Wow. Talk about an intro to place Einstein in the modernist frame.
Thanks to What the fuck have you done for the relatively cool connect.
Wow. Talk about an intro to place Einstein in the modernist frame.
Thanks to What the fuck have you done for the relatively cool connect.
Filed under academics, communication, documentary, representation
Amidst financial crises and unprecedented public school budget cuts I.S. 318 in Brooklyn, New York has assembled the best junior high chess team in the nation. Brooklyn Castle follows five chess team members for one year, and documents their challenges and triumphs both on and off the chessboard.
via Finishing Brooklyn Castle (Formerly Chess Movie) by Rescued Media — Kickstarter.
I got the link to this movie preview this morning. It included a link to their kickstarter campaign, by the time I had decided to reblog this, the campaign had funded the movie and a series of demos where the kids from I.S. 318 play famous chess celebrities. Turns out a few of those boss chess players dropped $5,000 to make this film happen.
Rock on. Spotted at the always wonderful neogriot.
Filed under academics, documentary, learning
There is something terribly doubt inspiring about locking your occupation to creative output. The Rumpus has an advice column — the mysterious Sugar who breaks this problem down with eloquence:
How many women wrote beautiful novels and stories and poems and essays and plays and scripts and songs in spite of all the crap they endured. How many of them didn’t collapse in a heap of “I could have been better than this” and instead went right ahead and became better than anyone would have predicted or allowed them to be. The unifying theme is resilience and faith. The unifying theme is being a warrior and a motherfucker. It is not fragility. It’s strength. It’s nerve. And “if your Nerve, deny you –,” as Emily Dickinson wrote, “go above your Nerve.” Writing is hard for every last one of us—straight white men included. Coal mining is harder. Do you think miners stand around all day talking about how hard it is to mine for coal? They do not. They simply dig.
via DEAR SUGAR, The Rumpus Advice Column #48: Write Like A Motherfucker – The Rumpus.net.
Filed under academics, communication, health, learning
Several prominent US businesses have withdrawn advertising from the television show All-American Muslims. They were pressured by right wing anti-Muslim groups who believe the show humanizes humans.
Well dang.
Here is Edward Said explaining the early days when there were only a few dozen so-called-experts who exploited the moral panic over Islam to earn money.
There’s a whole group of these people, numbering thirty or forty, who are trundled out whenever there’s a crisis, a hostage crisis, a hijacking, a massacre of some sort or another, to demonstrate the necessary connection between Islam, Arab culture and the Arab character, as it’s sometimes referred to, or the Islamic character and random violence. To my mind, the great misfortune is that these Orientalists whose role is to understand, to interpret the culture of Islam and the Arabs, and it’s a culture from which they earn their living, and in fact have no sympathy with it. They deal with it from an adversarial and oppositional position.
– Said & Barsamian The Pen and the Sword 1994 p.27-28
Thanks to Feministe we get a list of the cowardly businesses who bowed to pressure.
Anyway, the companies who pulled their ads include Lowe’s, Bank of America, the Campbell Soup Co., Dell, Estee Lauder, General Motors, Goodyear, Green Mountain Coffee, McDonalds, Sears, and Wal-Mart. So many don’t give your money to those companies this holiday season? Or call Lowe’s CEO Robert Niblock at (704) 758-2084 or Executive Support Mr. Andrew Kilby at (866) 900-4650 and let them know what you think about this decision (keep it respectful, please).
Filed under academics, colonialism, representation
DJ Screw made a huge difference in the way hip hop fans understood the sound. Local, exceptional, slowed down, Texan, and all that made a package that made his 90 minute tapes (TAPES fool!) a necessity. Screw died a few years back and what we have are memories of him.
This University of Houston librarian knows the deal — someone should swoop in and try to save all that history. The vinyl, the photos, and all the rest from the Screw lab should get archived, and shared with the public. Now it’s happening. Kick ass.
Check Rap Radar for some photos of the collection. RIP DJ Screw.
The film and book The Help articulates sixties era southern relations with . . . you guessed it, the help. Hollywood shaved the issued down to make a movie, and surprise! They made some mistakes, such as:
Portraying the most dangerous racists in 1960s Mississippi as a group of attractive, well dressed, society women, while ignoring the reign of terror perpetuated by the Ku Klux Klan and the White Citizens Council, limits racial injustice to individual acts of meanness.
via NewBlackMan: Association of Black Women Historians on ‘The Help’.
Check the link for a letter written by the Association of Black Women Historians. Also check the link if you want some nice books and resources to help ground The Help with facts.
Eli Porter is a disabled emcee whose high school battle video has become a key hip hop trope. Here is the documentary about the actual footage. Complete with commentary from the internets celebrities.
Filed under academics, disability, documentary, hip hop, homophobia, learning, media

Donna Seger has a lovely blog Streets of Salem. She has recently collected a nice gathering of maps represented via living creatures. Kicks ass.
Filed under academics, art, colonialism
100% on point. Learning vs. education, the battle is on.
Thanks to Neo Griot for the years of insight and this particular video.
Filed under academics
A short write up on the comic at the often-inspiring feministing.com.