‘Those who are Vulnerable Suffer More’ *

Jun 30th, 2005 | Filed by

Asma Jehangir on Pakistan’s judicial system in light of Mukhtaran Mai case. … Read the rest



Musharraf Says Mukhtaran Mai Free to Travel *

Jun 30th, 2005 | Filed by

She has her passport back.… Read the rest



Are Philosophers Disembodied Argument Machines? *

Jun 30th, 2005 | Filed by

Carlin Romano on Thomas Nagel on Nicola Lacey on H L A Hart.… Read the rest



Book Meme

Jun 30th, 2005 2:15 am | By

Err. I knew it had been awhile, but I didn’t think it had been as long a while as that. Thought it was more than a week, so maybe…ten days or so. No – three weeks. Blimey! How I do lose track sometimes (because I’m busy not losing track other times, or rather of other things – that’s what does it).

But I’m on it now. The book meme, which Norm tagged me with ten days I mean three weeks ago. (Really?! I bet it wasn’t. I bet he moved the post, just to rattle me.)

Total number of books I’ve owned:

What, I’m supposed to have counted them and kept track of the numbers? I don’t know! I have … Read the rest



Close Reading Redux

Jun 30th, 2005 12:43 am | By

Michael Bérubé has a post on that Judith Halberstam article about the putative death of English. Remember that article? The one I had so much innocent fun with last month? Actually (now I look) two sessions of innocent fun – because I wasn’t able to fit all my ridicule and venom into one comment of reasonable length.

Much of my venom was directed at the characterization of close reading as ‘elitist’ – remember that?

But, while Spivak’s investment in the “close reading” and formalism betrays the elitist investments of her proposals for reinvention, I urge a consideration of non-elitist forms of knowledge production upon the otherwise brilliant formulations of The Death of a Discipline. If the close reading

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Remarks on Theory

Jun 30th, 2005 12:39 am | By

People have been commenting here and there on Mark Bauerlein’s “Theory’s Empire”, no doubt because of the links on Arts and Letters Daily and (cringe) National Review Online’s The Corner. There’s this colleague of Mark’s for example:

If the original impulse of theory was to shatter orthodoxies and challenge hierarchies (it wasn’t all that, but that’s the mythology), the current incarnation is tediously hegemonic…I’m sure deconstruction was really exciting back in the day, but, well, I don’t live back in the day, and I don’t care…the theory evolved into elaboration for its own sake, turning a corner of literature departments into Philosophy-Lite (“Just as much deep meaning, but a third less logical rigor”). You can see how theory

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David Aaronovitch on Jew-hating on the Left *

Jun 29th, 2005 | Filed by

Part of the Left has lost its political and moral compass.… Read the rest



Mark Steyn Says Very Silly Thing *

Jun 29th, 2005 | Filed by

‘There aren’t many examples of successful post-religious societies.’… Read the rest



Sikh Protesters Disrupt Sikh Wedding *

Jun 29th, 2005 | Filed by

‘We will use any means whatsoever to stop this happening.’… Read the rest



Christian Group Calls Belfast Gay Parade ‘Offensive’ *

Jun 29th, 2005 | Filed by

Because they ‘believe what the bible says regarding sodomy.’… Read the rest



A Culture That Sees Child Abuse Everywhere *

Jun 29th, 2005 | Filed by

Meadow did not single-handedly create abuse-obsession that led to unjust convictions.… Read the rest



Munchausen’s and Other Syndromes *

Jun 29th, 2005 | Filed by

Expert witnesses, suspect science and dead babies.… Read the rest



Ethnomathematics *

Jun 29th, 2005 | Filed by

Essential tool for ethnochemistry, ethnoengineering, ethnophysics.… Read the rest



Preacher

Jun 29th, 2005 2:50 am | By

What was that we were saying about Bible-clutchers who avow their belief that everyone ‘outside’ of JC will get conscious torment for eternity? And about the thought that people who choose to believe that, and sign a statement saying so at the beginning of their college careers, and carry on as usual in a cheerful tranquil manner – have something badly wrong with them; that such people are not, as is so often assumed of ‘devout’ believers, better than other people, but worse?

Well. Last January, some six months before Edgar Ray Killen was convicted and sentenced for the murder of James Chaney, Michael Schwerner, and Andrew Goodman, Jeffrey Goldberg wrote a piece in The New Yorker about a visit Read the rest



Islamic Group Cross at Transvestite Beauty Contest *

Jun 28th, 2005 | Filed by

Leader worries Allah might send second tsunami to punish.… Read the rest



Televangelist in Nigeria Furious at Tiny Payoff *

Jun 28th, 2005 | Filed by

Promised miracles, expected 6 million people, got 1 million, had hissy fit.… Read the rest



Ethics of Amputation by Choice *

Jun 28th, 2005 | Filed by

Two Australian philosophers exploring the phenomenon of amputee wannabes.… Read the rest



On Vivian Gornick and the Pursuit of the Ideal *

Jun 28th, 2005 | Filed by

‘Ideas, dolly, ideas. Without them, life is nothing. With them, life is everything.’… Read the rest



Pulling Down the Moonshine

Jun 28th, 2005 | By Geoffrey Dean

Astrology, Science and Culture: Pulling Down the Moon By Roy Willis and Patrick Curry. Berg, Oxford 2004. ISBN 1-85973-687-4. 170 pages including bibliography and index. GBP15.99 paperback.

The subtitle “Pulling Down the Moon” refers to the women diviners of ancient Thessaly who, Plutarch said, can pull down the moon. Roy Willis is a social anthropologist at the University of Edinburgh. Dr Patrick Curry is a social historian and Associate Lecturer at the Sophia Centre for the Study of Cultural Astronomy and Astrology, Bath Spa University College.

In order of increasing controversy, astrology has been seen as a topic of great historical importance, a useful fiction to promote therapy by conversation, a cloud in which meaningful faces can be seen, an … Read the rest



Disorder and Early Sorrow

Jun 27th, 2005 10:16 pm | By

This review of Simon Blackburn’s Truth brings up Munchausen’s by proxy:

For a more serious example of the misuse of “objective facts” by people in power, he blasts the proponents of “Munchausen’s Syndrome by Proxy,” which Blackburn calls “a description invented by a British pediatrician for a ‘condition’ in which mothers harm or kill their babies in order to gain attention for themselves. By insinuating the quite false idea that science had ‘discovered’ this ‘condition,’ and therefore in some sense was on the way to understanding it, and then by ceding power to ‘expert witnesses’ who could pronounce upon its presence, the medical profession assisted in the conviction of many innocent mothers whose babies had died of natural causes.”

The … Read the rest