Creating new accounts

Due to some spam commenting, I've arranged it so that I have to approve new accounts before they're active. Sometimes I'm not sure if the email addresses and names are legitimate or not, so if you want to create an account, send me an email in addition to creating the account just quickly introducing yourself. Sorry for the trouble, but I'm not sure what else to do about it.

Scarf, just now finished

During a three-hour marathon knitting session while watching Jake 2.0, I finally finished this scarf I've been working on for months:

New Scarf

And:

New Scarf #2

Feminisms and Rhetorics 2007

I am so there:

Call for Papers

The 2007 Feminism(s) and Rhetoric(s) conference invites proposals on civic discourse, feminisms, and rhetorics. The conference draws its inspiration from the 50th anniversary of the integration of Little Rock’s Central High School, the Clinton Presidential Library, Heifer Project International & the Clinton School for Public Service.

This conference asks us to explore civic discourse and how civic discourse, feminism(s) and rhetoric(s) interact with, for, and against each other.

• What is civic discourse? What counts as civic discourse?
• How has civic discourse changed over the years for women? For feminism?
• What does it mean to participate in civic discourse in the 21st century?
• How do we participate in civic discourse?
• How has the internet/electronic discourse affected civic discourse?
• How has civic discourse become corporatized?
• How has globalization impacted civic discourse?
• What does it mean to be a feminist and/or rhetorician participating in civic discourse?

We look forward to reading proposals from a wide variety of disciplines, including, but not limited to, history, ethics, new media, political science, social justice, pedagogy, law, literature, art and art theory, queer theory, international studies, cultural studies, race studies, economics, environmental studies, science, social activism, communication studies, technical communication, visual design, philosophy, and engineering.

It seems like national academic conferences in my field are hardly ever held in the south. There was CCCC 2004 in San Antonio, but that's it. I'd like to see more conferences in Nashville, Birmingham, or Atlanta, as I'd have a free place to stay.

Novels Read During Break

  • Joanna Russ, Picnic on Paradise
  • Jamaica Kincaid, The Autobiography of My Mother
  • Julia Alvarez, Saving the World
  • Zadie Smith, White Teeth

The semester has started, and I just want to get back in my fiction hidey-hole.

Made for Each Other

Guess which line made Jonathan and me laugh and laugh during a recent 24-a-thon:

Ah, William Devane. And sorry about the lousy quality; I should have paid closer attention to the bitrate, etc. settings.

For All You Post-MLA'ers

An analogue, superfluous though it may be:

Stage Door is an excellent film, by the way; I highly recommend it.

I Smell a Dissertation

There's an interesting story in the Times about the Voluntary Disclosure Form, which those under arrest can use to make a statement sans legal representation:

A homeless man accused of stabbing a tourist as he rode with his girlfriend on the subway found that words weren’t enough. Asked to sign his confession, he instead sketched a cartoon version of his crime: a pair of lovers’ faces — one happy and one sad — and a stormy black cloud floating over a subway train.

Such statements — and occasional illustrations — by defendants in New York City courts are one element of what prosecutors call the V.D.F., more formally known as the People’s Voluntary Disclosure Form. To read them is to experience a kind of poetry of everyday criminal life in New York City.

By turns raw, ugly, poignant, defiant, rarely remorseful and almost always damaging, the statements are a window into the criminal process, part of the common language between detectives and suspects.

“It’s kind of like the literature of the criminal defendant,” said Gerald L. Shargel, a criminal defense lawyer. “The information contained on the V.D.F. is much more rich and colorful than anything the defense lawyer provides.”

Because they can be so revealing, the V.D.F.’s are a bane of defense lawyers’ existence, and they often try to suppress them so they cannot be used in court.

[. . .]

For many people, the urge to explain, if not to confess, is as urgent as it was for Raskolnikov in “Crime and Punishment.”

“My name is Paul Cortez,” is the Melvillian first sentence of the V.D.F. statement handwritten by Mr. Cortez, a yoga teacher who is awaiting trial as the suspect in the fatal stabbing of a dancer in her Upper East Side apartment.

What follows is a three-page roller coaster ride of love, sex and betrayal, culminating in an alibi. On the day of the victim’s death, Mr. Cortez wrote, “I knew something was wrong, so I called back several times.” When she didn’t answer, he called clients, watched a football game with a friend, “then read a little and went to bed. The next morning about 10:30 I found out from my mom Catherine was Dead.”

The last word, “Dead,” is capitalized for emphasis.

It might be a project better suited for a linguistics/discourse analysis dissertation, but it could work for rhetoric too.

Home Office Meme

Krista started it; whether it'll become a full-fledged 43folders-y meme is anybody's guess. At any rate, here is my workspace:

My Workspace

Oh, and some evidence of crafty fun:

Craftiness

This was my first attempt at soapmaking. It was easy enough with the microwavable soap base and all. On the labels are the names of the BPAL oils I used to scent those soaps.

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