Raritania
Sunday, December 23, 2018
Review:
Bullshit Jobs: A Theory
, by David Graeber
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New York: Simon & Schuster, 2018, pp. 368. Back in 2013 David Graeber penned an article for Strike! Magazine regarding what seemed to...
"Are the Arts Just For the Rich?"
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Watching Patrick Stewart in William Shatner's documentary The Captains' Close-Up talk about his childhood, I was surprised by his w...
Bullshit Jobs and the New Hollywood
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What one might call the "myth" of the "New Hollywood" of the 1960s and 1970s is that the artists' hubris led to the...
Sunday, December 16, 2018
Are They Trolling Me? A Test
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I have already written a blog post about spotting trolls , but thought I'd present some of those thoughts again in a somewhat more syste...
2 comments:
Sunday, December 9, 2018
What Makes a Troll a Troll?
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We all know that the Internet, and especially social media, are inundated with trolls --pathetic, repugnant, dark triad -afflicted losers (n...
Wednesday, October 31, 2018
Yes, Tax Breaks ARE Subsidies
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Many have encountered the claim, typically made by right-wing and especially libertarian commentators, that tax breaks are somehow not subsi...
Saturday, October 27, 2018
George Orwell's
Nineteen Eighty-Four
: A Note
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Some time ago a poll in Britain identified George Orwell's Nineteen Eighty-Four as the book that people most often lie about having rea...
Friday, October 26, 2018
Review:
On History
, by Eric Hobsbawm
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New York: New Press, 1997, pp. 305. As the title of his book implies, here historian Eric Hobsbawm is writing less of history here than of...
Saturday, September 8, 2018
Shelley, Verne and Wells--especially Wells
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When we recount the history of science fiction, it is common to point to some early figure as its founder--for instance, Mary Shelley, Jules...
Are Books Too Long These Days?
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Are books too long these days? I will say up front that many of the novels that have most impressed, most affected, most influenced me wer...
The Summer 2018 Box Office:
Solo
and
The Meg
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I haven't done an overview of the summer box office in quite a while, in part because it has become so damned repetitive, in its commerc...
Friday, September 7, 2018
Ian Watt, Irony and Criticism in Our Own Time
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For me one of the most memorable aspects of Ian Watt's The Rise of the Novel (reviewed here ) is his discussion of the proneness of cri...
Ian Watt and Shakespeare
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Ian Watt's Rise of the Novel was, as discussed here, a study of eighteenth century literature. Still, that outstanding piece of literar...
Of Character and the Larger Scene: A Note on Ian Watt's
The Rise of the Novel
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Recently reading Ian Watt's classic of literary criticism, The Rise of the Novel , one of the book's more compelling aspects seemed ...
The Way We Live Now
by Anthony Trollope: A Second Note
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As Anthony Trollope's great satire of late Victorian society opens, we are looking at Lady Carbury, who is in the midst of preparing for...
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