense'

THE Archbishop of Canterbury, Dr Rowan Williams, has criticised the new web-based media for ?paranoid fantasy, self-indulgent nonsense and dangerous bigotry?. He described the atmosphere on the world wide web as a free-for-all that was ?close to that of unpoliced conversation”. […] ?There is a tension at the heart of the journalistic enterprise. Its justification…

Woman kept alive to save baby

On May 7, the 26-year-old vaccine researcher from Arlington, Virginia, 15 weeks pregnant with her second child, collapsed from a stroke brought on by undiagnosed melanoma. She suffered serious brain damage and will never regain consciousness, but the cancer is spreading quickly. Now Ms. Torres’ family is hoping she will live long enough on life…

The true horror of American Torture has been revealed. Let me make light of it.

The techniques Rumsfeld balked at included “use of a wet towel or dripping water to induce the misperception of suffocation.” “Our Armed Forces are trained,” a Pentagon memo on the changes read, “to a standard of interrogation that reflects a tradition of restraint.” Nevertheless, the log shows that interrogators poured bottles of water on al-Qahtani’s…

Agency shuts Fleet Street office

Fleet Street began its association with publishing in 1500 when Wynkyn de Worde built London’s first printing press next to St Bride’s. It became home to Britain’s newspaper industry. But one by one the newspapers moved out – the former offices of the Daily Telegraph and Daily Express are now home to the US investment…

Video gaming serious subject at DU

“They develop both left-brain technical thinking as well as right-brain artistic thinking (skills), combined with traditional university liberal arts training,” said Scott Leutenegger, associate professor and coordinator of the game-development program. “This is going to become something that’s needed for more jobs over the next 10 to 30 years.” Schutz said the program “keeps both…

Legal Guide for Bloggers

Whether you’re a newly minted blogger or a relative old-timer, you’ve been seeing more and more stories pop up every day about bloggers getting in trouble for what they post. Like all journalists and publishers, bloggers sometimes publish information that other people don’t want published. You might, for example, publish something that someone considers defamatory,…

Not Ready for Their Close-Up

The high-def format’s merciless gaze isn’t solely a matter of screen resolution. Color is a factor, too. For years, government standards have limited the range of colors available to broadcasters, based on the technological limits of the time. With high-def, more colors can be used, including some formerly forbidden shades of red — which means…

To Our Readers

Watch next week for the introduction of “wikitorials” — an online feature that will empower you to rewrite Los Angeles Times editorials. —To Our Readers (LA Times) Fascinating idea. Similar:Let's talk about AI art (long, scrollworthy post from The Oatmeal)https://theoatmeal.com/comics/ai_artAestheticsSuch pictures fill my weekday world at fiveYour pictures fill my weekday world at f…AestheticsGoogle’s broken link…

Byte-Sized Middle Ages: Tolkein, Film, and the Digital Imagination (PDF)

[T]he process by which a fringe subculture, through its idiosyncratic reception of Tolkien’s fiction, ultimately came to define the “medieval” imagery, pacing, and plotting of one of the most popular film series in history is a relatively recent development. What was once a conception of Tolkien’s medieval fantasy realm held by an eccentric few has…