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The End of Exemptions for Beauty

[…]address of March 4, 1853: “Of the complicated European systems of national polity we have heretofore been independent. From their wars, their tumults, and anxieties we have been, happily, almost entirely exempt. Whilst these are confined to the nations which gave them existence, and within their legitimate jurisdiction, they can not affect us except as they appear to our sympathies in the cause of human freedom and universal advancement.” A decade later an English novelist, Anthony Trollope, demurred because exemptions had been forfeited by waging the War Between the States. He noted, “The Americans had fondly thought that they were […]

9/11 Emerging

[…]reach the ramp, more like Robert Frost’s people on the beach, who “cannot look out far…/ [and] cannot look in deep./ But when was that ever a bar / To any watch they keep?” Frost’s irony in my view declines to dismiss them, for who knows what they think? I know. They think everything imaginable, for I have talked to them. I can use them. Americans on the move: Red Cross worker Donna Harrelson and her husband had owned a rental equipment store in Texas. When it was bought out by a chain, they wisely declined to take stock options, […]

Kaye in Wonderland

[…]useful feature but only a portion of the whole printed text shows up and I found jumping from book to computer screen just as troublesome as consulting end-notes to printed chapters. Is one to suppose that, if the full text was available, there would be no book to sell? So what is this Notes section for,if it still requires reference to the printed book? What it actually demonstrates, contrary to the authors’ claims, is that electronic technology, had it been free to access the entire text, would have made the task of referencing easier. In a project that wishes to […]

The Question of the Animal

[…]the relation between animal life and science, see Judith Roof’s essay, “From Protista to DNA [and Back Again],” which appears later in the volume.) The well-known Deleuze scholar Paul Patton is the author of the following chapter. His contribution, “Language, Power, and the Training of Horses,” discusses the ethical potential and difficulties involved in training other animals, horses in this case. Patton argues that, although perhaps no mode of training animals is wholly free of coercion, there are more or less ethical modes of training animals that respect both the differences between humans and animals and the specific nature of […]

The Avant-Garde and the Question of Literature

[…]presentness no longer seems limited to the present. It’s as if modern art weren’t just the latest change in art, say, the form of Stein’s own generation, but were instead a change of a wholly different order, one that has revealed something about all art. That this is, in fact, Stein’s idea is indicated by her lecture’s first sentence, which insists on a historical changlessness underlying changes in compositions, as well as by her later, more paradoxical insistence that what results from incorporating the new time-sense is not a historical document but something timeless, a classic. It is as though […]
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Words and Syllables

[…]that what Packer really wants from the old barber (Antony Abuto) is not a haircut but the comfort of “the same words. The oil company calendar on the wall. The mirror that needed silvering,” and accompanying stories about his family past that represent something solid and dependable in an ever-changing world (161). DeLillo refreshes his controlled third-person narrative with two first-person chapters of “The Confessions of Benno Levin,” written by the stalking ex-employee of Packer Capital. Part of “a spiritual biography that runs to thousands of pages” (149), Levin’s baffling journal provides a raw counterpoint to the chilly vision of […]

Metadiversity: On the Unavailability of Alternatives to Information

[…]sense, that the Internet is becoming a place where it can be possible for “pride of the standard [to be] seen as a foreign emotion, where a continuum of neo-Englishes flourishes, protected from the hierarchical weight of `received pronunciations’ and official criteria of correctness” (253-4). But the boundaries of this continuum are narrow precisely because it is neo-Englishes rather than a diversity of world languages that flourish. It is no accident of history that the programming and markup languages that structure the Internet are almost exclusively written in standardized fragments of English, especially as English has been revisioned into the […]
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L’Affaire PMC: The Postmodern Culture-Johns Hopkins University Press Conversation

[…]set of links, back to the first issue or forward to the current. Each issue will be represented in toto. Even more inclusive is the contributors’ page, which will have bios for everyone who’s ever contributed to the journal and links to their works. However, ebr would need to continue roughly five more years to amass the amount of data that has appeared in PMC. Whether this structure can survive the weight of that quantity of data remains to be seen. Fundamentally, I am uncomfortable with the rhetoric expounded in favor of privatization. I ask that we remember Mark Amerika’s […]
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On ®TMark, or, The Limits of Intellectual Property Hacktivism

[…]and forms of life, for autonomists, require this kind of labor, and characteristic of the latest phase of global capitalism is profitable appropriation of this labor. The so-called service economy, for instance, commodifies the affective labor involved in the reproduction of the labor force. Taking this process one step further, in the case of informatics, capitalism appropriates reproduction not only of the physical body of the laborer but also reproduction within the organization of the labor process. That is, capitalism not only appropriates the labors of love involved in creating websites; it also aims to commodify the channels of affect […]
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Michael Milken and the Corporate Raid on Education

[…]New Resources.” Financial Post (12 March 1999): C9 Bailey, Steve and Syre, Steven. “The Latest Incarnation of Milken.” The Boston Globe (14 October 1998): C1. Baker, Russ. “The Education of Mike Milken: From Junk-Bond King to Master of the Knowledge Universe.” The Nation (3 May 1999): 11-18. Bernstein, David S. “Mister Universe.” Inside Technology Training (September 1998): http://www.ittrain.com/ittrain/98sep_fea2.html. Boroughs, Don L. “The Predator’s Fall.” U.S. News & World Report (25 October 1993): 67. Carey, John. “Money Floods in to Fight a Killer.” Business Week (10 May 1999): 104. Carvajal, Doreen. “Libel Wrangle Over Milken Book Drags On.” The New York […]
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