paperbackmuseum.blogspot.com
The Paperback Museum: 11/1/07 - 12/1/07
http://paperbackmuseum.blogspot.com/2007_11_01_archive.html
Media, culture, and politics from an aesthetic-materialist's perspective. Thursday, November 29, 2007. This is a response I wrote to Audre Lorde's "Need: A Chorale for Black Woman Voices," a poem assigned in the online course my friend Alexis Gumbs is teaching: " To Be a Problem: Outcast Subjectivity and Black Literary Production. In conjunction with this post, please read Alexis's comments on sexual violence against black women, " To Be Game. I was particularly affected by Pat's words on p. 11:. These v...
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The Paperback Museum: Bush, We Bid You A-Doo
http://paperbackmuseum.blogspot.com/2009/01/bush-we-bid-you-doo.html
Media, culture, and politics from an aesthetic-materialist's perspective. Friday, January 16, 2009. Bush, We Bid You A-Doo. Have compiled their favorite "Bushisms" over the past eight years, and the results are hilarious.and sad, given that W. was our president for two full terms. The Republicans' strategy of celebrating W.'s willful ignorance as some kind of "folksy," from-the-gut authenticity now lies in tatters. Here are some of the best Bushisms out of the bunch:. Nashville, Tennessee, 27 May 2004.
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The Paperback Museum: 12/1/08 - 1/1/09
http://paperbackmuseum.blogspot.com/2008_12_01_archive.html
Media, culture, and politics from an aesthetic-materialist's perspective. Tuesday, December 30, 2008. Still Reading Milton after All These Years. I continue to be impressed by Stanley Fish's commitment to Milton studies, even as his academic star-power takes him to the heights of institutional authority and public intellectualism (via his very popular New York Times. More recently, Fish wrote on a new prose translation of Milton's Paradise Lost. By the Canadian Miltonist Dennis Danielson. Is best read as...
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The Paperback Museum: Donald Pease: The Cadence of Critical Intervention
http://paperbackmuseum.blogspot.com/2009/04/donald-pease-cadence-of-critical.html
Media, culture, and politics from an aesthetic-materialist's perspective. Friday, April 3, 2009. Donald Pease: The Cadence of Critical Intervention. I wanted to share with everyone a recent talk by my former professor and American Studies icon Donald Pease. Posted by Kinohi Nishikawa. Notorious b.i.g. Anti-Aging Medicine for Baby Boomers. Subscribe to: Post Comments (Atom). Media, culture, and politics from an aesthetic-materialist's perspective. Around the Way Links. From the Annals of Anthroman.
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The Paperback Museum: 7/1/08 - 8/1/08
http://paperbackmuseum.blogspot.com/2008_07_01_archive.html
Media, culture, and politics from an aesthetic-materialist's perspective. Tuesday, July 22, 2008. Domino's: What Else Can You Fit on a Pizza? From the Onion News Network: "Domino's Scientists Test Limits of What Humans Will Eat.". Domino's Scientists Test Limits Of What Humans Will Eat. The sad thing about this piece is that commercials for actual Domino's pies are interspersed throughout the parody - can you tell what's real and what's fake? Posted by Kinohi Nishikawa. Links to this post.
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The Paperback Museum: Introducing Donald Goines
http://paperbackmuseum.blogspot.com/2007/08/introducing-donald-goines.html
Media, culture, and politics from an aesthetic-materialist's perspective. Wednesday, August 8, 2007. I recently wrote a brief review of Eddie Allen's Low Road: The Life and Legacy of Donald Goines. National Public Radio host Tony Cox interviewed Allen about his book and Goines's life (and tragic death by shooting) back in 2004. Follow this link. To access that interview and to get a taste of the kind of writing Goines spawned in his brief but shockingly productive literary career (16 novels in five years).
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The Paperback Museum: Petey Greene: Radicalizing Racial Discourse
http://paperbackmuseum.blogspot.com/2009/06/petey-greene-radicalizing-racial.html
Media, culture, and politics from an aesthetic-materialist's perspective. Tuesday, June 9, 2009. Petey Greene: Radicalizing Racial Discourse. I just finished watching the PBS documentary Adjust Your Color. Last year. Both men emerged out of prison to take advantage of media opportunities that allowed them to address the ghettos out of which they had emerged. (Tragically, both men died young too.). From Petey Greene's Washington, D.C. Posted by Kinohi Nishikawa. Labels: black pulp fiction.
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The Paperback Museum: Supreme Court Porn
http://paperbackmuseum.blogspot.com/2009/04/supreme-court-porn.html
Media, culture, and politics from an aesthetic-materialist's perspective. Thursday, April 23, 2009. The Supreme Court heard oral arguments yesterday in the case Redding v. Safford. The 9th Circuit Court of Appeals deemed the school's actions unconstitutional, but according to various news. The US. Supreme Court is likely to overturn that decision, citing that the harm suffered by Redding isn't compelling enough to render illegal at least this outrageous, police-like action taken by the school. 2002): The...
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The Paperback Museum: Worst President Ever
http://paperbackmuseum.blogspot.com/2009/01/worst-president-ever.html
Media, culture, and politics from an aesthetic-materialist's perspective. Tuesday, January 20, 2009. Slate has published a readable gloss. The article begins with this wonderful, and telling, anecdote:. Posted by Kinohi Nishikawa. Labels: franklin delano roosevelt. Subscribe to: Post Comments (Atom). Media, culture, and politics from an aesthetic-materialist's perspective. Around the Way Links. From the Annals of Anthroman. Jack and Jill Politics.
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The Paperback Museum: He Lives
http://paperbackmuseum.blogspot.com/2007/08/he-lives.html
Media, culture, and politics from an aesthetic-materialist's perspective. Wednesday, August 8, 2007. Regarding the Morse v. Frederick. Student free-speech case I commented on the previous post, I thought it'd be relevant to post a picture of the actual "speech" in question. Here's Joseph Frederick's inimitable "BONG HiTS 4 JESUS":. The only thing Frederick was guilty of was making fun of the faux seriousness with which we approach drug and religious discourses in this country. His banner was pure.