In the Meantime reviewed

Sharma’s In the Meantime reviewed.

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Umberto Eco, How to Write a Thesis – reviewed in Times Higher Education

As previously mentioned, Umberto Eco’s 1977 book How to Write a Thesis now out in translation from MIT Press – it is reviewed in The Times Higher Education by Robert Eaglestone – thanks to Dean Bond for the link. Here’s the concluding part.

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How to Write a Thesis is really: how to be an academic.

This is part of the answer to those who think that focusing on research makes us bad teachers: at their very deepest roots, both research and teaching in universities rely not only on subject knowledge but on the virtues of sincerity and accuracy, taught through research. But there’s more: the paradox – brought into sharp focus by How to Write a Thesis – that even with a PhD, you never properly qualify. Even eminent professors remain, in a way, students for ever, with more to research, more to explore just over there. And the surprising fact is that the people who remember daily the experience of doing research, who know that despite their degrees, titles and fancy hats, they, too, are really only students: these are the best people to teach other students. Whisper it – it’s not politic to say it aloud – but that’s what makes universities special places. Our graduate students intuit this, so help them scale the tower’s walls (so as to toil in the incongruously situated groves) by giving them this book.

 

Posted in Books, Publishing, teaching, Umberto Eco, Universities, Writing | 1 Comment

Top posts on Progressive Geographies this week

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Seven upgrade strategies for a problematic article or chapter

Some interesting writing and publishing advice here. Here’s the heavily compressed version:

Do one thing well. Flatten the structure. Say it once, say it right. Try paragraph re-planning. Make the motivation clearer. Strengthen the argument tokens. Improve the data and exhibits.

Posted in Publishing, Writing | 4 Comments

Greece and Europe: A First Account of a Radical Government – recordings of Douzinas, Mason and Žižek

Greece and Europe: A First Account of a Radical Government – recordings of Costas Douzinas, Paul Mason and Slavoj Žižek. Also includes a link to this short film:

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Plastic Materialities: Politics, Legality, and Metamorphosis in the Work of Catherine Malabou

Plastic Materialities: Politics, Legality, and Metamorphosis in the Work of Catherine Malabou, edited by Brenna Bhandar and Jonathan Goldberg-Hiller.

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Catherine Malabou’s concept of plasticity has influenced and inspired scholars from across disciplines. The contributors to Plastic Materialities—whose fields include political philosophy, critical legal studies, social theory, literature, and philosophy—use Malabou’s innovative combination of post-structuralism and neuroscience to evaluate the political implications of her work. They address, among other things, subjectivity, science, war, the malleability of sexuality, neoliberalism and economic theory, indigenous and racial politics, and the relationship between the human and non-human. Plastic Materialities also includes three essays by Malabou and an interview with her, all of which bring her work into conversation with issues of sovereignty, justice, and social order for the first time.

Contributors. Brenna Bhandar, Silvana Carotenuto, Jonathan Goldberg-Hiller, Jairus Victor Grove, Catherine Kellogg, Catherine Malabou, Renisa Mawani, Fred Moten, Alain Pottage, Michael J. Shapiro, Alberto Toscano

Posted in Alberto Toscano, Books, Catherine Malabou | 1 Comment

Cycling in Melbourne – seven weeks and 1152 miles

View from Arthur's Seat

View from Arthur’s Seat, 21 March 2015

I left Melbourne on Monday. It was a terrific, productive, interesting and enjoyable eight weeks. I’ve said a little about talks before, mainly in Sydney, and I’ll provide links to a recording of one other talk soon. I’ll doubtless say more about the Foucault work in an update, but I wanted to say something about what I was often doing when not working: cycling.

I bought a bike about a week after I got here. The nice guys at Cycle Galleria let me borrow a wonderful bike for a few days, a BHG6-Pro which was great fun but far too good a bike for me, and also too expensive for what will be a second road bike. So in the end I got a 2014 shop version of the Cannondale Supersix EVO. I put 1152 miles (1854 km) on it in seven weeks, so it certainly got used. It’s also a great way to get to know a place.

Melbourne is an interesting city for cycling. The CBD is a bit tricky, with lots of traffic, trams (and, all important tram tracks to avoid), parked cars to the left of the bike lanes, and, of course, pedestrians. But once you get out of the central area, there are some great routes. I spent a lot of time on Beach Road, which runs along the bay all the way to Mordialloc, before it runs into a highway. There are also bike-trails along the Yarra river, and further east towards Monash University, and these trails are in good enough condition you can ride a road bike down them. The Yarra trail links to Yarra boulevard, which is a fun up and down climb and very popular. Real hills are a bit further from the city – I managed Mount Dandenong, Mount Pleasant, and Arthur’s Seat while here. Not especially fast, though I got better while here. There are some very serious cyclists in this city. The longest ride I did was 75 miles (120 km). Maybe sometime I will be here for the Around the Bay in a Day event – 210 or 250km!

I’m hoping to do Mont Ventoux again this summer, and these few months have been good preparation.

Posted in Cycling, Travel | 1 Comment

Second review of the Global Discourse review symposium on The Birth of Territory

Strandsbjerg on The Birth of TerritoryGlobal Discourse are hosting a review symposium on The Birth of Territory, which was joint winner of their inaugural book award. The second review, by Jeppe Strandsbjerg, is available here; and the first review by Jordan Branch (previously posted) is here.

Both require subscription, or email me.

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Being Social: Ontology, Law, Politics – first book from Counterpress

Being Social: Ontology, Law, Politics, edited by Dan Matthews and Tara Mulqueen.

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Being Social brings together leading and emerging scholars on the question of sociality in poststructuralist thought. The essays collected in this volume examine a sense of the social which resists final determination and closure, embracing an anxiety and undecidability of sociality, rather than effacing it. Through issues including queer politics, migration, and Guantanamo, recent events such as the occupation of Gezi Park in Istanbul, and theoretical explorations of themes such as writing, law, and democracy, contributors assess how a reconfigured sociality affects thinking and practice in the legal and political realms. With a particular emphasis on Jean-Luc Nancy, whose work brings questions of community to the fore, these essays explore how the consistent ‘unworking’ of sociality informs the tenor and form of political debate and engagement.

This is the first book from Counterpress – available in print or e-book.

You can buy the paperback from all of the various online bookshops. But more importantly, you can download the ebook from our website (below) on a pay-what-you-can-basis, or for free. Please do consider paying what you can for it. We pay proper royalties (not your paltry 10% after 1000 sales!), and after our basic costs, we will save what we can to try to set up an alternative funding process for critical (legal) theory research – one that is not beholden to the agendas of the various funding councils and administrative bodies. So please share this book, pass it on, give it to your students, order a paperback for your library. Keep an eye to our website. We have some really exciting projects lined up…  but more about that soon.

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‘Contested Spaces of Citizenship’ Postgraduate Conference, 29th April 2015, Durham University

Postgraduate Conference outlineProgramme for upcoming ‘Contested Spaces of Citizenship’ Postgraduate Conference on Wednesday 29th April 2015 at Durham University, with Engin F. Isin as the key-note speaker. All those planning to attend should email g.d.m.maestri@durham.ac.uk to confirm.

Posted in Conferences, Engin Isin, Politics | 1 Comment