This is actually one of the only things Richard Dawkins is right about
why would this not be a real Dawkins tweet though. is it odd for famous people to express perfectly ordinary opinions in exactly the same way anyone else would?
I think it’s because you assume that Richard Dawkins is locked in perpetual battle with right-wing Christians accusing him of Satanism on one side and left-wing atheists accusing him of Islamophobia on the other.
Then you see this tweet about anime or whatever and mentally you read it with the same tone of voice that you read all his other tweets, and it clashes.
It’s like those Youtube comment threads where they start off talking about anime and end up in a screaming match about Balkan nationalism, but in reverse.
Bennett’s personal experiences are merely anecdotal, but his history of the relationships between the Iowa Writers’ Workshop, the explosion of MFA programs in the last 40 years under its influence, and the CIA and other groups’ active sponsorship are well-researched and substantiated. What he finds, as Timothy Aubry summarizes at The New York Times, is that “writing programs during the postwar period” imposed a discipline instituted by Engle, “teaching aspiring authors certain rules of propriety.“
“Good literature, students learned, contains ‘sensations, not doctrines; experiences, not dogmas; memories, not philosophies.’” These rules have become so embedded in the aesthetic canons that govern literary fiction that they almost go without question, even if we encounter thousands of examples in history that break them and still manage to meet the bar of “good literature.” What is meant by the phrase is a kind of currency—literature that will be supported, published, marketed, and celebrated. Much of it is very good, and much happens to have sufficiently satisfied the gatekeepers’ requirements.
In a reductive, but interesting analogy, Motherboard’s Brian Merchant describes “the American MFA system, spearheaded by the infamous Iowa Writers’ Workshop” as a “content farm” first designed to optimize for “the spread of anti-Communist propaganda through highbrow literature.” Its algorithm: “More Hemingway, less Dos Passos.” As Aubry notes, quoting from Bennett’s book:
Frank Conroy, Engle’s longest-serving successor, who taught Bennett, “wanted literary craft to be a pyramid.” At the base was syntax and grammar, or “Meaning, Sense, Clarity,” and the higher levels tapered off into abstraction. “Then came character, then metaphor … everything above metaphor Conroy referred to as ‘the fancy stuff.’ At the top was symbolism, the fanciest of all. You worked from the broad and basic to the rarefied and abstract.”
The direct influence of the CIA on the country’s preeminent literary institutions may have waned, or faded entirely, who can say—and in any case, the institutions Whitney and Bennett write about have less cultural valence than they once did. But even so, we can see the effect on American creative writing, which continues to occupy a fairly narrow range and show some hostility to work deemed too abstract, argumentative, experimental, or “postmodern.” One result may be that writers who want to get funded and published have to conform to rules designed to co-opt and corral literary writing.
“Trans boys and men and non-binary people may have periods” is a true statement, and depends entirely on the op-status and specific hormone regimen the trans men and nonbinary people in question may or may not have.
Sex Ed that isn’t inclusive of everyone isn’t helpful to everyone.
C’mon now, I gotta tell you it’s actually called MENstruation. So obviously trans men and nb folks can have one of those. (Still a better argument than weird TERF gatekeeping)
“Something Good-Negro Kiss,” the newly discovered William Selig silent film from 1898 is believed to be the earliest cinematic depiction of African-American affection. Thanks to scholars at the University of Chicago and the University of Southern California, the footage is prompting a rethinking of early film history. The performance by cakewalk partners Saint Suttle and Gertie Brown is a reinterpretation of Thomas Edison’s “The Kiss,” featuring May Irwin and John Rice. The film was announced December 12, 2018 as a new addition to the Library of Congress’ National Film Registry—one of 25 selected for their enduring importance to American culture. The 29-second clip is free of stereotypes and racist caricatures, a stark contrast from the majority of black performances at the turn of the century.
People here have probably at some point read my descriptions of what ‘cousin’ meant in autistic communities and why I think reviving the term is important. I wrote about it again on my other blog for Autistic History Month. I also submitted it to the people doing Autistic History Month so hopefully they’ll post it somewhere. I’d been going to write something else, but this post came out of me at the last minute, and seemed far more useful than what I had been going to write.
Bringing people together with words like ‘cousin’ allows people to identify with autistic people, without putting pressure on them to figure out instantly whether they are actually autistic or not. It allows people to acknowledge that most skills and difficulties autistic people experience are not totally unique to autistic people. It allows people to acknowledge the vast grey area that is both outside of standard definitions of autism, and outside of neurotypical, but that resembles autism in important ways. It allows people to acknowledge that the boundary between autistic and nonautistic is fuzzy at best. And it does all that while contributing to people understanding more about themselves and each other, and bringing people together into friendships, communities, and other relationships they might not otherwise have.
So I really believe that it would not only be a good thing to remember the word ‘cousin’ and what it used to mean, but to revive it and expand its use for more than just autistic people. It allows for so much more flexibility than people are currently given about a lot of different identity groups, and that’s important. So if you like the idea of cousins, by all means, use it and adapt it as much as you want, for whatever groups of people in your own life you think it would best apply to.
Photo of the Day – The Blue-crowned Laughingthrush (Garrulax courtoisi) is a Critically Endangered species now only found in the Chinese province of Jiangxi. This is certainly one of the world’s rarest and least-known species. The good people in the small village of Caomencun have taken fiercely to protecting the large Camphor trees where this species takes refuge.
This is where Rich Lindie managed to photograph this individual
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