1.30.2008

Book Meme, Webpage, and A Year Without A Dog

I.
See K8s and her friend's blogs. I've been tagged with the book meme, so here it goes:

1. Name one book that changed your life.
A Thousand Plateaus, Deleuze and Guattari.

2. Name one book you have read more than once.
Lord of the Rings Trilogy

3. One book you would want on a desert island.
American Indian Myths & Legends, Erdoes & Ortiz.

4. Two books that made you laugh.
Even Gowgirls Get the Blues, Tom Robbins
The Hitchiker's Guide to the Galaxy, Douglas Adams

5. One book that made you cry.
Truth & Bright Water, Thomas King

6. One book you wish you'd written.
Writing Without Teachers, Peter Elbow

7. One book you wish had never been written.
"The Song of Hiawatha" by H. W. Longfellow

8. Two books you are currently reading.
Richard Louv's Last Child in the Woods: Saving our kids from Nature-Deficit Disorder
Allison Wallace's A Keeper of Bees

So, who to pass this on to? Maybe Scot and Sarah.

II.
Oh, and I have my very own webpage. Some links are still forthcoming.

III.
Plus, it has been a year now that we have lived without our dog, Page. We miss her still.

1.24.2008

Southern Climate

I've live farther north and, on a couple occasions seen colder weather. But, hey, at least this gets some of the invasive species out of their encroaching range, no?

Current Conditions

Updated: 6 sec ago

Observed at: IowaPonds by the Soccer Complex, Waterloo, Iowa
Elevation: 886 ft / 270 m
-22.9 °F / -30 °C
Clear
Humidity: 55%
Dew Point: -34 °F / -36 °C
Wind: 2.7 mph / 4 km/h from the SW
Wind Gust: 4.0 mph / 6 km/h
Pressure: 30.42 in / 1030.0 hPa (Rising)
Visibility: 10.0 miles / 16.1 kilometers
UV: 0 out of 16
Clouds: Clear -
(Above Ground Level)

1.10.2008

Stochastic Quantitative Reasoning

Still on the political thought-train... but I'm thinking of using this article in my writing classes. Holland does a good job of working not just with evidence, but also with the vagaries of probability. Since so many of my students want to just put up some percentages or polling data in support of their argument, I'm thinking this might 1) show them how it's done and 2) open up a space for talking about why Holland chooses to make clear the limits of his speculation.

Beyond that, he's probably right. The media was caught up in Obamamania. Women turned out in greater numbers than in 2004 (57 v. 54 percent) and coupled with a switch in Biden voters (I can attest that in my own caucus precinct, we nabbed over 50% of Biden voters largely on the theory that supporting a clear front-runner in our precinct, Obama, might help erode a third-place show so that Biden might make up ground elsewhere in the scramble for that #3 spot. Risky and ultimately it lost, but that was what the Biden precinct captain advised, so I let him go with it.

1.04.2008

First Caucus!

Wow is about all I can say!

Iowa Democratic Party Caucus Results

Current Caucus Results

Senator Barack Obama : 37.58%
Senator John Edwards : 29.75%
Senator Hillary Clinton : 29.47%
Governor Bill Richardson : 2.11%
Senator Joe Biden : 0.93%
Uncommitted : 0.14%
Senator Chris Dodd : 0.02%
Precincts Reporting: 1781 of 1781
(Percentages are State Delegate Equivalents.)

Keep Iowa blue in 2008! Your contribution will help deliver the state for our Presidential nominee and send Tom Harkin back to the U.S. Senate. Contribute now!

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1.02.2008

Becoming 2008

I had thought about doing a list of things that distinguished 2007 for me: Top albums, books, movies, etc. However, I have been reading too much Deleuze and criticism on Deleuze, so I figured Top-whatever lists were pretty segmentary. As an alternative in a more becoming sort of way, here is what is rattling around with those things now:

Let's jump right to music: After 15 years of listening to Rage Against the Machine's eponymous first album, I finally used a Best Buy gift card to buy it (oh, the irony!). Fascinating how it is only recently that I have had the need to buy it because of its ubiquity. Along with this, I picked up Patti Smith's Twelve, a cover of twelve classic rock hits from the Beatles to Nirvana. It's a bit heavy on sixties rock, covering "Within You and Without You," the Stones' "Gimme Shelter," the Doors' "Soul Kitchen," Jefferson Airplane's "White Rabbit" and Hendrix's "Are You Experienced?" These are all excellent remakes, as is her cover of Dylan's "Changing of the Guards" and Nirvana's "Smells Like Teen Spirit." The one I could do without, though was the remake of Tears for Fears' "Everybody Wants to Rule the World." On top of that, I checked out Kings of Leon's recent album, "Because of the Times." They are new to me, but I like their grit and sound.

Right now, I am re-reading Into the Wild since i assigned it for my Expository Writing course. I like the different ways Krakauer builds a case out of his research. It is an excellent model, I think for students in that it blends his researched data into a definite perspective, using multiple rhetorical appeals and strategies. While the weakest in terms of logic might be his own personal relation between him, his father, and his experience climbing Devil's Thumb, it is nonetheless HUGELY engrossing and persuasive. Here at the office, I am also skimming William Germano's From Dissertation to Book, which I highly recommend to anyone undergoing this process. He's more readable than the authors in The Thesis and the Book and for that, I appreciate his candor and style. Oh, and Deleuze? Criticism, mostly: Clare Colebrook's article from Topoi, Zizek's Organs Without Bodies, and Rajchman's (Again) Deleuze Connections. I also cracked Michael Smith's Toward the Outside, a book on Levinas. My main concern in the theory here is 1) that ecocomposition acknowledges what I think is a real thorn in its side: the connection between its subject and its object. Broadly, ecocomposition finds it to be socially constructed all the way down OR posits some reality that can be accessed and must be saved from all this constructivist nonsense. How, then, can we remain committed to "sustainability" or saving the planet? 2) to get at this, I am researching what the links are/ have been/ and how we might look at writers as ecologically situated. This means 3) that they are at the intersections of ecologies rather than their interfaces. It's not enough these ecologies meet clash and grapple, but that they are, in the figure of the writer, virtually indistinguishable.

While I have been interested in Deleuze, I haven't seen too many movies. I got a HDTV for Christmas, so LOTR looks better as does my gift copy of Easy Rider. Jess is going back through Harry Potter, both books and films, so we just got through half of Sorcerer's Stone.

Ah, well, there is more to become and I could go on about politics and war and environmentalism, which are also part of my work and life (volunteer for Obama, community screening and discussing War Made Easy in February, organizing Focus the Nation in January). But my syllabus for Professional Writing needs attention before a 2pm meeting.

Not always theoretical... not even always academic.. but always written..