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by J K Cohen | August 26, 2010

More than a decade ago, during the “dot com” boom, I worked as a middle manager for a national Internet service provider. It was my first job in industry, and I did not know what to expect, but I was hoping for more interesting technical problems to solve, more resources with which to solve them, and a more sustained and strategic focus by management. As you can imagine, what I found was quite different. There was, in fact, a complete disconnect between the management side and the operational side of the business. Management was not interested in helping us solve problems or even form a larger strategy. That was for us to do. They were focused almost entirely on something else.


I was just at a conference in Shanghai about world literature. On one of the panels, the chief editor of a big forthcoming US anthology of World Lit gave a presentation. The Chinese colleagues had words of advice for him: “Include more Chinese literature.” “Without Chinese literature, your anthology won't be complete.” Th... >> Read more
The illustrated version of Slavoj Zizek's lecture on the drawbacks of charity is more fun than the straight video version. In both, a certain Slovenian makes the familiar argument that charity is counter-productive because it masks the brutality of capitalism. One is left to suppose that without charitable organizations to keep them quiet and wi... >> Read more
Eating Our Way Out
by J K Cohen | August 13, 2010
By now, everyone who’s read Michael Pollan or seen Food, Inc. knows about Monsanto, the multinational corporation which has patented and jealously defended its grip on the building blocks of life. Everyone knows how, by offering absurdly high crop yields with minimal farmer effort, on the one hand, and by using threats, coercion, and lawsuits o... >> Read more
As usual, this article gets it wrong from the start, because it understands plagiarism as a property crime. Hello, capitalism! A piece of writing, in this system of thought, is a “work product” (as lawyers say) that somebody owns, and if another person comes along and copies it, a theft has occurred. On the other hand, in the underst... >> Read more
I was vacationing in scenic Rhinebeck, New York last week, and could see why Bill and Hillary Clinton would choose it as a venue for their daughter’s wedding. It was as picturesque as gentrified small towns get, sort of a less artistic Stockbridge, Massachusetts, with a warm light shining on the humble stores on either side of Route 9. But the C... >> Read more
Knock Knock
by H Saussy | July 27, 2010
When writing to a university president, try to be polite, but clear; as a colleague, you have an informed perspective to offer. — This sounds like a good rule and I would like to think I followed it this time. But administrative prose is not my forte. _________________ President David Naylor University of Toronto Simcoe Hall, room 206 27 ... >> Read more
A few years ago I wrote that Comparative Literature has, in a sense, won its battles…. The controversy is over…. Our conclusions have become other people’s assumptions. But this victory brings little in the way of tangible rewards to the discipline.... The omnipresence of Comparative Literature ideas does not by any means betoken a large and pow... >> Read more
My favorite two Baudelaire stories. 1. One day, Baudelaire, hatless, was sunbathing on the quai d'Anjou [outside his apartment on the Ile Saint-Louis, so the date is the middle 1840s], and enjoying fried potato slivers that he extracted one by one from their newspaper wrapping. Along came, riding in a carriage, some very grand ladies who were fr... >> Read more
Some good attention is coming to Rwanda's national health plan. >> Read more
From the National Center for Missing and Exploited Stanzas: Thou, O my Grief, be wise and tranquil still, The eve is thine which even now drops down, To carry peace or care to human will, And in a misty veil enfolds the town. >> Read more
Suspense
by H Saussy | June 06, 2010
From a recent Trib article reproduced in the Times, Didi Kirsten Tatlow, “Letter from China: In Search of a Modern Humanism in China,” NYT, May 13, 2010: I met Mr. Wang [Hui] after he returned to China. On a hot, gusty day as a sandstorm whirled through Beijing, he explained his new ideas. “A healthy society needs truthful voices,” he said. “An... >> Read more
Several major life events have conspired to keep me away from printculture for so long and I've found it exceedingly difficult to get back into the writing game, despite telling myself that I should really just sit down and get started. So here I am. How to start? The biggest game changer was the birth of our child last summer TWO summers ago. ... >> Read more
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Tap-tap.


Plumpy'nut(TM)

Well worth reading: an NYT article that, though oddly incomplete in places, unveils the ambiguities of international food aid. The cloven hoof pops out in sentences like this one, which refers to

Plumpy’nut, which is fairly expensive, costing about $60 per child for a full two-month treatment.
For that $60 worth of Plumpy'nut, you are keeping another human being alive for 60 days. “Fairly expensive”? In what scale of values? Are Africans a luxury pet, a discretionary item?

They Call It Cost Control

For $700,000 the University of California could have paid about 50 full-time graduate stipends. Wouldn't that have been a better investment than feeding this pitiful bureaucrat's sense of entitlement?

Say the Name

looking for kindly moose and eco-squirrel!
I never felt right blaming stupidity, greed or racism for the ills of the Republic, so this New Yorker article, tracing many tentacles to their common lair, makes it possible to blame a cluster of individuals who want the political agenda in this country to be based on a passel of convenient lies. Ecrasez l'infâme!

Velcro Helicopters
“These are the baby-on-board parents, highly invested in their students’ success. They do a lot of living vicariously, and this is one manifestation of that.”
The piece about parents who can't let go of their college-age kids linked up in my mind with an article from 2006 claiming that 50% of Americans say that they have no close friends or confidants.* If the one dynamic is supposed to compensate for the other, it can't be good for the kids or the parents.
* (Follow-up articles in the American Sociological Review questioned these results.)

Nuh-no

No, Maureen Dowd, the president's job is not to be a patriarch and it's not to be an entertainer. I don't know why the New York Times hired you to be a “liberal” commentator. Your expectations fit no one so well as Ronald Reagan.

Death of Print, Cont.

When setting up the reading lists for my fall courses, I noticed that paperbacks I bought a few years back for $20 or so are now going for upwards of $70-- same publisher, same edition (somewhat blurrier and with lower-quality cover stock). It looks as if publishers have decided that where large volumes are not going to be sold-- that is, with somewhat specialized academic titles-- the only way to underwrite their costs is by marking up the product massively. (However, they must be making this calculation on the entirely of their backlist, because the books I am talking about were first printed in the 1970s and 80s, and no new investment has been made in them since then, beyond perhaps asking an intern to feed them through a scanner.)
At the same time, I find that my university owns some of these titles as electronic books.
What to do? I believe in academic publishing, I like to have physical books on the shelf, and I think we should all buy more books to keep the presses alive. But I can't say to my undergraduates, “Write off the $70 in a few years, when you're a professional semiologist.”

And He Thought the Tropes Were a People

Wonderful: Iliad, Inc., sends a letter to Homer's publishers, threatening a lawsuit for copyright infringement.
(OK, it's dated April 1, and today is August 9, but I couldn't resist.)

The Problem of the Problem

Peeps, Bob Herbert is on the line and he's mad about the erosion of the US's status as a college education power. One aid to diagnosis: look into the comments, where you'll see hundreds of people battering on their automatic hot buttons, blaming “the Democrats” (for low standards and social promotion) and “the Republicans” (for offshoring jobs, cutting school spending and instituting high-stakes multiple-choice tests) alternately. As long as the response is so analytically impoverished, I don't expect we will get any closer to solving the problem. It would take: (a) a general agreement on the aims of education, (b) the will to spend money on teachers and teacher training, (c) some prospect of a desirable outcome for the experimental subjects, i.e., the students, which refers us back to (a). My little hint to anyone interested in joining the debate: Since the days of the ever-expanding economic pie seem to be over, education needs to be linked to a goal different from a clean job paying $200,000/year and up.

Competition Where It Would Count

Free-enterprise doctrinaires and dogmatics love to extol competition. What if a crew of capable, public-spirited professionals, with the support and resources of the US government, were to go about nationalizing any pieces of our balky private health system that are collapsing, and gave a good example by offering better care for less money? That would be worth trying, say I from my temporary perch in a country where the single-payer system, seconded by mutual insurance coops, does quite well. And take a look at this snapshot from Haiti seven months after the earthquake.

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