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Concision’s Vices and Virtues

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Amplifyd from www.thesmartset.com
Concision has a long, proud history, but pundits are now blaming the brevity of tweets for attention-span erosion that will hasten our descent into duh, stupidness.
Beyond being simple, being succinct is not always bereft of ideology. “Omit needless words” is writing advice from The Elements of Style by Strunk and White, echoed by Orwell (”if it is possible to cut a word out, always cut it out”) in his essay “Politics and the English Language.” But Orwell also described the danger of condensed language in his novel 1984. According to Syme, one of Winston Smith’s co-workers at the Ministry of Truth, “The whole aim of Newspeak is to narrow the range of thought. In the end we shall make thoughtcrime literally impossible, because there will be no words in which to express it.”
Writer Ian Garrick Mason, in a recent blog post on Sans Everything, offers balm for those who fear brusqueness, noting that, “Our communication and entertainment formats have been multiplying and diversifying, not getting shorter.” The sitcom, he observes, has not supplanted the opera. Similarly, Twitter will not replace the paragraph, only publicly demonstrate concision’s vices and virtuesRead more at www.thesmartset.com
 

Conference Report: ‘On the Idea of Communism’

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Amplifyd from thecommune.wordpress.com

Perhaps for some it is entertaining to come up with grandiose proclamations about communism, as Badiou does, “Without the horizon of communism, without this Idea, there is nothing in the historical and political becoming of any interest to a philosopher”. But as Rancière himself argued, communism is not some dream you cling on to like a religion, but a mode of societal organisation which can only brought about by the concrete activity of real human beings. There is no particular danger posed by thinking up blueprints - after all, we should know what the purpose of our activism is - but it is also the case that the future society we want to see also has to be reflected in how we organise today, so that the means used will lead to the ends desired.  An academic conference which refuses on principle to talk about communism as a political movement in the here and now will therefore do nothing to re-establish anyone’s belief in a viable alternative to capitalism.

Read more at thecommune.wordpress.com
 

Doctoral Candidates Anticipate Hard Times

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Amplifyd from www.nytimes.com
Fulltime faculty jobs have not been easy to come by in recent decades, but this year the new crop of Ph.D. candidates is finding the prospects worse than ever. Public universities are bracing for severe cuts as state legislatures grapple with yawning deficits. At the same time, even the wealthiest private colleges have seen their endowments sink and donations slacken since the financial crisis. So a chill has set in at many higher education institutions, where partial or full-fledge hiring freezes have been imposed.

Many in the humanities fear that their fields are going to suffer most. Humanities professors are already among the lowest-paid faculty members, according to the Humanities Indicators Prototype, a new, decade-long effort to establish a database of information led by the American Academy of Arts and Sciences.

What’s more, nearly half of all the positions are part time — with no job security and no benefits — a situation that many educators expect to worsen.

Read more at www.nytimes.com