No, Wikipedia, Your Bad

In a not so searing rant to a friend, I wanted to discuss the (likely Clueless-derived) etymology of the phrase “my bad.” Turns out there is no entry for it on Wikipedia – one of the few I’ve come across. Anyone know if “my bad” predates Clueless? Anyone want to help write the entry?

Related, I am struck by how non-existing Wikipedia entries are like the new Googlewhack. The last query I can recall turning up empty handed was about the fictitious show “It’s A Wise Child” that featured the Glass family – though, happily, it looks like this has been rectified.

Baby Steps

I’ve been trying for some time to track down the new Babies documentary trailer, after first seeing it before Where the Wild Things Are. I remembered feeling troubled by the way the film other-izes and makes cute foreign lifestyles and traditions.

I’m not trying to be curmudgeonly and express distaste for everything, but it feels odd when everyone in the theater is laughing at African and Asian babies (“Ha ha, they’re fighting” and “Ha ha, they have a goat that’s drinking the bath water”) while the whiter babies are simply seen as adorable, as normal.

It doesn’t look like this was the intention of the film or the trailer, but – when we’re filming & editing from a westernized position (I believe the film is French) – these biases arise unintentionally.

I think the trailer will have to be online soon. In the meantime, I snapped a bunch of pics in the theater as I watched Fantastic Mr. Fox as if I were some bootlegger trying to peddle wares in the LA Santee market.

Check out the contrast in depiction of lifestyles (yes, perhaps this is partly the point of the film, but doesn’t it make it even more problematic?). Enjoy.

“yawning, like a cat’s wide open mouth of space”

I think I’m trying to sneak around myself lately. I wonder if this is something I can elucidate in a way that sheds light on my wariness of academia in general.

For starters, I should say that I’ve spent much of this quarter reflecting on how academic talk gets in the way of meaningful talk. (There’s a longer story around process and methodology here, but not one that’s necessarily relevant to this post.)

In any case, I realize that, as a graduate student, I have a perspicacious eye for self-editing. Papers are to be … polished. They are to exude clarity and they are to be a-personal, right? At least the ones that are accepted, are widely read, are seen as real literature. I realize all of these categories are heavily problematic; they are still a part of the reality within the current Ed. research regime.

And all of this is a digression to the real story:

Saturday morning, I woke up with an envelope sealed on my dining room table. I remembered writing a letter to a friend in the early hours of Saturday morning before going to sleep. I apparently failed to save a copy on my computer and also decided to seal it away with nothing but a name on the envelope, until an address could be ascertained.

On the back of the envelope, in my typically messy scrawl, lurking around the southwestern corner, I’d quoted Quincy Troupe for some reason: “There is nothing on the flipside of time but more time.” And that was it. Here I was, faced with the fact that I’d tried to deceive myself – in my weary state, I didn’t want the discerning eye of the alacritous critic and academician to edit the words I’d written. I can vaguely recall anecdotes and thoughts that likely went into the letter, but I can honestly say I don’t recall all of it.

And so I faced a dilemma: Do I send the letter sight un(academically)seen? Or do I pilfer the envelope that is not addressed to me, no longer mine, and sneak into my previous night’s thoughts to ensure I don’t embarrass myself?

I mailed it. I don’t even know if it has reached its intended recipient yet, so there’s no and then to this story. I guess I’m interested in the idea of removing the editor, the academic, the intellect from writing. Not all of the time, of course, but at least during the important times.  I’ve been reading a collection of essays by Ander Monson and I’m struck by the way he both distances and confronts the personal in content and form that are unlike anything else I’ve read recently.

I’ve found files and loose papers of random writing that I don’t remember constructing. In one instance: a poem I remember writing – to the day – while sitting at the newsstand at Book Soup, never quite finding the one word that was missing. I remember the feeling of having lost this word at some point – that it was known by me, perhaps in a dream, or in the shower, or walking the dog, or any of the myriad places that words topple in front of us only to make a just as haphazard getaway. This scrap of paper sits on my table, it’s not awaiting an audience or an editor or a thesaurus; it’s awaiting completeness.

And I think that when I was writing that poem – a casual homage to a tertiary character from the adventures of El Gaviero – I was in a different space. Perhaps a different person. The approach I take to writing without the tearful eye of mind and research is one that feels different. It uses different muscles, the script in which I write literally changes (though it’s still just as messy). And I wonder what would happen if this were allowed to be an unsuppressed voice in research. What would theory, epistemology, pedagogy and all of those terribly overbearing words & ideas look like if we extended things toward a more fluid heart, toward a feeling, toward a hermeneutic of emotion and connection, “to lead you to an overwhelming question…”

Like the letter, perhaps this thought is still en route towards an unexpected conclusion. And like the letter, perhaps it’s better to simply click “publish” before the reigning king of academia returns to change this clause or that.

Apparently Its Own Department‽

Saw this on the shelf in our main meeting room the other day and felt creeped out.

Fitting, considering that on the same day, Wayne Au spoke to my Critical Theory class about his book, Unequal by Design. If ever a picture deserved an interrobang, it’s this one (thanks for the link, Peter).

Qualitative, Quantitative, and the Zen of Salinger

“But the thing is, the marvelous thing is, when you first start doing it, you don’t even have to have faith in what you’re doing. I mean even if you’re terribly embarrassed about the whole thing, it’s perfectly all right. I mean you’re not insulting anybody or anything. In other words, nobody asks you to believe a single thing when you start out. You don’t even have to think about what you’re saying, the sarets said. All you have to have in the beginning is quantity. Then, later on, it becomes quality by itself. On its own power or something. He says that any name of God – any name at all – has this peculiar, self-active power of its own, and it starts working after you’ve sort of started it up.” – Franny

********

“I don’t care where an actor acts. It can be in summer stock, in can be over a radio, it can be over television, it can be in a goddam Broadway theatre, complete with the most fashionable, most well-fed, most sunburned-looking audience you can imagine. But I’ll tell you a terrible secret – Are you listening to me? There isn’t anyone out there who isn’t Seymour’s Fat Lady. That includes your Professor Tupper, buddy. And all his goddam cousins by the dozens. There isn’t anyone anywhere that isn’t Seymour’s Fat Lady. Don’t you know that? Don’t you know that goddam secret yet? And don’t you know – listen to me, now – don’t you know who that Fat Lady really is? … Ah, buddy. It’s Christ Himself. Christ Himself, buddy.” – and Zooey

[btw, I always imagined the dialogue in these two stories to be the more suitable adaptation for film than Holden’s whiny jaunt around New York. Glad to find out a good friend actually took a stab at such an effort.]

I Wonder

Will old Kindles also have a distinguishing odor that suggests research, history, familiarity?*

*Likewise, one of the best aspects of doing research at the Clark was being able to look at beautifully bound material dating back five hundred years or more and – there, right there – seeing marginalia in scripts that put my handwriting to shame. Seeing people historically dialogue with the same text I was working with suddenly helped place me in a continuing communal dialogue across time. As I jotted notes on my laptop, I knew that, years ago, someone else was also communicating through the English Reformation-era poetry that my research focused on. And will this dialogue within marginalia (more frequently in library books with notes that are either confounding or mind-blowing) end if the Kindle-ers have their way?

“Pandemic Right Here! Got That Pandemic!”

We looked at the clock: it was minutes before midnight. We were exhausted, the chips and guac had been exhausted hours before, and the dog had lost interest from the moment the events transpired. The only real reason we had to continue was because the fate of all humanity rested on our weary shoulders. Such is the sense of burden that is felt as we played through four different games of Pandemic.

A board game that relies on collaboration amongst players instead of competition, Pandemic finds players racing around the globe treating infections and feverishly trying to discover the cure before another epidemic wrecks havoc on the globe. In effect, the players are working together to beat the game; either we all win or – as was most oft the case for us – we all lose.

A game that can be played by anyone, we found ourselves deliberating every action and discussing (or arguing) strategy. We were metacognitive in our decision making process. We highlighted what failed in past games (deciding to ignore the wildfire-like spread of disease in Asia, for instance was a particularly terrible strategy) and relied on our various locations, cards, and other game attributes to eventually beat the game.

Exhausting and exhilarating, Pandemic is the kind of game that warrants careful analysis – the game’s design helps rupture any sense of confidence; at any moment all hell can break loose when another epidemic strikes. As a learning tool, Pandemic is particularly intriguing. By the end of our final game – we saved the world at 12:53 a.m. – we informally reflected on how our game playing adapted to the nature of the game, our communication skills, and the way the game’s design was a useful instructional tool.

As I continue to think about game play within the classroom, I think Pandemic and a general resurgence in board game playing is helping me distill the basics out of what is meaningful in a gaming and learning environment.

I’m in the middle of watching this great Google Talk by Pandemic’s creator, Matt Leacock.

Additionally, I’m looking to create a regularly meeting board gaming group to look at the role of social interaction and strategizing when playing. (I guess I should also mention I’m reading this and planning to work through the exercises, if anyone else in Los Angeles is interested in collaborating.)

At Manual Arts, Mr. Carlson and I have created the Strategic Gaming Club – meeting during lunch and after school a group of students regularly plays games ranging from Mancala to Chess to Hungry Hungry Hippos. And if we’re able to sneak in a few sessions of Settlers of Catan and Pandemic, I’m sure the world would thank us.

“Got that Pandemic!”

Riding the Dissertation Wave

I recently got a Google Wave preview invite (thanks you-know-who). I’m excited about the collaborative options but anxious to be able to actually collaborate with people other than the handful lucky enough to be testing the preview version.

I created my first semi-working wave today the initial text is as follows:

Thinking about technology, open access, and still wanting something to be generally single-authored, I’m wondering if I can use Google Wave to work through my dissertation.

Some initial questions:

Can I put a Creative Commons license on a wave?

Can I make a wave “public” so I can have anyone read it and make suggestions but still be able to moderate it? I think this could be more managable than creating a Wiki, but just as participatory.

Do I need to wait until this is out of “preview” to best connect others?

I’ve got a meager four contacts on Wave at the moment and only two are aware of the research/teaching behind the dissertation stuff I’ll get around to.

For now, I’m going to try to throw a few ideas up here, play around with this and see if anything can come of it.

I’m trying to experiment with ways to post the wave here, though with everything still a “preview,” I can’t ensure things will stay put. In the meantime, I’m curious about thoughts about proceeding with public head-scratching, drafting, defending, and writing of the dissertation. Is this kind of open approach even going to be accepted?