Sunday, January 24, 2021

We Need A Moratorium On Comparisons To Orwell’s ‘1984’

 Free societies are havens of dissent and disagreement.


Mass unhappiness and social breakdown have spawned something new: the caring industry,with its revolutionary ideology   Mass Of Mass 


“Multiverse theorists commit the inverse gambler’s fallacy” — Philip Goff (Durham) vs. the multiverse


This department of philosophy has a “director of outreach,” and justifiably so — a survey of various public philosophy outreach initiatives at the University of North Carolina, Chapel Hill


A panel event to discuss the renaming of David Hume Tower and Hume’s legacy at the University of Edinburgh — taking place later this month, with Mazviita Chirimuuta, Tommy J. Curry, and others


Over 60 philosophers, bioethicists, psychologists, drug experts “call for the immediate decriminalization of all so-called recreational drugs” — in an article in the American Journal of Bioethics


“One’s psychological history… is the time-spanning rope that ties together [our] different temporal parts and makes us complete” — philosopher Steven Hales (Bloomsburg) on when his rope was cut by amnesia


“It does not seem like a wise precedent to prosecute your political enemies. It does not seem like a wise precedent to leave the criminal behavior of your political enemies unprosecuted.” — “Here we have a proper antinomy” — Just one of the many angles by which Justin E. H. Smith (Paris) approaches recent events.


“The monotony of complimentary reviews steadily fed my cynicism, as it should feed yours” — Paul Musgrave (U. Mass Amherst) on the problems with academic book reviews

 They know exactly where you pause, when you slow down and speed up, and they count you in and out of the city.


We Need A Moratorium On Comparisons To Orwell’s ‘1984’

Especially for some folks, writes former high school English teacher Rachel Klein. “‘This is just like 1984!’ the right-wing mob cries as it changes the very meaning of words to suit its nefarious aims. ‘So Orwellian!’ its leaders cry as they demand unthinking fealty to an unhinged, unquestioned leader. … It’s a text that allows them to frame themselves as the victim of their own unacknowledged atrocities. … What white supremacist insurrectionist wouldn’t see himself in Orwell’s hapless hero of the rebellion? Perhaps if they’d read to the end …” – Electric Literature


COVID Is Killing American Indian Tribal Leaders And Their Culture

“It’s like we’re having a cultural book-burning,” said Jason Salsman, a spokesman for the Muscogee (Creek) Nation in eastern Oklahoma, whose grandparents contracted the virus but survived. “We’re losing a historical record, encyclopedias. One day soon, there won’t be anybody to pass this knowledge down.” – The New York Times


The Wrenching Realities Of Gentrification

Gentrification is one of the most pressing – and polarising – issues confronting cities today. In popular discussions, defenders of gentrification tend to paint it as an influx of badly needed capital into blighted urban areas… Critics view gentrification as a quasi-colonial invasion of the privileged into economically vulnerable communities. – Aeon


The Musical Fantasy World Created By Teens That Has Spawned Three Concept Albums For Broadway Shows

Yes, it’s partly because of TikTok and the world of duets, collaborations, and free-flowing (but in this case, very directed) creativity. But it’s so much more: “Averno [is] the setting of a sprawling, cross-platform universe over TikTok (125,000 followers), Instagram (47,000 followers), Spotify (1.4 million streams), YouTube, Twitter and Tumblr. It encompasses podcasts, livestreams, novels and short stories, TV and film scripts, an extensive alternate-reality game and, yes, musicals — all at different stages of completion.” – The New York Times




       Dædalus online 

       What great, great news: "In January 2021, Dædalusbecame an Open Access journal". They're still working on digitizing the back catalog, but eventually all this great material will be freely accessible. 
       Some of it already is -- like the new Winter 2021 issue, 'On the Novel', edited by Michael Wood. Lots of things that look worth a closer read, including: Simon D. Goldhill arguing for Finding the Time for Ancient Novels, Robyn Creswell on Poets in Prose: Genre & History in the Arabic Novel, and Two Theories by Franco Moretti. 
       A good-looking issue (on a topic of obvious interest ...), but that whole archive will be something to return to again and again ..... 



Flickr and the Library of Congress are collaborating on a project called COVID-19 American Experiences that "invites people to contribute images that reflect how the pandemic has impacted people's lives and communities".


Ibram X. Kendi - not Jozef Imrich -has a deal with Netflix to bring 3 of his books to the screen: Stamped from the Beginning; Stamped: Racism, Antiracism and You; and Antiracist Baby.


From I Love Typography, a list of favorite typefaces of 2020.


On the occasion of its 20th anniversary, An Oral History of Wikipedia.


From a large study of household transmission of Covid-19: "age ≥ 60 and infants most likely to get infected, age < 20 most likely to infect others (1.6X)".


A county-by-county US map that shows who wants to get the Covid-19 vaccine. In some places, it's under 50%. Lots of work to do here