Question and Answer

On Facebook, someone asks: “Come on people, is it so hard to have manners?”

I would say “yes” because having manners rests on a recognition and prioritization of the other person. So much of our contemporary technological life aims at the obfuscation of other people (iPods, iPhones, e-readers, nintendo DS, etc), at filtering the external world out and amping my internal world up. It takes more and more effort to keep oneself tethered in reality, to acknowledge the face-to-face with others.

I am thinking of D. Diane Davis’ discussion of Nancy in the introduction to her Inessential Solidarity. She reminds us that Levinas’s primordial concept of the face-to-face “is a relation of nonindifference, Levinas tells us, that pivots neither on shared meaning nor on identification but on an obligation, an imperative that precedes understanding […] You might whip out your Blackberry or plug into your iPod or feign sleep or complete absorption in your magazine, iPad, or Nintendo DS, but the active refusal to be responsive is a response and so no longer simple indifference” (11). I am tweaking this a bit, suggesting that our contemporary technologies obliviate the other–such that the encounters that trigger the “conscious” responses of avoidance (of avoiding my responsibility toward the other, my hospitality, my repaying the debt) Davis articulates do not present themselves to consciousness. Of course, we still are left with the conscious decision to put these technologies away, and to invest our time in the presence of others. But such investing can be hard, hard work. Worthy work, though.

Posted in davis, ethics, face-to-face, levinas, rhetoric | Comments Off on Question and Answer

Help Stop Crippling Budget Cuts

Yesterday we learned of Florida State senator JD Alexander’s proposed budget, which would cut USF’s state funding by 58%.

Today I am asking all my readers to consider the following articles:

If so moved, then please follow this link to “urge your legislator not to enact massive cuts to higher education.”

I would stress that the legislative branch already has enacted massive cuts to higher education; over the last three years, USF’s operating budget has been cut by $100 million dollars. That’s about 33% of its total operating costs. Massive increases in tuition have off-set some of those costs, but not all. Students are already outraged and feel over-extended. The only way these cuts help stimulate our economy is buy further entrenching our students in debt. This is not a long-term solution.

But there is a strategy to Alexander’s madness. To set the discussion at 58% means that accepting a “mere” 25% deduction feels like a fair compromise. It isn’t. The Florida system has taken massive cuts for 3 years. It cannot tolerate more, unless one doesn’t care about crippling the quality and availability of education. How can you argue that education is central to the future of the economy and simultaneously gut funding to your education systems?

One might argue that education should be left to the free hand of the market. I would argue that the last few years has shown us the extent to which the private sector knows how to operate efficiently and ethically. If anything, investing in education should be seen as a presupposition to the idea of a “free market” because it at least ensures that everyone has equal access to the tools for success. But, again, the strategy here is called “positional bargaining,” by setting the initial position at such a ludicrous extreme, it almost ensures that the opposition will have to compromise far more than they feel they should.

We can see Alexander’s perverse strategy already playing out. Take, for instance, change.org’s web petition to “Have equal budget cuts across the Florida State University System”. This is not the argument to make–as one of my graduate students, Dan Richards, so keenly pointed out, we should not approve budget cuts for a fourth straight year that will leave all our Universities in deficit.

I am on my best behavior here. I am trying, very hard, to avoid any mention of a conspiracy theory, of considering what is happening in Florida across what is happening in other states, such as Texas, Michigan, and Wisconsin. Apparently, given those sentences, I can’t quite try hard enough.

I remember a verse from my youth, one that helped get me interested in “critical” education in the first place. Zack de la Rocha:

They don’t gotta burn the books
They just remove them;
While arm warehouses grow as quick as the cells,
They rally round the family,
With a pocket full of shells

Posted in education, florida | Comments Off on Help Stop Crippling Budget Cuts

I’ll Take Know Your Rhetorician

Today in my undergraduate Rhetorical Theory class, we played “Ancient Rhetorical Jeopardy.”

Posted in rhetorical-theory, teaching | Comments Off on I’ll Take Know Your Rhetorician

Colbert, Citizens United, and Irony

Apparently I live under some kind of rock, because today was the first I heard of Steven Colbert’s PAC. There’s a short article over at Slate documenting Colbert’s attack on the Supreme Court’s Citizen’s United decision. A few random thoughts:

First, I thought of Gregory Ulmer’s theory that in electrate culture, entertainment rises as a dominant apparatus to challenge the authority of religion, science, and the state. Couple Colbert’s campaign with the recent success of Wikipedia’s blackout and you get a picture of how “entertainment” is rapidly massing political clout. From a sophistic/Latourian perspective, this is a good thing, since it collects more actants into the multitude to contribute to the social drama that constitutes our reality.

Second, I thought it interesting how the author explores the effectiveness of Colbert’s strategy–is it leading to authentic change or is it merely more evidence of our “irony fatigue,” our cynicism. FTA:

At one level, this is all just comedy, and it’s hard to measure whether Colbert’s sustained attacks on the court’s campaign finance decisions are having any real impact, beyond making us laugh. On the other hand, when the New York Times declares that Colbert’s project is deadly serious, and it’s just the rest of politics that’s preposterous, something more than just theater is happening.”

That last sentence reminds me of Baudrillard’s riff on Disney World in Simulation and Simulacra, that Disney World isn’t the fantasy, but rather the hard kernel of the Real, a representation of our fantastic desire, that makes the rest of the world (the illusion of that world) keep on running. Just a thought there.

I’ve been writing about Latour today, specifically his emphasis on concern in “Why Has Critique Run Out of Steam?” and its relation to the desire for ontological purification in We Have Never Been Modern. I’m thinking of Latour’s emphasis on a compositional public, transiently organized around matters of concern, through Richard Lanham’s Strong Defense of rhetoric, which insists upon viewing truth as the fragile, fluid, and flexible products of an ever-ongoing social drama. To do so dismisses the notion of “just theater.” Theater, performance, hypokrisis, lexis–its all we got.

Posted in colbert, cynicism, irony, lanham, rhetoric, sophistry | Comments Off on Colbert, Citizens United, and Irony

Gmail is Awesome

Today I discovered that gmail prompt you with the question “did you forget to attach a document” if you write “attach” in an email and then hit send. Neat stuff. I was telling a student that I attached a reading to our course site–but there’s plenty of times I need that reminder. Point for Google.

Posted in google, technology | Comments Off on Gmail is Awesome

Discrimination or a Bad Day?

Via Facebook, a story from Native News Network about a student suspended for using her native language in class. FTA:

“The teacher went back to where the two were sitting and literally slammed her hand down on the desk and said, “How do I know you are not saying something bad?”

As a former high school teacher, I get it. There are days when you just are on edge. I once through a persistent problem child out of class because she sneezed. I just didn’t have the fight in me that day.

I am hoping, based on the quote, that this teacher was having one of those days. Too bad for her it has become a meme on Facebook. There might be a context to this story beyond the article.

This reminds me that ethics is something to which we work because, put simply, we need less of this in the world. The default reaction to what we don’t know is often fear, but that is something we can work to overcome.

Posted in ethics, teaching | Comments Off on Discrimination or a Bad Day?

Dear Football Gods

Please, don’t let us lose to the Giants. I’ve had the pleasure of Super Bowl wins. They were dandy. That loss back in 07 really humbled us. I could lose to any other team and say, “wow, its been a great year.” But not Eli. Not the Giants.

That is all.

EDIT: The game didn’t quite go as planned. But at least the commercials were solid this year.

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Education in Ruins; a War of Nerves

I’ve talked about my love for Bill Reading’s The University in Ruins on this blog before. Today I came across a disturbing news item on Facebook that made me think of Reading’s warning, a warning echoed by Mark C. Taylor in The Moment of Complexity: that if, after the decimation of the Modern Enlightenment project (Lyotard, etc), educators failed to provide a robust and compelling justification for education, then one would be constructed for them. Kant’s institution sealed faculty from public scrutiny, provided they obeyed State laws. The old motto: “think but obey.” That was the deal Kant and Humbodlt struck for institutions of higher learning in their seminalConflict of the Faculties–the public stays out of curriculum, and the educators stay out of politics.

Increasingly, however, the State (the polis) has rescinded this contract. The fiasco in Texas regarding history textbooks in 2010 was a clear shot across the bow: no longer will faculty be free to determine what gets taught in classrooms. Those decisions will now be made outside the discipline. With the deconstruction of the Modern University, and its goals of universality and assimilation, goes the forcefield that shielded academics from the realm of politics. Of course, there’s more going on here: the radical shift in Universities from centers of conservative values to liberal critique, the massive increase of students attending University, the increasing polarization and invective of political discourse in the electric era, etc. My point is simply that the classroom is no longer isolated from politics. In fact, the classroom is a political hot spot, if the events in Texas, Wisconsin, Michigan, Ohio, Florida tell us anything.

Now we can add New Hampshire to the list. Huffington Post:

The Tea Party dominated New Hampshire Legislature on Wednesday overrode the governor’s veto to enact a new law allowing parents to object to any part of the school curriculum.

There’s a small part of me, a Levinasian part, that argues we could interpret such a law as inviting alterity–forcing educators to consider different perspectives. But that voice is drowned out by another part of me, screaming that school is supposed to be a center for challenging beliefs, encountering difference, and inspiring change. Again, we call them the liberal arts for a reason (and have all the way back to Cicero, who saw oratory as the art of adjusting the convictions of the republic).

But there’s another aspect here that really bothers me–the lack of respect it affords educators to determine what should be taught. The article indicates that parents are responsible for paying the costs of alternative curriculum–but think of the amount of time and energy that will be dedicated to Intelligent Design (which, I would argue, is one of the real intentions here–not “whole language” or “everyday math”). FTA:

Hoell stressed the new law could allow parents to address both moral and academic objections to parts of the curriculum. The lawmaker said he could imagine the provision being utilized by parents who disagree with the “whole language” approach to reading education or the Everyday Math program.

“What if a school chooses to use whole language and the parent likes phonics, which is a better long-term way to teach kids to read?” Hoell said to HuffPost.

What about the fact that education, both curriculum and pedagogy, is an intense area of study and that those who shape curriculum have years, if not a lifetime, of training? As if we needed more evidence of how little respect some people have for the difficulty of educating well. As if education didn’t require expertise. The emphasis placed on standardization and assessment by No Child Left Behind and the Spellings Commission influences, at least implicitly, how we teach. But, to me, the events in Texas and now New Hampshire are much more invasive–directly assaulting what we teach.

We should see this for what it is. Burke would remind us that this is war, a logomachy over the logos guiding our nation’s identity. It is a war from which the Modern University provided academia amnesty. In the 21st century, it is a war we must be willing to fight.

Let you alone! That’s all very well, but how can I leave myself alone? We need not to be let alone. We need to be really bothered once in a while. How long is it since you were really bothered? About something important, about something real?

Fahrenheit 451

Posted in burke, education, enlightenment, mark-c-taylor, politics, readings, university-in-ruins | Comments Off on Education in Ruins; a War of Nerves

Digital Humanities

A friend emailed me Feisal G. Mohamed’s response to Fish’s recent discussion of digital humanities. Here’s my response.

I think there’s two basic genealogies to digital humanities/technology studies. Reductive? Sure. But helpful.

The first traces back to Heidegger’s “Question Concerning Technology.” Heidegger argues that modern technologies can be traced all the way back to a Greek emphasis in “techne,” doing, production. This has marked Western history, creating an overwhelming insistence upon using/consuming things. Often these scholars misread Heidegger’s skepticism of techne-ology to be an absolute dismissal, a return to naturalism. I don’t read Heidegger quite this way. His point is that we cannot get outside of “techne” and consumption, but can learn to dwell within it at least semi-consciously. Doing so allows us to open ourselves to other ways of Being in the world.

The second traces back to McLuhan. Que the optimism for a global village, connectivity, ethics, etc. We are how we consume. Blah, blah, blah. We all know this camp, because most of us in rhetoric and composition were reared in its wake.

Clearly, Mohamed’s skepticism is rooted in a hardcore Heideggerian misread that believes the answer to our problems lies in a kind of Thoreau-ian naturalism far away from machines and their evil influence. The expectation that we “fully disarticulate” notions of innovation and progress is the give away–as if innovation and progress were really just ideological fantasies; note too that the author rigorously divides ethics and spirituality from materiality and digitality–as if the two were streams that could never be crossed. Boo. Of course, a lot of the writing I do is built upon the premise that new technologies make possible new ways of considering ethics and metaphysics, which I would argue melds, to some extent, the Heideggerian and McLuhan threads together. On the one hand, our dwelling within Being is always, already mediated by the technologies through which we experience and interact with beings; but, on the other hand, digital technologies have exponentially expanded our encounters with other beings and other ways of considering how to be (ethics).

Posted in digital humanities, digital-citizenship, Fish, heidegger, mcluhan, metaphysics, techne, technology | Comments Off on Digital Humanities

Web writing, postpedagogy, social expressivism, and Grassi

Leahy and I have been writing an article on web writing. Here’s one of my conclusions (I think I have 3 write now) for the theory section:

We began this explication of social expressivism by highlighting Socratic traces in Elbow’s expressivism and end by referencing Ernesto Grassi’s concept of ingenium and metaphysic of the public sphere. We hope this shows that the questions of web writing and (post)pedagogy aren’t new, even if they are emphasized by our explorations of new media. They are the fundamental questions of Greek history, handed down through centuries, via multiple and transforming institutions, in the shadows of which we continue to dwell, teach, and write.

Posted in elbow, electracy, grassi, new-media, post-pedagogy, rhetoric | Comments Off on Web writing, postpedagogy, social expressivism, and Grassi