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Archive for the ‘Class’ Category

paying for it

By • Feb 5th, 2008 • Category: Class

in a list discussion recently, there’s been talk about raising the price of a small conference, from $10 – $40. I’m not going anyway, it’s just more money for hotel, etc. than I want to spend and would, for me, be better spent on seeing my son. Not to mention time I’ll have to take [...]



accidentally good advice

By • Feb 5th, 2008 • Category: Class

huh. I never looked at it this way, but I think SEK gave me accidentally good advice. In Scott’s best of his blog posts for 2007 edition, he points at this post wherein I read SEK’s translation: original: 6. I dropped out of high school as a junior and took the GED. I transferred to [...]



on the global waterfront

By • Jan 31st, 2008 • Category: Announcements, Class, Labor Struggles, Racialization

Monthly Review Press has just published a book by Suzan Erem and E. Paul Durrenberger, titled “On the Global Waterfront.” It details an important laobr struggle on the Charleston, SC docks and tells us much about the US labor movement, racism, global capitalism, and the heroism of dedicated. mostly black, dock workers. “On the Global [...]



black, brown, yellow, white

By • Jan 30th, 2008 • Category: Class, Racialization, The Missing Class

red is missing there. Forgot to mention that I’d also picked up Latino Challenge to Black America: Towards a Conversation Between African Americans and Hispanics by Earl Ofari Hutchinson. It was featured on the new book shelf and caught my eye — and turned out to be fascinating in light of the debates that erupted [...]



bougie up! ghetto down!

By • Jan 30th, 2008 • Category: Class, Our Kind of People, Racialization

In my post on the book, The Myth of the French Bourgeoisie, I noted that Maza’s argument is in line with something others have noted about the marker “yuppie”. Its usage indicates that it’s an identity against which people nearly always define themselves in opposition. People don’t want to be called yuppies and, if they [...]



myth of the French bourgeoisie

By • Jan 30th, 2008 • Category: Class, History, Myth of the French Bourgeoisie

Seeing as how Chuckie’s back from vaca, it reminded me to share something I’d already shared at LBO. In my latest trip to the library, I stumbled over a book that caught my eye, Sara Maza’s The Myth of the French Bourgeoisie: An Essay on the Social Imaginary, 1750-1850. I’m getting desperately, desperately bored by [...]



archiving:explained

By • Jan 16th, 2008 • Category: Archiving, Class, Feminist Fight Club, Horseshittery

I think you were wrong about what you said last night, Gary. For those who don’t know, Gary’s an old friend of mine and we yakked on the phone for about four hours last night. Anyway, I think Gary and I might have it wrong about blogging and memory. I don’t know if it’s good [...]



where’s ginmar when you need her?

By • Jan 7th, 2008 • Category: Class, Racialization

Somehow, I’m not expecting the Dem-candidates to do much about this, eh? Aside from which, where IS ginmar when you need outrage against enslavement? hmm? Migrant workers chained beaten and forced into debt, exposing the human cost of producing cheap food By Leonard Doyle in Immokalee, Floride Three Florida fruit-pickers, held captive and brutalised by [...]



dirty imposter

By • Jan 6th, 2008 • Category: Class

The people on the fourth floor have, for the fourth time, gone out on their party porch and tossed a substance, this time dirt, below where it lands on *our* party porch — or sometimes our porch or the sidewalk in front of the porch. Through the fall, it was mostly water. Then, once, dude [...]



the uselessness of identity

By • Jan 6th, 2008 • Category: Class, Not Quite White, Racialization

hee. I lied. Well, I got up to go chill in front of the tube for awhile. But then I saw the soup I’d made. yum. I’ve been diggin’ on soup made of yogurt, spices, chicken, and some veggies. Great for cold, wintry days. I love winter! So, I reheated the soup and read the [...]



menace of the feeble minded

By • Jan 5th, 2008 • Category: Class, Not Quite White, Racialization

I’m almost finished with Matt Wray’s Not Quite White: White Trash and the Boundaries of Whiteness. Yeah, it’s a quick read. Plus, I cheated. At work, I spent coffee breaks, lunch, and gotta get my head clear of bug chasing breaks reading the book. I figure I’m more productive that way. *smirk* I’m kinda whooped [...]



human rubbish

By • Jan 5th, 2008 • Category: Class, Not Quite White, Racialization

I’m just heading into Wray’s chapter on the eugenics movement aimed at whites in the u.s. It’s not often discussed, I guess, but there was a concerted effort to either place what were considered biologically degenerate whites into segregated communities or, more popularly, to sterilize them and prevent them from contaminating the good society. It’s [...]



why I am so tired

By • Jan 5th, 2008 • Category: Class, Racialization, Work

ugh. it was a loooooooooooooong day. I went in early to decorate K’s desk with balloons. My software dev director and I took K out for lunch at a local Indian restaurant. Much better than the others I’ve been to — though not as good as the one in LimpDick! It’s been pretty hectic b/c [...]