“Fourscore and seven years ago, our “fathers”—with half the population excluded from the start—“brought forth”—with the dubious, always questionable assumption of “progress”itself a value judgment about the meaning of history, which opens up the inherently dubious notion of “history” itself—“a “new” “nation”—a double double scare quote, with the claim of “new” at once instantly erasing the presence of all indigenous peoples and affirming the utterly questionable notion that anything can be qualitatively or authentically “new,” which again calls the very notion of “history” into question—and the word “nation” presupposing a commonality that may be nothing more than a kind of conspiracy of consent, a conglomeration of power meant to enrich the few and marginalize almost everyone else—“conceived”—privileging the idea that anything so questionable as a “nation” could be made up, as if out of nothing—“in “Liberty”—

Well, that’s just too much. We’re going to have to stop right here. We can’t even begin to get into “dedicated to the proposition”—we’ll let that passthatall”—“all”? Really?men—again—“are “created”—by whom? By what? For what purpose? To what end?—“equal.” Yes. Stop right here.

After the seminar

Greil Marcus, an editor of the New Literary History of America, in a piece called “Scare Quotes are the Enemy”

What Marcus’s parody captures about bien-pensant readings  is their dainty horror at the discovery that people in the past did not think like Us. Which is odd in a generation that rabbits on about the Other.  Texts are produced only to be decontaminated. It wasn’t us, cry the critics, we didn’t silence the Other. It was Them.

 

clintonGet respect in the workplace

Vote ‘Yes’ to industrial action!

See how easy it is?

 

In the Higher Education section of the Australian this week, Luke Slattery gets a mite carried away.

? university leaders are focussing their attention on post-crash curriculum reform.

What leadership role might higher education play in the ethical retooling of the professions and the broader society?

Let’s hope they remember the plumbers.

 

People talk of ‘monetising’ (or if American, of ‘monetizing’); their blogs or websites. Why this verb? Let’s consider the options. ‘Making money out of’ hints at exploitation, ‘making money from’ suggests that money will actually be made (with blogs, about a 1/1,000,000 chance) To ‘monetise’ cleans up the process; it’s technical and neutral; neither ethics nor the possibility of success need enter into it.

Nothing wrong with making money. I just wish people would be more straightforward about it.

Consider the case of Nathan Rice, a prominent WordPress guru and theme designer. Continue reading »

 

My 13 year old was rumbled today for mucking around during a speech in assembly and given a detention (chiz). Nowadays kids are required to sign a confession, usually dictated by a teacher, and parents are required to countersign. In these documents the word inappropriate is sure to occur. I duly signed, after adding a note that his behaviour had been, in fact, ‘discourteous’.

As one who has done more than his share of mucking around I tend to take these things lightly. But the lad wanted to know why the amendment and once I explained (courtesy is necessary because we are bored and protects us in our turn when we bore others) he announced that he now felt bad about what he’d done. Welcome to the moral life, kid. It’s what they don’t teach you at school.

‘Inappropriate’ is to teachers what ‘life style’ is to those who work in public health. Consider the words of a professor of medicine writing in the current issue of Monash Magazine.

The combination of immunology and stem cells ‘as body repair kits’ will provide patients with ‘non-rejected’ treatments for many if not all degenerative diseases caused by poor life style selection such as smoking and diet . . .

A lot to think about there. I particularly like ‘non-rejected’, as in ‘non-dead’.

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