highlyeccentric: A woman in an A-line dress, balancing a book on her head, in front of bookshelves (Make reading sexy)
[personal profile] highlyeccentric
I'm travelling around at the moment, link schedules likely to be disrupted

Short pieces, current affairs, hot takes:


Good News:


Longer pieces - essay, memoir, natural history, other
  • Anonymous, The Saturday Paper, The Casualisation of Academic Teaching:
    Last year, a truck driver employed as a casual in the mining industry took his employer to the Federal Court to argue he was entitled to annual leave, and the court found in his favour. The case rested on the nature of his working arrangements – they were regular and predictable, with the employee working a seven-day-on, seven-day-off continuous roster, which was set in advance for a year. The court found he was not a casual employee. Prima facie, this decision has implications for casual academic work.
    The court ruled that the “essence of casualness” is that there is “no firm advance [mutual] commitment … to continuing and indefinite work according to an agreed pattern of work”. The common characteristics of casual work were described as irregular work patterns, uncertainty as to the period over which employment was offered, discontinuity, intermittency of work and unpredictability. Casual academic work has none of these features. If it did, the teaching programs at Australian universities would be rendered completely unsustainable.

  • Corinne Manning (Bitch Media), adrienne maree brown wants activists to prioritise pleasure
  • Maya Wei-Haas (National Geographic), A tectonic plate is dying under Oregon: here's why it matters. This was interesting, and nothing struck me as immediately wrong, but - can we trust National Geographic on, well, geography? Because their track record on history and social sciences and pretty much anything I have expertise in is terrible. Would appreciate opinions here.
  • Bhasin, Holman, Alexander and Melin (Bloomberg.com), Victoria's Secret has more than a Jeffrey Epstein problem. I mean, a Jeffrey Epstein problem is a pretty big problem. This story is full of... wow. Like: I did not know that the chain was founded by a man who went lingerie shopping with his wife and felt uncomfortable because, basically, It Are Not About Him. So he made a chain where men *would* feel comfortable: This explains... a lot.
  • Zuleyka Zevallos (The Other Sociologist blog), Whitewashing race studies.
  • Rachel Charlene Lewis (Bitch Media), Take it or leave it: Sizzy Rocket on creating pop music just for queer women.
  • Libby Anne (Love, Joy, Feminism), Josh Harris is no longer a Christian but I'm still angry. That would be Josh Harris of 'I kissed dating goodbye'.
  • Rachel'i Said (+972 Magazine), Why is Israel still denying the kidnapping of Yemenite children. "Between the years 1948 and 1952, thousands of babies, children of mostly Yemenite immigrants to the newly-founded State of Israel, were taken away from their parents. After decades of being silenced, it is time to look those parents in the eye and say: you were wronged."
  • Michael Camilleri (Therapeutic Advances in Gastroenterology 5.6, 2012), Irritable Bowel Syndrome: how useful is the term, and the diagnosis?.


Caveats commenter: I've banned the person for whose benefit I have been issuing bi-weekly warnings, apologies to the rest of you if I've been patronising the shit out of you for months. Continue demonstrating medium levels of critical literacy and a basic ability to read the room, it's much appreciated.

Date: 2019-08-04 10:30 am (UTC)
kaberett: Trans symbol with Swiss Army knife tools at other positions around the central circle. (Default)
From: [personal profile] kaberett
Re National Geographic (because this is a thing I can opine on quickly, ha) GRL is a decent journal, and I am now gonna go skim paper + article & see if there's anything egregious...

Date: 2019-08-04 08:29 pm (UTC)
kaberett: Trans symbol with Swiss Army knife tools at other positions around the central circle. (Default)
From: [personal profile] kaberett
Okay, so, study looks legit and honestly pretty interesting, but the NatGeo article seems REALLY DETERMINED to make this all INCREDIBLY HIGH DRAMA with POTENTIAL ENORMOUS HUMAN COSTS via NATURAL DISASTERS in a way that kind of... doesn't actually follow from "this is a pretty cool bit of science, huh".

Date: 2019-08-05 07:23 pm (UTC)
muccamukk: text: "Scientia Potestas Est (Science Protests too Much)" (RoL: Science Protests too Much)
From: [personal profile] muccamukk
That's also what I was getting out of it. There's an interesting bit of science, as yet not that backed up, and scientists are spitballing about it. The article is like Let Us Remind You About the Big One.

There being a tear in the plate or not does not affect the big one coming or not, as far as I can tell, anyway.

Date: 2019-08-05 02:07 am (UTC)
monksandbones: A photo of the top of a purple kohlrabi, with a backlit green leaf growing from it (veggie love now with more kohlrabi)
From: [personal profile] monksandbones
Unrelated to this linkspam, but can report that I have used the boiled egg method as recommended in your summa linkspam a few weeks back to boil some eggs for my supper tonight with UNPRECEDENTED success! Even if I had to use a reusable freezer pack in a bowl of water in place of ice to achieve immediate cooling!

Related to this linkspam, the National Geographic piece was fascinating and very relevant to my interests in the form of tectonic drama! Under my feet! The plate "ripping" part seems to be a fair amount south of here, but it's always a little alarming but thrilling to think about the Juan de Fuca plate SUBDUCTING and MELTING underneath Vancouver Island among others!

Date: 2019-08-07 07:49 pm (UTC)
meneltarma: black and white image of Rudolf Nureyev sitting on a car (historical: dress to impress)
From: [personal profile] meneltarma
I found myself wanting ... more substance ... on the Josh Harris piece, as someone who was harmed by the anti-dating movement and homeschooled, but I get it's not meant to be a substance critique but an emotional one. The fact he has a seminary degree but has never dragged his ass back to university for a BA but feels entitled to jump into "branding" using his own corpse as proof of his success sure is Something. I was peripherally aware of it but I find myself wanting to dig deeper into how, why, what it means, that Josh Harris' cis male whiteness lets him be an expert without any credentials when his expertise is in, um, using his privilege to sell content he now claims to disavow. There's a lot happening there.

I'm Full Of Feelings about The Problem Of Ex-Evangelical Public Figures and I keep cycling around that response and others about Harris' exit from Evangelical Christianity and his public announcement of his divorce, and how much people yearn for them to be accountable for their actions and theologies of harm and how the structure of supremacist Christianity doesn't allow for people to say "I made a mistake and I'm sorry" but only to say "I've grown and changed so you can't be angry anymore about how I used to be" and how that continues to play out even when people disavow Christianity entirely.

(If people are mad at me for who I was when I was in a Christian cult or any other cult I got sucked into, G-D knows they're entitled to be. The harm didn't go away just because I stopped believing those things and now work to dismantle their power in the wider world. But "you might be rightfully angry about things I no longer/perhaps never believe(d) but did in fact say for complex reasons I take ownership of" seems to be beyond people like Harris.)

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