Friday, September 30, 2011
Smart Links 9/30/11
It's Friday. Go ahead. Indulge yourself with a video of puppies.
Third hand smoke can mess you up too.
Not ready for marriage? Try moving to Mexico, where you can get a "temporary marriage license". Thanks, for sharing PB!
The words of the world are endangered!
Jonathan Franzen growing up, 50 years later.
"Reign Man"! Oh, Hipster Hitler.
Theory Dogs, Coming Soon!
Hey folks, I aim to be launching my new web comic series, Theory Dogs, very soon. The comic will follow the (mis)adventures of my two dogs, Kuvi and Kaila, exploring the world through critical theory. So far, Kuvi’s favorite philosophers include Foucault, Lacan, Marx, and Zizek. If you have any suggestions on any critical theory the canines should tackle, please let me know!
I’m considering creating a special comic on the Wall Street protest right now, where Kuvi will ponder, “What would Marx say?” She has a lot of thoughts but not a lot of opposable thumbs, so we’ll see how fast I can whip these up!
We’re aiming for next week! Stay tuned!
P.S.: I apologize in advance for my poor art skillz. It turns out it’s really freaking hard drawing via clicks and mice.
I’m considering creating a special comic on the Wall Street protest right now, where Kuvi will ponder, “What would Marx say?” She has a lot of thoughts but not a lot of opposable thumbs, so we’ll see how fast I can whip these up!
We’re aiming for next week! Stay tuned!
P.S.: I apologize in advance for my poor art skillz. It turns out it’s really freaking hard drawing via clicks and mice.
Thursday, September 29, 2011
Oh, Brooklyn: Reaper Bus
Yesterday I saw an elderly couple standing by the bus stop. His wife is standing with her arms folded. She is frowning. The older man, slightly hunched carrying a bag of groceries, turns to his wife and sighs. "We've been waiting for this bus forever. I'm going to die before it finally shows up."
I don't know if there is a better (worse?) place than a bus stop to make a death joke. But kudos to you, elderly gentleman, for simply not caring.
Oh, Brooklyn.
Wednesday, September 28, 2011
Smart Links 9/28
We've known for awhile that patent laws are stifling innovation, but it must be pretty bad when the OECD says it's inhibiting growth.
The Museum of Children's Art in Oakland was going to show an exhibit on art made by Palestinian children during wartime, but "concerned parents" compelled the museum to shut it down. If you would take your kid to the Holocaust Museum though, you should have no problem taking your kid to an exhibit on Palestinian kids. Bad form, MOCHA, though I still love your acronym.
Acknowledge racism still exists. It will help the world.
Are you disabled? You'll find out within 40 minutes.
Women can finally vote, but they still can't drive in Saudi Arabia. Instead, they get lashed for driving a car.
Anthony DeRosa's opinion on the Wall Street Occupation makes him sound like a complete a**hole. As if all people protesting corporate greed would all be "over-privileged, unemployed trustafarians". The Wall Street Occupation is simply a protest against corporate privilege and exploitation, something all Americans can relate to.
If these links have made you depressed about the current state of affairs, have some coffee. It helps make people happier, well kinda.
The Museum of Children's Art in Oakland was going to show an exhibit on art made by Palestinian children during wartime, but "concerned parents" compelled the museum to shut it down. If you would take your kid to the Holocaust Museum though, you should have no problem taking your kid to an exhibit on Palestinian kids. Bad form, MOCHA, though I still love your acronym.
Acknowledge racism still exists. It will help the world.
Are you disabled? You'll find out within 40 minutes.
Women can finally vote, but they still can't drive in Saudi Arabia. Instead, they get lashed for driving a car.
Anthony DeRosa's opinion on the Wall Street Occupation makes him sound like a complete a**hole. As if all people protesting corporate greed would all be "over-privileged, unemployed trustafarians". The Wall Street Occupation is simply a protest against corporate privilege and exploitation, something all Americans can relate to.
If these links have made you depressed about the current state of affairs, have some coffee. It helps make people happier, well kinda.
Tuesday, September 20, 2011
15 year old AIDS enzyme problem solved by an online game
An online game rewarding players for correctly decoding a complex protein solved a 15 year old AIDS problem. The game enabled users to model the enzyme, Mason-Pfizer monkey virus (M-PMV) retroviral protease, in just three weeks. Technically though, the correct answer was found in just ten days; the time span for the game was 3 weeks. From the Huffington Post:
How insane is that? Technology/social media is re-opening the world of science to average folks!
scientists experimented with giving users three weeks to create a model of a protein that scientists haven't been able to model on the molecular level themselves. At the end of the three-week period, scientists compared the best models to x-ray crystallography of the protein. They discovered that at least one group of players had determined the correct structure for it, according to the Fold.it. blog.
The findings were published in structural and molecular biology section of the Sept. 18 version of the journal Nature. Fold.it has gained over 236,000 players since it started in 2008.
Amazingly, according to PC Magazine, few of the players involved had any background in biochemistry at all.
How insane is that? Technology/social media is re-opening the world of science to average folks!
Wednesday, September 14, 2011
Smart Links 9/14
Fearless bikers coast down mountain "spines" in Utah through sharp rocks, cranky cacti, vertical drops, ridiculously skinny "trails".
Mexico deploys comics to fight drug wars, sneaks in a cierto/falso section to test the kids. Que extraño.
Birth of the Cylons? Starbuck get your gun.
Finally, being a computer nerd is cool, possibly leading to money, fame and ladies.
Rub a dub dub, 3 hipsters in a tub.
Video map shows net jobs gained/jobs lost since 2004 in the US. Things get scary around 2009.
Yes, there were once ad campaigns that marketed white sugar as inherently superior to brown sugar, suggesting uncomfortable racial undertones, to say the least.
Via LC at oohlalani: If only I could have an Alan Rickman GPS for Christmas. ::::swoooon::::
Mexico deploys comics to fight drug wars, sneaks in a cierto/falso section to test the kids. Que extraño.
Birth of the Cylons? Starbuck get your gun.
Finally, being a computer nerd is cool, possibly leading to money, fame and ladies.
Rub a dub dub, 3 hipsters in a tub.
Video map shows net jobs gained/jobs lost since 2004 in the US. Things get scary around 2009.
Yes, there were once ad campaigns that marketed white sugar as inherently superior to brown sugar, suggesting uncomfortable racial undertones, to say the least.
Via LC at oohlalani: If only I could have an Alan Rickman GPS for Christmas. ::::swoooon::::
Monday, September 12, 2011
Visiting the 9/11 Exhibit at P.S. 1 Moma: A Review
Occasionally, it is familiar for New Yorkers to see two huge spotlights shine into the night sky. Over the years, the two towers have come to exemplify a beacon of American resilience, protecting and guiding us into what remains an uncertain future. And yet, to see the lights extend higher and higher into the clouds is to feel the uncomfortable confusion of how to remember. When I see the ghostly columns of light, I remember where I was (brushing my teeth in California, 6:30am), the disbelief of disaster (no, it can’t be that bad), counting who I knew in New York (my great uncle, who walked home to New Jersey that day). Yet in many respects my memories of the actual event are inconsequential in comparison to how I remember the ongoing repercussions: taking my shoes off at the airport, the anxiety of visiting Manhattan on its anniversary, the MTA posters warning riders to “say something” if they “see something”, the joke of threat levels from the Bush Administration, knowing my cell phone can be legally tapped.
Remembering 9/11 on its anniversary is to remember everything: fear, terror, hope, loss, love, anger, resentment, safety. No other event in American history is comparable to the ongoing emotional, political, and social effect that 9/11 had on America. Perhaps since Pearl Harbor, no foreign fighting or war has taken place on American soil. It induced a collective sense of vulnerability that was devastatingly new for Americans, and importantly, unnervingly familiar to other countries.
And although it has been a decade, 9/11 exists as an event that defies understanding, and for that reason it is perhaps not surprising that we have trouble figuring out how to remember it. What is the best way to memorialize our loss while retaining our resilience to live without fear? What are we remembering? What can we remember when 9/11 hasn’t actually ended, when the “war on terror” rages on despite the ten year distance? What is the story of 9/11? Can there be a story when 9/11 is really about all that is in absentia?
P.S. 1 MoMA tries to remember in its September 11 exhibit. On view from September 11, 2011 – January 9, 2012, it “brings together more than 70 works by 41 artists—many made prior to 9/11—to explore the attacks' enduring and far-reaching resonance. Eschewing images of the event itself, as well as art made directly in response, the exhibition provides a subjective framework within which to reflect upon the attacks in New York and their aftermath, and explores the ways that they have altered how we see and experience the world in their wake.”
P.S. 1 MoMA smartly chose to showcase works that were made prior to the attacks in emphasizing how 9/11 has not only radically altered our perceptions of everyday objects – an unattended suitcase, a pile of ash – but also how 9/11 persists as an ongoing trauma in American public consciousness. In other words, to talk about 9/11 is to talk about how we as a country can’t, or refuse, to get over it. Or maybe we just don’t know how.
The exhibit, which grimly opens with black party banners, very early on situates 9/11 from the American perspective. For an exhibit that wished to focus on the aftermath of the attacks, it is slightly curious that few pieces consider the global or religious reactions, but considering the (perhaps inevitable?) memorializing tilt of the exhibit, it’s possible that the curators felt boxed into creating a U.S. centric interpretation of the event. For instance, in the large gallery the soundtrack from the Mel Gibson movie, The Patriot, surges through the exhibition. Full of over dramatized crescendos, the instrumental music is melancholy and cliché, a wry comment on the American patriot fulfilling the role of both hero and anti-hero in the post 9/11 political landscape. As I ambled through the exhibit, passing by an unattended leather suitcase, a red tarpaulin bag that looked like a body bag, the soundtrack came to suggest the uncomfortable oscillation between hero and villain, in which each and every person is both potential hero or potential threat in fulfilling their own patriotic visions.
The rigid 9/11 boundaries between friend and foe are the most unnerving in one of the few Arabic related pieces. In one of the smaller galleries, a poster entitled “Arabic Joke” turns out to be more tragic than funny in the post 9/11 world. To briefly paraphrase it (since the MoMA guards prohibited all photography), an Arabic man thinks he is made of grain and begins to fear that the chickens will eat him. His wife chastises him and eventually sends him to a psychiatric ward. When the doctor tells her that her husband has improved, she picks him up but is dismayed to see her husband curl up in fear when they pass by some chickens. She asks, “I thought you were better and no longer thought you were made of grain?” The man replies, “Yes, I know I’m not made of grain, but it doesn’t matter what I think, it only matters what the chicken thinks.” The mad man has a good point, and the disaster of being wrongly perceived and categorized, as either “good” or “evil”, permeates the entire exhibit; it becomes a black joke of how terrorism has rendered ourselves and everyone suspect, but of course, especially Muslims.
As I continued to wander through the galleries, what struck me was how many of the pieces depicted absence. Ostensibly, this is because 9/11 is all about loss, but I think there is more to it. For instance, in a piece by Ellsworth Kelly entitled “Ground Zero”, a green trapezoid covers the spot where the two towers stood in a New York Times photograph, and in “Gray Twilight” by Alex Katz, a darkened shroud envelops the entire canvas except for a cluster of gray smears that either illuminate or disappear into the horizon. In another room, a series of photographs depict bone chilling emptiness: uninhabited desks, chairs, blurred shadows in glass windows, a singular cup on a table. In all these works, the sense of loss is complicated by the ambiguity of whether things have actually been lost, or if things have been covered up (the green trapezoid over ground zero), if things were never lost since they were never there to begin with (reading the gray twilight for signs of life), or if absence can take on a presence of its own (the empty chairs and desks). In these works, nothing is apparently there. But as people we like to project our stories and memories and associations on these blank spaces. We like to create a story because otherwise the absence of meaning becomes overwhelming, painful, if not frightening. The exhibit indeed shows how 9/11 has radically altered interpretations of otherwise benign objects.
The photograph, “Unititled (Glass in Airplane)" by William Eggleston, is a prime example.
Before the attacks, the photograph was of a glass on an airplane, perhaps merely suggesting luxury through the golden brown alcoholic beverage, the idle fingers stirring ice. Yet post 9/11 it takes on an ominous tone. One imagines the people on the ill fated planes enjoying their last drink, their last view to the outside world. The person with a wedding ring. It becomes an emotionally charged moment since the passengers do not yet know their planes will be hijacked, and as the shadow on the cup extends longer and longer, it becomes a bad omen predicting the shadow of not only the two towers falling, but of the lingering shadow of terrorism itself.
But it’s possible that I am reading too much into this.
It’s possible that there is no story at all.
For the most part, it is up to the visitor to project their own memories, emotions and anxieties on the pieces in the September 11 exhibit. The plaques do little more than contextualize when and where pieces were made. Because of this, the exhibit compels the visitor to narrativize each of the pieces in their own way. In and of themselves, the pieces do not possess any significance to 9/11, only resemblances, traces. As a result, the exhibit reflects the confusion of how we as a country are supposed to remember 9/11 if we continue to encounter it daily through new airport security measures, laws to legalize surveillance, hyperbolic news reports from Afghanistan and Iraq, profiling an entire religion as potential threats. This exhibit doesn’t indulge in melancholy practices as much as it painfully reminds one that terrorism and anxiety remains a part of daily life, much as it was ten years ago.
In coming to terms with this anxiety, the problem of remembering 9/11 is also a problem of producing a coherent story that explains terrorism. But of course, there is none. If a narrative adds logic to a given scenario, then there can be no story of terrorism since inherently, terrorism has no logic. To do so would be to graft a story onto what is simply not there. In choosing works that depict this in absentia, the exhibit plays on 9/11 as a signifier with no signified. The confusion of what to remember is the confusion of how to forget that there is no story.
Remembering 9/11 on its anniversary is to remember everything: fear, terror, hope, loss, love, anger, resentment, safety. No other event in American history is comparable to the ongoing emotional, political, and social effect that 9/11 had on America. Perhaps since Pearl Harbor, no foreign fighting or war has taken place on American soil. It induced a collective sense of vulnerability that was devastatingly new for Americans, and importantly, unnervingly familiar to other countries.
And although it has been a decade, 9/11 exists as an event that defies understanding, and for that reason it is perhaps not surprising that we have trouble figuring out how to remember it. What is the best way to memorialize our loss while retaining our resilience to live without fear? What are we remembering? What can we remember when 9/11 hasn’t actually ended, when the “war on terror” rages on despite the ten year distance? What is the story of 9/11? Can there be a story when 9/11 is really about all that is in absentia?
P.S. 1 MoMA tries to remember in its September 11 exhibit. On view from September 11, 2011 – January 9, 2012, it “brings together more than 70 works by 41 artists—many made prior to 9/11—to explore the attacks' enduring and far-reaching resonance. Eschewing images of the event itself, as well as art made directly in response, the exhibition provides a subjective framework within which to reflect upon the attacks in New York and their aftermath, and explores the ways that they have altered how we see and experience the world in their wake.”
P.S. 1 MoMA smartly chose to showcase works that were made prior to the attacks in emphasizing how 9/11 has not only radically altered our perceptions of everyday objects – an unattended suitcase, a pile of ash – but also how 9/11 persists as an ongoing trauma in American public consciousness. In other words, to talk about 9/11 is to talk about how we as a country can’t, or refuse, to get over it. Or maybe we just don’t know how.
The exhibit, which grimly opens with black party banners, very early on situates 9/11 from the American perspective. For an exhibit that wished to focus on the aftermath of the attacks, it is slightly curious that few pieces consider the global or religious reactions, but considering the (perhaps inevitable?) memorializing tilt of the exhibit, it’s possible that the curators felt boxed into creating a U.S. centric interpretation of the event. For instance, in the large gallery the soundtrack from the Mel Gibson movie, The Patriot, surges through the exhibition. Full of over dramatized crescendos, the instrumental music is melancholy and cliché, a wry comment on the American patriot fulfilling the role of both hero and anti-hero in the post 9/11 political landscape. As I ambled through the exhibit, passing by an unattended leather suitcase, a red tarpaulin bag that looked like a body bag, the soundtrack came to suggest the uncomfortable oscillation between hero and villain, in which each and every person is both potential hero or potential threat in fulfilling their own patriotic visions.
The rigid 9/11 boundaries between friend and foe are the most unnerving in one of the few Arabic related pieces. In one of the smaller galleries, a poster entitled “Arabic Joke” turns out to be more tragic than funny in the post 9/11 world. To briefly paraphrase it (since the MoMA guards prohibited all photography), an Arabic man thinks he is made of grain and begins to fear that the chickens will eat him. His wife chastises him and eventually sends him to a psychiatric ward. When the doctor tells her that her husband has improved, she picks him up but is dismayed to see her husband curl up in fear when they pass by some chickens. She asks, “I thought you were better and no longer thought you were made of grain?” The man replies, “Yes, I know I’m not made of grain, but it doesn’t matter what I think, it only matters what the chicken thinks.” The mad man has a good point, and the disaster of being wrongly perceived and categorized, as either “good” or “evil”, permeates the entire exhibit; it becomes a black joke of how terrorism has rendered ourselves and everyone suspect, but of course, especially Muslims.
As I continued to wander through the galleries, what struck me was how many of the pieces depicted absence. Ostensibly, this is because 9/11 is all about loss, but I think there is more to it. For instance, in a piece by Ellsworth Kelly entitled “Ground Zero”, a green trapezoid covers the spot where the two towers stood in a New York Times photograph, and in “Gray Twilight” by Alex Katz, a darkened shroud envelops the entire canvas except for a cluster of gray smears that either illuminate or disappear into the horizon. In another room, a series of photographs depict bone chilling emptiness: uninhabited desks, chairs, blurred shadows in glass windows, a singular cup on a table. In all these works, the sense of loss is complicated by the ambiguity of whether things have actually been lost, or if things have been covered up (the green trapezoid over ground zero), if things were never lost since they were never there to begin with (reading the gray twilight for signs of life), or if absence can take on a presence of its own (the empty chairs and desks). In these works, nothing is apparently there. But as people we like to project our stories and memories and associations on these blank spaces. We like to create a story because otherwise the absence of meaning becomes overwhelming, painful, if not frightening. The exhibit indeed shows how 9/11 has radically altered interpretations of otherwise benign objects.
The photograph, “Unititled (Glass in Airplane)" by William Eggleston, is a prime example.
Before the attacks, the photograph was of a glass on an airplane, perhaps merely suggesting luxury through the golden brown alcoholic beverage, the idle fingers stirring ice. Yet post 9/11 it takes on an ominous tone. One imagines the people on the ill fated planes enjoying their last drink, their last view to the outside world. The person with a wedding ring. It becomes an emotionally charged moment since the passengers do not yet know their planes will be hijacked, and as the shadow on the cup extends longer and longer, it becomes a bad omen predicting the shadow of not only the two towers falling, but of the lingering shadow of terrorism itself.
But it’s possible that I am reading too much into this.
It’s possible that there is no story at all.
For the most part, it is up to the visitor to project their own memories, emotions and anxieties on the pieces in the September 11 exhibit. The plaques do little more than contextualize when and where pieces were made. Because of this, the exhibit compels the visitor to narrativize each of the pieces in their own way. In and of themselves, the pieces do not possess any significance to 9/11, only resemblances, traces. As a result, the exhibit reflects the confusion of how we as a country are supposed to remember 9/11 if we continue to encounter it daily through new airport security measures, laws to legalize surveillance, hyperbolic news reports from Afghanistan and Iraq, profiling an entire religion as potential threats. This exhibit doesn’t indulge in melancholy practices as much as it painfully reminds one that terrorism and anxiety remains a part of daily life, much as it was ten years ago.
In coming to terms with this anxiety, the problem of remembering 9/11 is also a problem of producing a coherent story that explains terrorism. But of course, there is none. If a narrative adds logic to a given scenario, then there can be no story of terrorism since inherently, terrorism has no logic. To do so would be to graft a story onto what is simply not there. In choosing works that depict this in absentia, the exhibit plays on 9/11 as a signifier with no signified. The confusion of what to remember is the confusion of how to forget that there is no story.
9/11 Is Everywhere. Again.
Steve Almond keeps it real on why overindulging in 9/11 lamentations is narcissistic and distracts from the thousands of other people in the world who continue to die and suffer everyday.
The New Yorker posted a time-lapse video of the 9/11 memorial under construction.
Obama talks about September 11.
The New Yorker posted a time-lapse video of the 9/11 memorial under construction.
Obama talks about September 11.
Friday, September 9, 2011
On 9/11 and the Arab Spring
Today Reza Aslan wrote on the “two fires” that have illuminated and burned throughout the decade following 9/11. As its anniversary nears, he reminds us American readers that the intended audience of 9/11 was never really us, but to Muslims around the world to “wake up” and do something about oppression, poverty, and inequality in their home countries. There were ostensibly many reasons why Al Qaeda attacked the U.S. – economic imperialism, the American failure to sign the Kyoto Agreement, American foreign policy in the Middle East – but Reza offers a somber observation: that although these are all legitimate reasons among others, the primary motivation of the 9/11 terrorists was not to punish America, but to “awaken” the “Muslim youth” to take action, to find inspiration in a symbolic assault to power. Aslan writes,
When I say the attacks of 9/11 were not about us, I mean that while we were the victims of that theatrical display of public violence, we were not its intended audience. The audience was the Mohamed Bouazizis of the world: the young and dispossessed of the Middle East, those who agree with bin Laden that “death is better than a life of humiliation.”…. The brazen attack on New York and DC was not meant as a punishment for America’s actions in the Middle East. And it certainly was not an attempt to change American foreign policy. It was a call to action, an attempt to awaken the political activism of young Muslims by channeling their vague feelings of anger and disaffection over their miserable lot in the world toward a single, tangible, easy-to-define symbol: 9/11…Angry about Israel? The answer lies in 9/11. Oppressed by a bloodthirsty dictator? Look for the solution in 9/11. Can’t get a job? 9/11.
As an act of terrorism, the falling of the two towers was an end in itself. It symbolized a threat to power that could not be ignored or overlooked. As we at home or on the streets or on the news watched in horror as the towers crumbled piece by piece, person by person, the spectacle created a social relationship that extended all over the world, mediated by this one immortalized image. In the post 9/11 world there were only terrorists and non-terrorists, good and evil, Muslim and non-Muslim.
In other words, it was meant to start a revolution. The steel and glass fortresses, seemingly invincible in its figuration of American economic and political power, were the tragic mediums in which Al Qaeda launched its call to arms not against America and its allies per se, but against all forms of power which subjugated people into unlivable, inhuman conditions. Aslan writes that it is a miracle that more conflicts did not happen given the United State’s efforts in fueling hatred – the unnecessary war in Iraq, the intolerant, xenophobic Bush speeches – and despite the U.S.’s progress in eradicating Al Qaeda, the key factor in overcoming Al Qaeda were the people it supposedly sought to liberate, not the “Western war on terror”. The youth of the Middle East, disenchanted and tired of violence, decided not to use 9/11 as a symbol to rally around. They chose not to find an answer in violence, in 9/11.
So ten years later, when Mohamed Bouazizi, decided to set fire to himself in front of the Tunisian government building, he epitomized a new call to arms that swept across the Middle East. The fire he lit sparked another kind of purging that the young, educated youth of the Middle East would take on and march with in toppling dictators, renewing public trust, and dismantling old regimes. Rampant unemployment, poverty, and corruption in some respects left the educated youth no other choice but to fight for democracy and freedom through public protests, social media, and most importantly, their voices. The Arab Spring was, as Aslan writes, a call for change that continues today.
But just as the attacks themselves had little to do with America, so did America play little role in the defeat of al-Qa‘ida’s ideology. It was not the invasion of Iraq, or nation-building in Afghanistan, or Bush’s “freedom agenda” that deafened young Muslims to al-Qa‘ida’s call. It was al-Qa‘ida’s bloodlust in Iraq and Afghanistan. It was the fact that between 2004 and 2008, Muslims accounted for 85% of the casualties from al-Qa‘ida attacks (between 2006 and 2008, that number surged to 98%). Above all it was the youth themselves — the very kids that the 9/11 attacks were meant to mobilize. Though fed up with their dictatorial regimes and spurred by 9/11 to do something about it, by the end of the decade, these kids had discovered a far more effective model for action, a different symbol to rally around: that of young Mohamed Bouazizi, standing in the middle of traffic, holding a small, flickering flame in his hand.
When I say the attacks of 9/11 were not about us, I mean that while we were the victims of that theatrical display of public violence, we were not its intended audience. The audience was the Mohamed Bouazizis of the world: the young and dispossessed of the Middle East, those who agree with bin Laden that “death is better than a life of humiliation.”…. The brazen attack on New York and DC was not meant as a punishment for America’s actions in the Middle East. And it certainly was not an attempt to change American foreign policy. It was a call to action, an attempt to awaken the political activism of young Muslims by channeling their vague feelings of anger and disaffection over their miserable lot in the world toward a single, tangible, easy-to-define symbol: 9/11…Angry about Israel? The answer lies in 9/11. Oppressed by a bloodthirsty dictator? Look for the solution in 9/11. Can’t get a job? 9/11.
As an act of terrorism, the falling of the two towers was an end in itself. It symbolized a threat to power that could not be ignored or overlooked. As we at home or on the streets or on the news watched in horror as the towers crumbled piece by piece, person by person, the spectacle created a social relationship that extended all over the world, mediated by this one immortalized image. In the post 9/11 world there were only terrorists and non-terrorists, good and evil, Muslim and non-Muslim.
In other words, it was meant to start a revolution. The steel and glass fortresses, seemingly invincible in its figuration of American economic and political power, were the tragic mediums in which Al Qaeda launched its call to arms not against America and its allies per se, but against all forms of power which subjugated people into unlivable, inhuman conditions. Aslan writes that it is a miracle that more conflicts did not happen given the United State’s efforts in fueling hatred – the unnecessary war in Iraq, the intolerant, xenophobic Bush speeches – and despite the U.S.’s progress in eradicating Al Qaeda, the key factor in overcoming Al Qaeda were the people it supposedly sought to liberate, not the “Western war on terror”. The youth of the Middle East, disenchanted and tired of violence, decided not to use 9/11 as a symbol to rally around. They chose not to find an answer in violence, in 9/11.
So ten years later, when Mohamed Bouazizi, decided to set fire to himself in front of the Tunisian government building, he epitomized a new call to arms that swept across the Middle East. The fire he lit sparked another kind of purging that the young, educated youth of the Middle East would take on and march with in toppling dictators, renewing public trust, and dismantling old regimes. Rampant unemployment, poverty, and corruption in some respects left the educated youth no other choice but to fight for democracy and freedom through public protests, social media, and most importantly, their voices. The Arab Spring was, as Aslan writes, a call for change that continues today.
But just as the attacks themselves had little to do with America, so did America play little role in the defeat of al-Qa‘ida’s ideology. It was not the invasion of Iraq, or nation-building in Afghanistan, or Bush’s “freedom agenda” that deafened young Muslims to al-Qa‘ida’s call. It was al-Qa‘ida’s bloodlust in Iraq and Afghanistan. It was the fact that between 2004 and 2008, Muslims accounted for 85% of the casualties from al-Qa‘ida attacks (between 2006 and 2008, that number surged to 98%). Above all it was the youth themselves — the very kids that the 9/11 attacks were meant to mobilize. Though fed up with their dictatorial regimes and spurred by 9/11 to do something about it, by the end of the decade, these kids had discovered a far more effective model for action, a different symbol to rally around: that of young Mohamed Bouazizi, standing in the middle of traffic, holding a small, flickering flame in his hand.
Labels:
9/11,
9/11 memorial,
Arab Spring,
Mohamed Bouazizi,
Reza Aslan,
Reza Aslan 9/11
Wednesday, September 7, 2011
Smart Links
Yes, there could be a scientific rationale of why you're happy, or why you're not.
Via BH at Salon Anthro - Meet Henri, the existential cat.
On women and guns, victims and victimizers, in Libya.
Jail is the "new" madhouse as the mentally ill struggle within the American prison system.
I wouldn't necessarily call it a "wake up call", but one can easily imagine that riots are most likely to take place in poverty stricken areas. Here's a map of recent riots in England.
People can crowdsource anything these days, including green projects and start ups. IndieGoGo all the way!
A neat lab product from Google lets you track and compare how words rise and fall in popular usage. Data for the program was gleaned from the mammoth Google Book Search.
Via BH at Salon Anthro - Meet Henri, the existential cat.
On women and guns, victims and victimizers, in Libya.
Jail is the "new" madhouse as the mentally ill struggle within the American prison system.
I wouldn't necessarily call it a "wake up call", but one can easily imagine that riots are most likely to take place in poverty stricken areas. Here's a map of recent riots in England.
People can crowdsource anything these days, including green projects and start ups. IndieGoGo all the way!
A neat lab product from Google lets you track and compare how words rise and fall in popular usage. Data for the program was gleaned from the mammoth Google Book Search.
A Review of the Mark Bradford exhibit at the MCA
Last month, I checked out the Mark Bradford exhibit at the Museum of Contemporary Art in Chicago. It will be closing as of September 18, but according to the exhibition’s microsite, the collection will be making stops at a couple other cities, including the Dallas Museum of Art and SF’s MOMA, which is fantastic because the exhibit offers a visually stunning, contemplative collection on Mark Bradford’s journey as not only an artist, but as a black, gay man coming from the gritty streets of Los Angeles.
As a newcomer to his work, I opted to take the free museum tour of the collection, which surveys his work from 2001 to 2010. The tour proved very useful since it provided context that is otherwise not available to visitors. While I understand the limitations of plaques, taking the tour tremendously expanded my experience since the museum guide mentioned important (and perhaps controversial) details that really deepened the effect of his pieces. The failure of the plaques to truly inform and challenge the visitor was disappointing, but I’ll talk more about that later.
Our museum guide – let’s call her Susan – is a chirpy woman who tried hard to encourage interaction from the group. However, we are an unpromising looking group. One couple bears an eternal frown, despite the woman’s best efforts for polite laughs, and an unfathomably elderly lady speaks incessantly of her mother’s paintings. In addition, there is a large herd of small children being shepherded by a lone woman. She knows every child by name. Tom - no hitting people. Sarah – quiet no giggling. But it becomes increasingly clear that a day at the museum should have come with pleather kid leashes, or perhaps a scary, taser wielding adult.
When Susan begins the tour, she starts with Pinocchio Is Rising. The piece is basically an entire white wall with deceivingly rainbow, happy looking text. Once we read the parable, however, we see that it is an adult retelling of the Pinocchio tale that brims with anxiety. The poor wooden boy must make a choice – the cricket tries to help – and as a reader you sense an ambiguous yet life threatening urgency that Pinocchio himself seems to be only vaguely aware of.
Susan explains that Mark Bradford specifically wrote the parable in order to foreground the collection as an ongoing, decade long conversation about identity, recognition, and acceptance, and the notion is contrasted by a stiff black crow ominously frozen in flight on the other side of the gallery.
On the wall with the Pinocchio story, the museum apparently uses it as an open canvas for its incoming artists. For his exhibit, Mark Bradford white washed the previous piece, obviously colorful and vibrant, and cut out text so that the previous layer would show through.
This is the first clue that the Bradford collection will be obsessed with layers and its varied connotations, both positive, negative, and ambivalent. It’s a theme that Bradford will basically run with for the next ten years, to great effect.
The next piece we stop at is full of quiet, but it gains momentum once we learn of its title – Enter and Exit the New Negro.
Lines and layers of small white rectangles repetitively sweep across what seems like canvas – but it is not! The guide informs us that as one of Bradford’s first works, the piece is made from an old bed sheet since Bradford was too poor to afford canvas at the time. The whiteness of the image, almost glowing in the absence of color, leads to us to believe that it is a painting, but again Bradford has fooled us with his persistent layers. Susan says that for this work, as with many of his early pieces, Bradford worked exclusively with glue and paper materials, or more specifically, the small square hair perm end papers from his mother’s salon. The subtle undertones of all kinds of whiteness, the lighter, darker, sharper, brighter hues, drifting across the image lend an ethereal, albeit washed out effect. The subdued whiteness of the image creates a mysterious absence: where has the “new negro” gone? How have they entered, exited, and why? Or perhaps they are still there, invisible?
The many layers of white suggest that the “new negro” has been effaced, over written, buried, or chased away. At this point, it must be noted that the title alludes to the “New Negro” essay collection written by Alain Locke during the Harlem Rennaissance. The “New Negro” essay collection reflected the social movement to resist the aesthetic of whiteness as the pinnacle of beauty, and importantly, to take pride in being a black American. The “painting” comments on the anti-climactic “enter and exit of the new negro” and how the movement to positively transform African American identity has ostensibly failed. The lingering whiteness, the sense of invisibility, points towards a radical breakdown in the creation of the “new negro”, suggesting that the “new negro” has either never arrived, been rejected in the failure to measure up to “whiteness” as a standard of beauty and success, or has become whitewashed, thus remaining indefinitely invisible.
The piece points towards a critical problem in American racial politics. How should ethnicity be expressed, and can it even be articulated honestly when whiteness remains the default overarching paradigm of beauty, values, social development? It is as if Bradford is stressing that whenever a particular ethnicity is invoked – for instance, black – it is merely another way of saying, (still) not white.
Next on our stop was “Black Venus”, another mixed media collage that utilizes the hair perm papers. It again looks like a painting, one which positions the viewer in a bird’s eye view of a city like grid of color and darkness.
Here Susan falters in explaining what the term Black Venus actually means, since our herd of small children all happen to be black; by this time, the teacher has instructed them to sit quietly in front of the painting, and they are sitting as still as they possibly can. So to a group of young school children, Susan says in cautious voice that black venuses were once a pejorative term for black women who were used as prostitutes. The children blink. One boy rolls over on the ground and pokes another kid. Until a small boy asks – what does perjormative mean? The teacher blushes. It means a bad word, Dominic. (I think his name was Dominic, atleast.)
Susan exhales; political correctness crisis averted. The young black woman responsible for these children is still listening intently, and Susan makes continuous eye contact with her in order to gauge her success in being the racially sensitive white woman.
After a slight pause, she continues explaining that Bradford used a Google map as the basis for this painting. He chose Baldwin Hills, a wealthy neighborhood in Los Angeles that is comprised mostly of African Americans.
The painting is a somber work that plays on the imagery of the body. The female black body, a historically sexualized locus of white desire, is substituted here as the wealthy black neighborhood. The title sexually charges the painting with desire and lack. The blackness hovering in the center ambiguously suggests a growing void or mass. Having used a map as the basis for the painting, Bradford challenges the static nature of map imagery by infusing the work with movement. Intermittent reds, blues, and yellows pulsate from the center. Lines on the edges signifying roads or zones reflect a quiet desperation, like scrape marks.
In titling the painting as “Black Venus”, Bradford seemingly jabs the wealthy black neighborhood in its apparent satisfaction. Have they really made it? Have they fulfilled the American Dream? Was the realization of this dream pleasurable? How has wealth remarked or rezoned black bodies? Is economic fulfillment the climax of social pleasure? The painting ties the pleasure and exploitation of sexual bodies to the pleasure and exploitation within economics. It is a rich critique of time, place, and desire.
By the time we reach our next stop, we have picked up a few visitors, but the group of children has dropped off. We see the young woman leading her herd outside the gallery, probably because one of the boys (lightly) punched a painting (probably accidental). Which means that when we come upon Bradford’s electric painting, “Scorched Earth”, the museum guide is ready to come full force with the art nerd talk. And for good reason. It is a beautifully savage piece.
Susan tells us that “Scorched Earth” is a reference to the 1921 Tulsa Race Riot in Oklahoma. It was one of the most violent riots in U.S. history, yet the event has remained buried from public consciousness. According to Democracy Now!,
The painting erupts in chaos and flame. Buildings topple, burying the carnage and memories that will irrevocably change race relations of an entire country. Enmeshing an aerial map and the profiles of collapsing buildings creates a sprawling scene of confusion and disarray, as if this was an abstracted vision of the apocalypse. It reminded me of Yeats’ poem, The Second Coming, which was notably written after WWI in 1919.
This was the first work where Bradford decided to use paint. Susan tells us that he agonized over using orange paint but ultimately decided that it best captured the vibrant violence that enveloped Tulsa for months. The painting remains hauntingly beautiful in its abstract portrayal of a society under brutal dissolution. It is a still image of a region in a radical breakdown, in which “things fall apart” and “the centre cannot hold”. The map imagery that Bradford draws upon is buried, obscured by the networks of power, class, and race that overwrites, but never quite erases, these implied memories of violence and betrayal. On maps, Bradford says,
Given the painting’s attempt to conduct urban archaeology in excavating this forgotten event, one would imagine that the plaque on “Scorched Earth” would mention the Tulsa Race Riot. But the plaque carries on the silence of a smothered history. If Susan did not connect the painting to the Oklahoma riot, I would not have realized the connection since I myself had not heard much on the Tulsa Race Riot before. Instead, the plaque offers a bland explanation, giving the visitor no useful information in situating the painting as a reaction against the Tulsa Race Riot. To be honest, there might as well be no plaque, since the text was pretty much a waste of space. When it comes to contextualizing the pieces, we see the exhibition falter, since many of the plaques offered many words but no information in helping the visitor understand pieces. Without Susan, I wouldn’t have known about the hair perm papers, Bradford’s disinclination to use paint, or the critical reference to the Tulsa Race Riot. In an otherwise splendid collection, the plaques diminish the efficacy of Bradford’s emotionally charged work. However, I will say that the call in audio guide via personal cell phone was great in offering Bradford’s voice, but not so great in situating particular pieces.
From hair perm papers to aerial map collages, the collection moves on to Bradford’s merchant posters. In these pieces, Bradford takes merchant posters (paper ads essentially) from his neighborhood and glues them on top of each other, scrapes some layers off, and glues over and over again, ultimately creating en excavated, time worn aesthetic. The collection displays an impressive number of his merchant poster works, a medium which Bradford remains obsessed with. They offer glimpses of a city in constant flux by capturing the economic and thus social needs of a place, and in these pieces we see how ads function as a kind of camouflage for the root social ills of a community.
Susan tells us that to Bradford, the merchant posters most accurately reflect the actual reality of a given neighborhood, the needs, the lacks, the despair, the dreams. It is a kind of urban archaeology that Bradford remains committed to. The merchant poster collages, in their gradual evacuations of color, form, and text, reflect Bradford’s ability to abstract familiar narratives and images. The abstractions are aesthetically seductive images, rich in their layered implications.
The exhibit closes with some other non-painting works, including a giant ark made to raise money for Katrina victims (also boarded up with merchant posters), and a blackened basketball in reference to black masculinity as epitomized by Kobe Bryant. It is a quiet end to the visually stunning pieces of the beginning, but it remains full of intriguing questions on race and power, ethnic performativity, and the economic forces behind identities, such as the stereotypically athletic, macho masculine identity.
In showcasing Bradford’s work, the exhibit succeeds in impressing upon visitors his beautifully complex and layered visions of evolving ethnic, sexual, and urban identities. Visitors can’t help but become fans of Bradford even despite the lacking plaques, and it’s mostly because Bradford’s works are powerful enough to speak for themselves.
So should you check it out? This Hungry Owl says YES.
As a newcomer to his work, I opted to take the free museum tour of the collection, which surveys his work from 2001 to 2010. The tour proved very useful since it provided context that is otherwise not available to visitors. While I understand the limitations of plaques, taking the tour tremendously expanded my experience since the museum guide mentioned important (and perhaps controversial) details that really deepened the effect of his pieces. The failure of the plaques to truly inform and challenge the visitor was disappointing, but I’ll talk more about that later.
Our museum guide – let’s call her Susan – is a chirpy woman who tried hard to encourage interaction from the group. However, we are an unpromising looking group. One couple bears an eternal frown, despite the woman’s best efforts for polite laughs, and an unfathomably elderly lady speaks incessantly of her mother’s paintings. In addition, there is a large herd of small children being shepherded by a lone woman. She knows every child by name. Tom - no hitting people. Sarah – quiet no giggling. But it becomes increasingly clear that a day at the museum should have come with pleather kid leashes, or perhaps a scary, taser wielding adult.
When Susan begins the tour, she starts with Pinocchio Is Rising. The piece is basically an entire white wall with deceivingly rainbow, happy looking text. Once we read the parable, however, we see that it is an adult retelling of the Pinocchio tale that brims with anxiety. The poor wooden boy must make a choice – the cricket tries to help – and as a reader you sense an ambiguous yet life threatening urgency that Pinocchio himself seems to be only vaguely aware of.
Susan explains that Mark Bradford specifically wrote the parable in order to foreground the collection as an ongoing, decade long conversation about identity, recognition, and acceptance, and the notion is contrasted by a stiff black crow ominously frozen in flight on the other side of the gallery.
On the wall with the Pinocchio story, the museum apparently uses it as an open canvas for its incoming artists. For his exhibit, Mark Bradford white washed the previous piece, obviously colorful and vibrant, and cut out text so that the previous layer would show through.
This is the first clue that the Bradford collection will be obsessed with layers and its varied connotations, both positive, negative, and ambivalent. It’s a theme that Bradford will basically run with for the next ten years, to great effect.
The next piece we stop at is full of quiet, but it gains momentum once we learn of its title – Enter and Exit the New Negro.
Lines and layers of small white rectangles repetitively sweep across what seems like canvas – but it is not! The guide informs us that as one of Bradford’s first works, the piece is made from an old bed sheet since Bradford was too poor to afford canvas at the time. The whiteness of the image, almost glowing in the absence of color, leads to us to believe that it is a painting, but again Bradford has fooled us with his persistent layers. Susan says that for this work, as with many of his early pieces, Bradford worked exclusively with glue and paper materials, or more specifically, the small square hair perm end papers from his mother’s salon. The subtle undertones of all kinds of whiteness, the lighter, darker, sharper, brighter hues, drifting across the image lend an ethereal, albeit washed out effect. The subdued whiteness of the image creates a mysterious absence: where has the “new negro” gone? How have they entered, exited, and why? Or perhaps they are still there, invisible?
The many layers of white suggest that the “new negro” has been effaced, over written, buried, or chased away. At this point, it must be noted that the title alludes to the “New Negro” essay collection written by Alain Locke during the Harlem Rennaissance. The “New Negro” essay collection reflected the social movement to resist the aesthetic of whiteness as the pinnacle of beauty, and importantly, to take pride in being a black American. The “painting” comments on the anti-climactic “enter and exit of the new negro” and how the movement to positively transform African American identity has ostensibly failed. The lingering whiteness, the sense of invisibility, points towards a radical breakdown in the creation of the “new negro”, suggesting that the “new negro” has either never arrived, been rejected in the failure to measure up to “whiteness” as a standard of beauty and success, or has become whitewashed, thus remaining indefinitely invisible.
The piece points towards a critical problem in American racial politics. How should ethnicity be expressed, and can it even be articulated honestly when whiteness remains the default overarching paradigm of beauty, values, social development? It is as if Bradford is stressing that whenever a particular ethnicity is invoked – for instance, black – it is merely another way of saying, (still) not white.
Next on our stop was “Black Venus”, another mixed media collage that utilizes the hair perm papers. It again looks like a painting, one which positions the viewer in a bird’s eye view of a city like grid of color and darkness.
Here Susan falters in explaining what the term Black Venus actually means, since our herd of small children all happen to be black; by this time, the teacher has instructed them to sit quietly in front of the painting, and they are sitting as still as they possibly can. So to a group of young school children, Susan says in cautious voice that black venuses were once a pejorative term for black women who were used as prostitutes. The children blink. One boy rolls over on the ground and pokes another kid. Until a small boy asks – what does perjormative mean? The teacher blushes. It means a bad word, Dominic. (I think his name was Dominic, atleast.)
Susan exhales; political correctness crisis averted. The young black woman responsible for these children is still listening intently, and Susan makes continuous eye contact with her in order to gauge her success in being the racially sensitive white woman.
After a slight pause, she continues explaining that Bradford used a Google map as the basis for this painting. He chose Baldwin Hills, a wealthy neighborhood in Los Angeles that is comprised mostly of African Americans.
The painting is a somber work that plays on the imagery of the body. The female black body, a historically sexualized locus of white desire, is substituted here as the wealthy black neighborhood. The title sexually charges the painting with desire and lack. The blackness hovering in the center ambiguously suggests a growing void or mass. Having used a map as the basis for the painting, Bradford challenges the static nature of map imagery by infusing the work with movement. Intermittent reds, blues, and yellows pulsate from the center. Lines on the edges signifying roads or zones reflect a quiet desperation, like scrape marks.
In titling the painting as “Black Venus”, Bradford seemingly jabs the wealthy black neighborhood in its apparent satisfaction. Have they really made it? Have they fulfilled the American Dream? Was the realization of this dream pleasurable? How has wealth remarked or rezoned black bodies? Is economic fulfillment the climax of social pleasure? The painting ties the pleasure and exploitation of sexual bodies to the pleasure and exploitation within economics. It is a rich critique of time, place, and desire.
By the time we reach our next stop, we have picked up a few visitors, but the group of children has dropped off. We see the young woman leading her herd outside the gallery, probably because one of the boys (lightly) punched a painting (probably accidental). Which means that when we come upon Bradford’s electric painting, “Scorched Earth”, the museum guide is ready to come full force with the art nerd talk. And for good reason. It is a beautifully savage piece.
Susan tells us that “Scorched Earth” is a reference to the 1921 Tulsa Race Riot in Oklahoma. It was one of the most violent riots in U.S. history, yet the event has remained buried from public consciousness. According to Democracy Now!,
“On June 1, 1921, Greenwood, a prosperous African-American community of Tulsa, was looted and burned by a white mob numbering in the thousands. This came after false rumors that a Black man had assaulted a white woman in an elevator, and an editorial in the Tulsa Tribune calling for whites to "lynch a nigger tonight." Eyewitness accounts tell of aerial bombing, internment camps for Black men, and truckloads of corpses dumped into unmarked mass graves. Thirty-five city blocks were completely destroyed, and experts believe that as many as 300 people died. If this is so, then the Tulsa race riot of 1921 surpasses the Oklahoma City bombing as the largest mass murder of civilians on U.S. soil.”
The painting erupts in chaos and flame. Buildings topple, burying the carnage and memories that will irrevocably change race relations of an entire country. Enmeshing an aerial map and the profiles of collapsing buildings creates a sprawling scene of confusion and disarray, as if this was an abstracted vision of the apocalypse. It reminded me of Yeats’ poem, The Second Coming, which was notably written after WWI in 1919.
Turning and turning in the widening gyre
The falcon cannot hear the falconer;
Things fall apart; the centre cannot hold;
Mere anarchy is loosed upon the world,
The blood-dimmed tide is loosed, and everywhere
The ceremony of innocence is drowned;
The best lack all conviction, while the worst
Are full of passionate intensity.
This was the first work where Bradford decided to use paint. Susan tells us that he agonized over using orange paint but ultimately decided that it best captured the vibrant violence that enveloped Tulsa for months. The painting remains hauntingly beautiful in its abstract portrayal of a society under brutal dissolution. It is a still image of a region in a radical breakdown, in which “things fall apart” and “the centre cannot hold”. The map imagery that Bradford draws upon is buried, obscured by the networks of power, class, and race that overwrites, but never quite erases, these implied memories of violence and betrayal. On maps, Bradford says,
Given the painting’s attempt to conduct urban archaeology in excavating this forgotten event, one would imagine that the plaque on “Scorched Earth” would mention the Tulsa Race Riot. But the plaque carries on the silence of a smothered history. If Susan did not connect the painting to the Oklahoma riot, I would not have realized the connection since I myself had not heard much on the Tulsa Race Riot before. Instead, the plaque offers a bland explanation, giving the visitor no useful information in situating the painting as a reaction against the Tulsa Race Riot. To be honest, there might as well be no plaque, since the text was pretty much a waste of space. When it comes to contextualizing the pieces, we see the exhibition falter, since many of the plaques offered many words but no information in helping the visitor understand pieces. Without Susan, I wouldn’t have known about the hair perm papers, Bradford’s disinclination to use paint, or the critical reference to the Tulsa Race Riot. In an otherwise splendid collection, the plaques diminish the efficacy of Bradford’s emotionally charged work. However, I will say that the call in audio guide via personal cell phone was great in offering Bradford’s voice, but not so great in situating particular pieces.
From hair perm papers to aerial map collages, the collection moves on to Bradford’s merchant posters. In these pieces, Bradford takes merchant posters (paper ads essentially) from his neighborhood and glues them on top of each other, scrapes some layers off, and glues over and over again, ultimately creating en excavated, time worn aesthetic. The collection displays an impressive number of his merchant poster works, a medium which Bradford remains obsessed with. They offer glimpses of a city in constant flux by capturing the economic and thus social needs of a place, and in these pieces we see how ads function as a kind of camouflage for the root social ills of a community.
Susan tells us that to Bradford, the merchant posters most accurately reflect the actual reality of a given neighborhood, the needs, the lacks, the despair, the dreams. It is a kind of urban archaeology that Bradford remains committed to. The merchant poster collages, in their gradual evacuations of color, form, and text, reflect Bradford’s ability to abstract familiar narratives and images. The abstractions are aesthetically seductive images, rich in their layered implications.
The exhibit closes with some other non-painting works, including a giant ark made to raise money for Katrina victims (also boarded up with merchant posters), and a blackened basketball in reference to black masculinity as epitomized by Kobe Bryant. It is a quiet end to the visually stunning pieces of the beginning, but it remains full of intriguing questions on race and power, ethnic performativity, and the economic forces behind identities, such as the stereotypically athletic, macho masculine identity.
In showcasing Bradford’s work, the exhibit succeeds in impressing upon visitors his beautifully complex and layered visions of evolving ethnic, sexual, and urban identities. Visitors can’t help but become fans of Bradford even despite the lacking plaques, and it’s mostly because Bradford’s works are powerful enough to speak for themselves.
So should you check it out? This Hungry Owl says YES.
Friday, September 2, 2011
Smart Links
A reminder of when women were holistically judged on things like making coffee, and men were ok with being jerks about it.
A new study from the Pew Center of Research found that agnostics, atheists, Jews and Mormons were on average more knowledgeable on religion than Christian groups. Go God(s)!
According to a new report by a Chinese environmental group, Apple products leave a toxic trail.
Given the freak earthquake and hurricane warnings in New York last week, let's all take a moment to consider how the world might actually end. Guernica points out several scenarios, per Hollywood's freewheeling imagination.
Another sad case of when conversion to Islam is perceived as race betrayal.
For the first time in history, there are more Puerto Ricans living in the U.S. than in Puerto Rico. Diaspora and its discontents persist away from Boricua.
Via BXChen. Fox Sports makes a racist Asian video.
Yikes. Maya Angelou had some fightin' words for the quote that was selected for the newly unveiled MLK memorial. She called the selection a poor choice that made the civil rights hero look like an "egotist".
An interview with David Graeber, an economic anthropologist, shakes up money mythologies. According to him, credit and debt preceded the barter system, and money shifts back and forth from functioning as a commodity/object and credit/social relation.
A new study from the Pew Center of Research found that agnostics, atheists, Jews and Mormons were on average more knowledgeable on religion than Christian groups. Go God(s)!
According to a new report by a Chinese environmental group, Apple products leave a toxic trail.
Given the freak earthquake and hurricane warnings in New York last week, let's all take a moment to consider how the world might actually end. Guernica points out several scenarios, per Hollywood's freewheeling imagination.
Another sad case of when conversion to Islam is perceived as race betrayal.
For the first time in history, there are more Puerto Ricans living in the U.S. than in Puerto Rico. Diaspora and its discontents persist away from Boricua.
Via BXChen. Fox Sports makes a racist Asian video.
Yikes. Maya Angelou had some fightin' words for the quote that was selected for the newly unveiled MLK memorial. She called the selection a poor choice that made the civil rights hero look like an "egotist".
An interview with David Graeber, an economic anthropologist, shakes up money mythologies. According to him, credit and debt preceded the barter system, and money shifts back and forth from functioning as a commodity/object and credit/social relation.
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