3703 students: You can read Marjorie Perloff's deeply thoughtful and deeply critical review of Cary Nelson's Anthology of Modern American Poetry by clicking here.
Sunday, February 13, 2005
Saturday, February 12, 2005
English professor spam
I received this item today:
Dear Professor of English,The important-sounding International was amusing, and the sheer absurdity of this invitation made it impossible not to visit the website. (Note: I have a strong anti-virus program and a firewall on my computer.)
Please submit a paper for [name withheld], an International journal . . . . Please visit the journal's website.
The journal must be unique in the world of English studies in having an Angelfire homepage. It's probably also unique in having images of foxes (wolves?), polar bears, and walruses on its homepage. An individual copy costs $30 ($50 if you're a library). A $10 "processing fee" must be included with one's essay, the check made out not to the journal but to an individual. There is no indication what sort of essays the journal is seeking. My best guess is that it's seeking essays accompanied by $10 checks. Best of all, submitting authors are asked to name two people to serve as referees. Not what one usually means by "refereed journal"!
I can't decide: Is this a scam in which you hand over your money and get "published"? Or does the "publisher" simply take your money and disappear? Either way, this lit crit scam is a welcome diversion from the usual junkmail. At least these people know that I teach English, unlike the Nigerian barristers who are always knocking at my e-mail door.
Related post
The National Dean's List
By Michael Leddy at 12:33 PM comments: 0
Friday, February 11, 2005
Getting organized . . . part 6
One more suggestion: the Hipster PDA. That is, a stack of index cards held together with a binder clip. The ways in which people have worked out the details of this analog organizing tool are pretty amazing. Google returns close to 10,000 hits for "hipster pda."
Tip of the (Valentine's) Day: A Hipster PDA makes a great Valentine's Day gift. Use pink index cards and write something on each. (Happy Valentine's Day, Elaine!)
By Michael Leddy at 11:47 AM comments: 0
Links
I've added a number of links to the column on the right. Big deal, eh? To me, it is though--I'm happy to have learned how to do so.
By Michael Leddy at 11:21 AM comments: 0
Trompe l'oeil
3703 students: From the wordsmith.org word-a-day service:
trompe l'oeil (tromp lye) nounThere, in an extreme form, is the project of the "beautiful illusion" that William Carlos Williams rejects. WCW on Shakespeare: "He holds no mirror up to nature but with his imagination rivals nature's composition with his own."
1. A style of painting in which objects are rendered in extremely realistic detail, giving an illusion of reality.
2. A painting, mural, etc. made in this style.
[From French, literally "fools the eye", from tromper (to deceive) + le (the) + oeil (eye).]
"Good trompe-l'oeil work is magical. It persuades you that the subject of the mural is real, that you are indeed seeing a view of smoking Mount St Helens, or a formal baroque garden glimpsed through a filigree-screen gateway, or a stretch of beach on a windy day."
Stephen Anderton; When We Practise to Deceive; The Times (London, UK); Jan 4, 2003.
By Michael Leddy at 7:53 AM comments: 0
Thursday, February 10, 2005
In memory of Alan Speer
Alan Speer died Sunday at a swim meet in Michigan. He was 34, a Charleston kid who grew up into a witty, learned man. He knew more about film than anyone, and I mean that just about literally.
My wife Elaine, who taught Alan flute, was close to him and remembers a story that he once told her. In his high-school days, Alan went to Turkey as an AFS student and, of course, learned Turkish. Years later, in his grad-school days, he was riding in an elevator when the two other passengers, both young women, began giggling and talking about how cute he was. Here's the good part: they were talking in Turkish, never imagining Alan could understand them. He stood there taking it all in, and when the elevator stopped at his floor, he turned to them, said something in Turkish, and left. I wish I could remember what it was he said (Elaine can't either). "I heard every word"? "Thank you"? "I agree with you completely"?
Whatever it was, I'm sure it was smart and funny and kind, like Alan himself.
Alan's writing on film is plentifully available online. His webpage for his film criticism, Cinemadox, can be found by clicking here.
By Michael Leddy at 3:30 PM comments: 10
Focus groups and language
My dad sent me a clipping from the Bergen Record (a NJ newspaper) that shows focus groups in action. The writer, Peter Grad, is writing about semantics and Social Security:
[W]e learned that the White House is banning the use of the term "privatization"--the key principle behind its push to overhaul Social Security--because focus groups distrust the word in the wake of Enron and other corporate scandals. Instead, the administration is encouraging the use of the phrase "personal accounts," a friendlier, warmer and fuzzier term.A number of news stories have posited the same rationale behind the push for Social Security "reform" rather than "privatization."
By Michael Leddy at 1:26 PM comments: 0
Lost in translation
Another item from Peter Grad (whose articles for some reason are largely unavailable online):
Linguist Christopher Moore scans the globe in search of words that are not easily translatable into English. In the Republic of Congo, for instance, he found ilunga, which 1,000 translators deemed the world's most untranslatable word: As best as they can describe it, it means "a person who is ready to forgive any transgression a first time and then to tolerate it for a second time, but never for a third time."Ah, language!
There is also the Czech litost (pronounced lee-tosht), meaning "a state of torment created by the sudden sight of one's own misery."
And the beautiful French idiom esprit de l'escalier, which refers to the clever reply one thinks of only afterward, in this case, on the way down the stairs after having made a remark in an upstairs room.
Grad's article was inspired by a story on National Public Radio, which you can read about and listen to here.
By Michael Leddy at 1:04 PM comments: 0
Paying attention to distractions
From an article by Katie Hafner in in today's New York Times, "You There, at the Computer: Pay Attention":
Humans specialize in distraction, especially when the task at hand requires intellectual heavy lifting. All the usual "Is it lunchtime yet?" inner voices, and external interruptions like incoming phone calls, are alive and well.For the full article, click here.
But in the era of e-mail, instant messaging, Googling, e-commerce and iTunes, potential distractions while seated at a computer are not only ever-present but very enticing. Distracting oneself used to consist of sharpening a half-dozen pencils or lighting a cigarette. Today, there is a universe of diversions to buy, hear, watch and forward, which makes focusing on a task all the more challenging.
[To read the Times, use mediajunkie as your name and password. For more names and passwords to enter free sites that require registration, go to bugmenot.]
By Michael Leddy at 7:16 AM comments: 0
Wednesday, February 9, 2005
The Nuts and Bolts of College Writing
Recommended to all college writers: The Nuts and Bolts of College Writing, by Michael Harvey. A mere 100-odd pages, it's the clearest, most helpful presentation of sound writing advice I've seen. And at $4.95 (plus $3.00 shipping), it's a bargain.
You can read about it here.
By Michael Leddy at 11:57 AM comments: 0