Dr. Lepore’s Lament

gwillow:

So I was the last person on the internet to find out about this little op-ed by Jill Lepore. When Harvard professors are throwing shade on you from the rarified heights of the New Yorker, you have officially arrived in life, or at least in comics. So I was rather chuffed by this piece, though I do want to respond to some of the points raised, because they tie into some of the broader conversations we’ve been having lately in the comics community. I’d like to give a shout-out to Valkyrie Leia Calderon for drawing my attention to this piece–you can read her thoughtful and candid open letter to Dr. Lepore here.

If you are an avid comic book reader and/or follower of industry trends, none of what I’m about to say will be news to you. However, for those of you who are new to the medium, returning to the medium, or just interested in the continuing debate on the role of gender in pop culture, I hope what follows will be useful and help flesh out the conversation.

First off, a funny tidbit: Dr. Lepore and I have met, though she probably doesn’t remember, as I was a scrappy teenager with a fauxhawk at the time. Way back when I was an undergraduate, she gave a guest lecture on the French and Indian Wars in an American History colloquium I was taking at Boston University. She struck me as very intelligent and thoughtful, a passionate historian.

So I was a bit surprised that someone who obviously values rigorous scholarship would analyze the first issue of a crossover event without any apparent knowledge of what a crossover event is, or what the heavily tongue-in-cheek “feminist paradise,” Arcadia, represents in the context of the Secret Wars and the wider Marvel Universe. (Does she know about the zombies? Somebody please tell her about the zombies.) Thus decontextualized, what Dr. Lepore is left with is a cover depicting a bunch of characters about whom she admits to knowing nothing, and one fifth of a story, which is perhaps why her analysis reads as so perplexingly shallow, even snarky.

Keep reading

If you haven’t read Lepore’s piece in the New Yorker, please do, but hold your nose, the poorly crafted snark is pungent. 

3,063 notes

lehighu:
“Writer/Director Kirby Dick speaks with Lehigh professor John Pettegrew at PBS39 earlier this afternoon. His film “The Hunting Ground” is a monumental expose about sexual assault on college campuses, premiered at the 2015 Sundance Film...

lehighu:

Writer/Director Kirby Dick speaks with Lehigh professor John Pettegrew at PBS39 earlier this afternoon. His film “The Hunting Ground” is a monumental expose about sexual assault on college campuses,  premiered at the 2015 Sundance Film Festival. It is screening tonight in the Diamond Theater at zoellnerartscenter at 7pm. You can learn more about the event here

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smashfizzle:

For weeks now, I’ve been vague about a visual art/photography project I wanted to work on, and I’m finally ready to share what it is, and why I need your help to see it become something real.

First, I watch something called theartassignment a lot. I’ve always been interested in visual art, but…

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non-compliant

kellysue:

redundantandrepetitive:

image

front

image

back

image

on wrist. (it’s sort of oddly proportioned.) (I didn’t swatch first.) (actually this was the swatch to see how the chart knits up.)  
the chart is here if anybody wants to play with it. there are more project details on the Ravelry page.

!!!!!!

YESSSSSSSSSSSSSSSSSSSSS

118 notes

disalmanac:
“Where to think: a handy chart-like chart from Disalmanac.
”

disalmanac:

Where to think: a handy chart-like chart from Disalmanac.

9 notes