Galloway on Today [audio] *

Aug 6th, 2005 | Filed by

Typical measured, reasoned, cogent exposition of his views.… Read the rest



Whither Multiculturalism, Again? *

Aug 6th, 2005 | Filed by

Nick Cohen, Andrew Gilligan, Camilla Cavendish, Ann McEvoy on Radio 4.… Read the rest



The Hijab Does a Great Job Protecting Women *

Aug 6th, 2005 | Filed by

Which theory is the most rubbish, Burchill wonders.… Read the rest



Helen Elliott Talks to Martha Nussbaum *

Aug 6th, 2005 | Filed by

‘Claiming something based on fame and authority is death to the intellectual life.’… Read the rest



Argument Over Jared Diamond Displays Tics *

Aug 6th, 2005 | Filed by

Such as evaluation of arguments on political grounds.… Read the rest



Exciting New Scholarship

Aug 6th, 2005 2:55 am | By

Disability studies has hit town. Actually it did that a longish time ago – this reporter may be a little behind the times. I noticed a new ‘Disability studies’ section in the University bookstore several years ago, and there are jokes about the subject in the Dictionary, which we started writing three years ago.

Now disabled people have gotten into the business of problematizing: Disability studies has arrived in academia. Of course, the medical study of disability is long-standing, but the new approach establishes an interdisciplinary field on the model of women’s, queer, and ethnic studies…”Disability studies is us looking out at the world and seeing how that looks to us.” It also critiques “how disability is represented in all

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The Point of Scholarship

Aug 6th, 2005 2:04 am | By

Scott Jaschik at Inside Higher Education has an article about criticisms and criticisms of criticisms of Jared Diamond’s Guns, Germs and Steel. It’s hard to tell without reading a great many academic blog posts (I read part of one and decided that was more than enough of that), but it all seems to have a whiff of self-righteous orthodoxy-sniffing about it. But since I haven’t actually read all those academic blog posts, I could be wrong about that. But in any case, Jaschik turned up one comment – by a commenter at Crooked Timber – that sounds like exactly the kind of thought that started B&W on its erratic but dogged course.

Both Savage Minds pieces seem to exhibit

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More Than a Cat-loving Philosopher? *

Aug 5th, 2005 | Filed by

Steven Best co-founded the North American Animal Liberation Press Office.… Read the rest



Olivier Roy on Born-again Killers *

Aug 5th, 2005 | Filed by

The quest for mythical, messianic, transnational liberation movements.… Read the rest



Is the BJP in Decline? *

Aug 5th, 2005 | Filed by

Is its main aim to win elections or to promote Hindutva?… Read the rest



What Price Virtue? *

Aug 5th, 2005 | Filed by

Ice cream? Heaven? Self-love? … Read the rest



Disability Studs Recognized by MLA *

Aug 5th, 2005 | Filed by

The body, the Other, texts, representation, Said – you can do it in your sleep.… Read the rest



Jonathan Rée on Foucault on Iran *

Aug 5th, 2005 | Filed by

The Iranian revolutionaries were as irreducible as Astérix, Obélix and Panoramix.… Read the rest



Roots Again

Aug 5th, 2005 3:56 am | By

As Hamlet said, words, words words. They can be so tricky. Sometimes on purpose, sometimes by accident – and it can be very difficult to tell which is going on. Consider this rumination by Hanif Kureishi.

I believed that questions of race, identity and culture were the major issues post-colonial Europe had to face, and that inter-generational conflict was where these conflicts were being played out. The British-born children of immigrants were not only more religious and politically radical than their parents – whose priority had been to establish themselves in the new country – but they despised their parents’ moderation and desire to “compromise” with Britain. To them this seemed weak.

What does he mean by ‘politically radical’ … Read the rest



Social Neuroscience *

Aug 4th, 2005 | Filed by

Belief becoming subject of choice for many psychologists and neuroscientists.… Read the rest



Bush Thinks ID Should be Taught in Science Classes *

Aug 4th, 2005 | Filed by

‘Teach both sides’ sounds fair, but ID is a sectarian religious viewpoint.… Read the rest



Shikha Dalmia Interviews Salman Rushdie *

Aug 4th, 2005 | Filed by

A fatwa concentrates the mind on freedom.… Read the rest



‘George Revels in His Own Infamy’ *

Aug 4th, 2005 | Filed by

Labour MP Eric Joyce doubts he impresses even his audience in the Middle East.… Read the rest



Someone Finally Noticed *

Aug 4th, 2005 | Filed by

Galloway’s interesting rhetoric.… Read the rest



‘Critical Literacy’ Takes a Hit in Queensland *

Aug 4th, 2005 | Filed by

There’s a difference between being taught to be critical and being taught an agenda.… Read the rest