Kerim did not break your kettle, and also, you never loaned it to him.
- Meh etymology
- Ask A Slave: A Comedy Web Series
- Does The Dog Die?
- NYC basic tips and tricks
- The real-life inspiration for the film Dog Day Afternoon
- The Social Life of Genes: Shaping Your Molecular Composition
- The Great Language Game
- Teju Cole’s 9 questions about Britain you were too embarrassed to ask
- A Co-Citation Network for Philosophy
- Thinking about the Somethings to be done about Syria
- The History Behind The Phrase ‘Don’t Be An Indian Giver’
- Massive boulder narrowly misses car during landslide in Taiwan
- Alan Lomax’s incredibly massive archive of American blues music is coming online
- ‘this is the stupidest, most irresponsible action a diplomatic mission like ours could get itself involved in’
Jacob totally broke your kettle. What kettle?
- Ngram analysis of Times wedding announcements
- The pull-out generation (and quasi-accompanying graphic)
- An ex-sex worker fights against sex trafficking rhetoric—in 1919 [radio 59:00]
- How engineers and tech workers can save the internet from the government
- How the rest of us can try to keep our communication private and secure
- The slow rebuilding of Christchurch, New Zealand
- Climate change and this year's slow hurricane season
- How should academics engage in politics?
- The history of presidential travel
The fact that you think the kettle is real is the real problem.
- "Which is why we have a president who talks like a law professor but acts like a cowboy"
- “the actors’ hatred for Alf could never be fully actualized, cathartically, for Alf was, of course, not real”
- "the Western world is too at ease with conventional weapons"
- "punk was born in the toilet and now it’s at the Met"
- "few people doubt reality besides sociologists and the socially disgruntled"
- "how people use music when doing intellectual labour: people use it as a symbol to say 'keep away from me'"
- "Ever buy a movie on iTunes instead of downloading it for free on The Pirate Bay? Yeah, keep not doing that"
- "the surprisingly broad overlap between prison & museum design"
- "If schools follow dualist specifications, education becomes less in tune with the way students actually consume texts"
- "the Introversion Meme is the newest face on a many-headed hydra of conservative backlash against a changing society"
- "they’re more than capable of fucking with minds. I’m looking forward to more games that fuck with mine"
- "with Glass, the contents of your screen are a mystery to others"
- "the self merely a set of techniques for self-documentation rather than a matter of what it is documented"
- "Mark Zuckerberg reportedly helicoptered in to hand out grilled cheese"
- "it is perfectly legitimate to describe Burning Man as the foundation of a secular religion"
- "Digital dualism acts in concert with sexism by deflecting critical attention away from sexism in action"
- "the cultural conventions that have helped to produce digital dualism and which help it persist"
The kettle has hidden weaknesses; let us boil some water and expose them.
- Deadly Notes: Atlantic Soundscapes and the Writing of the Middle Passage
- The Future Weird: Concerning Bodies Transformed by Violence
- Disaster Data and Representations of Superstorm Sandy
- “On November 4, 1922, Ali Kemal, the 55-year-old journalist, novelist, politician, and great-grandfather of London’s mayor Boris Johnson, was lynched in Turkey.”
- Refusing Simplicity: Encountering Seamus Heaney
- “Oh, Seamus. Thank you: a thousand thank yous. And codladh sámh.”
- On Being Rum [Greek] in Turkey in 1956
- “From the Arctic to the equator and on to the Antarctic, jellyfish plagues (or blooms, as they’re technically known) are on the increase.”
- How Poverty Taxes the Brain
- A Syrian Anarchist Challenges the Rebel/Regime Binary View of Resistance
- “I learned how to be a Jew without Israel.”
- A Filthy History: When New Yorkers Lived Knee-Deep in Trash
- The NYPD Guide to Watching Cricket (and Muslims) in New York City
As we all know, the Portuguese introduced the kettle to Goa, but--ironically--it was also the Goans who taught the Portuguese how to make kettles.
- Kurdish Cassettes and the Anatolian Underground
- White ravers in a Goan village: race as machinic assemblage
- Between Occidentalism and the Global Left: Islamist Critiques of the West in Turkey
- On the People's Publishing House in Delhi
- My Father, the Liberal Salafi Feminist
- Language learning in 16th/17th century Britain
- The Memories Museum of Dr. Mohammed al-Khatib
- Europeans of Another Colour – why the Goans are Portuguese
- Indians of Another Colour, or why Goans are more than just Portuguese
- The story of a Greek word in an Arabic manuscript in Algeria
- How Lipton introduced Yellow Label tea to the UAE
- The table-talk of a Mesopotamian judge
- Between Arab and Ajam: Travels Across the Borderlands of Iranian Khuzestan
- Aparna Jayakumar's photographs of the Annual Zoroastrian Powerlifting and Bodybuilding Championship
- John Berger's 1972 series Ways of Seeing
- On Sufi migration to the Deccan
- Discussion about the life and work of Primo Levi
- Adnan Sarwar on his time as a British soldier in Iraq
- 13th century methods for determining the qibla with a magnetic compass
- The scholars who lecture on ocean liners
- Mark Ravenhill on Voltaire, Louise Hay, and the danger of optimism
- False Consciousness in Sunnydale: Karl Marx, Adam Smith, and Buffy the Vampire Slayer
Fuck the kettles. We will boil our own water.
- Neoliberal Berkeley
- How college reproduces inequality
- Corporate open source and MOOCs
- Grad students' wives as a gendered labor category
- States meet funding obligations for predominantly white land-grant universities but not historically black ones
- The student loan bubble is starting to burst
- The student loan bubble isn't bursting
- "The problem must be pedagogy, they say, and the answer must be a new, commercial product."
- You can quit academia, but you can't quit capitalism
- The secret origins of higher education in America
- Oaxacan schoolteacher discusses the struggle against Mexican education reform
- Interview/reportback on the Zapatistas' "escuelita" (little school)
This is the kettle my mother gave me, when she observed that I didn't have a kettle.
- notes towards a critical consciousness on varieties of Kenyan violence
- an African conversation on cluster bombs
- feminism, football, transparency: all hail Senegal's new prime minister Aminata Toure
- black South African men break silence on the war on queer bodies
- gmos and African food sovereignty
- I am Slane girl: different race, different generation, half the world away
- professors who made theory make sense were women and queer men
- unidentified Asian woman whose lap Malcolm X died in: Yuri Kochiyama
- US military's pivot to Africa
- the marketability of 'modern' Iranian sexuality
- what's killing poor white women in the US
- the bookseller of Kibera and other essays on the invisible city
- Palestinian child labour in Israeli settlements
- how tone policing protects male power
- poverty has same effect on brain as constant all-nighters
- on making feminist porn comics: Jess Fink
- don't leave home without your - Sexual Assault Resource Kit
- undercover in a US cattle slaughterhouse
- notes towards a critical consciousness on varieties of Kenyan violence
With the introduction of the "smart-kettle," the surveillance state crossed a red line.
- Progressive mask falls from neoliberal WaPo blog's face.
- Welcome to the era of health data laundering, and Acxiom's "households with a diabetic focus.”
- Prison industries hurt small businesses and assault incomes.
- Action requires the veil of illusion.
- Liquid modernity & apocalypse.
- Mankiw's selective concern about debt.
- Greed & indifference killed millions.
- Some labor day thoughts (et al.)
- Robust competition online: "Google has acquired an average of one company every week" since 2010.
- National Association of Graduate-Professional Students (NAGPS) cries foul.
- "Millions for me, starvation for you."
- M(id)as Touch.