i had planned to go to bed early…

…because a late night of karaoke meant I spent today in low-watt mode. But I’ve been working on getting Liz Lawley’s MT Courseware set-up to work on my teaching installation of MT. Still have kinks to work out (I’m pretty sure the kinks are on my end, somehow), and coding/tagging always seems to keep me up later than I intend.

Earlier, I made some good progress on revising syllabi for the upcoming semester, including refining my use of the game Ivanhoe, something I wrote about earlier.

We were also fortunate enough today to catch the Marsden Hartley (images via google) exhibit at the Nelson-Atkins Museum of Art. I had seen his painting entitled “Christ Held by Half-Naked Men” (1940-1941) at the Hirshhorn in D.C., but I was unfamiliar with his larger body of work, which is quite varied.

Finally, I continued to tweak this blog’s layout. Thanks to Jason for reminding me to check out the CSS provided by Blue Robot and to Eric Sigler for the pointer to MTSimpleComments.
There are still kinks, but I’m just too pooped right now to figure them all out.

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counting

Keep on the Sunny Side

There’s a dark and a troubled side of life
There’s a bright and a sunny side too
Though we meet with the darkness and strife
The sunny side we also may view

Liz argues for the positive effects of “actively listing and talking about the good things in … life.” Right on. Here’s what I’m grateful for:

Most of all I’m grateful for eleven and a half years of life with L, without whom none of the above would matter.

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fire alarm blues

Ugh. Someone burned some toast, and now the apartment building’s fire alarm has gone off. It is ear-splittingly loud. My ears haven’t vibrated this much since I saw Neil Young in 1983 on his Trans tour. (And doesn’t that album sound a lot more interesting now than it did twenty years ago?)

For the love of God! Make it stop! I have black-eyed peas and greens to eat!

Update: Well, it only took forty-five minutes, but the alarm is finally off.

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…and a happy new year!

Momentarily we are off to A Touch of Asia, which is the best Indian restaurant we’ve found here in KC. Then champagne at a friend’s place; like us, she’s a fellow loft-dweller downtown. Finally, we might end up at the fireworks display scheduled to take place at the City Market.

May your new year bring you joy.

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stealth trip to southern california

We are definitely switching broadband providers as today marks one full week without access and no answers to our calls of complaint. Dialup speeds, combined with end-of-semester grading, account for my light blogging of late.

Soon I’ll be heading to southern California (shhhh! don’t tell anyone), not really for the annual meeting of the Modern Language Association, but because many of my friends and (it turns out) fellow bloggers will be there for the conference. In fact, I’m leaning towards skipping the conference altogether, although the book exhibit is always worth a look.

Meanwhile, as Matt and KF point out, there’s a tempest brewing over at Invisible Adjunct about a recent article in the Chronicle of Higher Education that, as happens with tiresome frequency, pokes fun at panel and paper titles on the convention program.

I don’t feel all that worked up about the whole thing, although I understand why others are more upset. Here are my thoughts:

  • Making fun of panel and paper titles? Wow, that’s a pretty deep consideration of the work we do in the study of language and literature. Nosiree, not shallow at all.
  • Why not go to the annual meetings of more specialized groups in the discipline (scholars who work in the Renaissance, say, or humanities computing, or rhetoric) and see what kinds of papers are delivered there?
  • Draw some conclusions about the representative nature of that handful of papers you’ve focused on.

  • Why not look at large annual meetings of other academic/professional organizations and see what kinds of papers they give? What is it about the study of language and literature that attracts such attention in a way that engineering, religious studies, and psychology do not? Is it because everyone who can read assumes they ought to be able to understand what we do without any specialized training?
  • Why assume that scholars in our discipline need to work so hard to make people outside our discipline understand what we do, but assume that scholars in other disciplines should be let off the hook? Why assume that people outside our discipline should not have to work to understand what we do?
  • Why not write an article that takes into account the fact that the MLA meets in large North American cities every year (San Diego, New York, New Orleans, Washington D.C., San Francisco, Chicago), and that most of the attendees do not live in or spend significant amounts of time in large North American cities? Perhaps this has an effect on how they comport themselves, how much money they have to spend there, assumptions they’re making about their audience?

There’s an interesting article to be written about the MLA. I’ve yet to read it.

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