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the feminist librarian

the feminist librarian

Category Archives: media

multimedia monday: gaming can make a better world

18 Monday Jul 2011

Posted by Anna Clutterbuck-Cook in media

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web video

Via On the Media.

(If you click on “share” you can enable subtitles in a variety of languages; TED is awesome).

Some excepts (courtesy of OTM):

So an epic win is an outcome that is so extraordinarily positive, you had no idea it was even possible until you achieved it. And when you get there, you are shocked to discover what you’re truly capable of. And this is the face that we need to see on millions of problem solvers all over the world, as we try to tackle the obstacles of the next century. When we’re in game worlds, I believe that many of us become the best version of ourselves, the most likely to stick with a problem as long as it takes, to get up after failure and try again. In real life, when we face failure, when we confront obstacles, we often don’t feel that way. We feel anxious, maybe depressed, frustrated or cynical. We never have those feelings when we’re playing games. Whenever you show up in one of these online games, especially in World of Warcraft, there are lots and lots of different characters who are willing to trust you with a world-saving mission, right away. But not just any mission, it’s a mission that is perfectly matched with your current level in the game, but it is on the, the verge of what you’re capable of, so you have to try hard. There’s no unemployment in World of Warcraft. There’s always something specific and important to be done. And there are also tons of collaborators ready to work with you to achieve your epic mission. Now, the problem with collaborative online environments like World of Warcraft, it’s so satisfying, we decide to spend all our time in these game worlds. So, so far, collectively, all the World of Warcraft gamers have spent 5.93 million years solving the virtual problems of Azeroth. Now, to put that in context, 5.93 million years ago was when our earliest primate human ancestors stood up. So when we talk about how much time we’re currently investing in playing games, the only way it makes sense is to talk about time at the magnitude of human evolution, which is an extraordinary thing. But it’s also apt, because it turns out that by spending all this time playing games we’re actually changing what we are capable of as human beings. We’re evolving to be a more collaborative and hearty species.

The four potentially world-saving characteristics of hardcore gamers:

The first is urgent optimism. Urgent optimism is the desire to act immediately to tackle an obstacle, combined with the belief that we have a reasonable hope of success. Gamers always believe that an epic win is possible and that it’s always worth trying, and trying now. Okay. Gamers are virtuosos at weaving a tight social fabric. There’s a lot of interesting research that shows that we like people better after we play a game with them, even if they’ve beaten us badly. And the reason is it takes a lot of trust to play a game with someone. We trust that they will spend their time with us, that they will play by the same rules, value the same goal, they’ll stay with the game until it’s over. And so, playing a game together actually builds up bonds and trust and cooperation, and build stronger social relationships, as a result. Blissful productivity, I love it. You know, there is a reason why the average World of Warcraft gamer plays for 22 hours a week. It’s because we know when we’re playing a game that we’re actually happier working hard than we are relaxing. And gamers are willing to work hard all the time, if they’re given the right work. Finally, epic meaning. Gamers love to be attached to awe-inspiring missions. They have compiled more information about World of Warcraft on the Internet than any other topic covered on any other wiki in the world. They are building an epic knowledge [LAUGHS] resource about the World of Warcraft. Okay, so these are four superpowers that add up to one thing. Gamers believe that they are individually capable of changing the world. And the only problem is they believe that they are capable of changing virtual worlds and not the real world. That’s the problem that I’m trying to solve.

Watch the whole thing. It’s totally worth it. I’m actually wondering if there isn’t some comperable discussion to be had about fan communities … talk about blissful productivity and tight social fabric! … but that’s a post for another day.

multimedia monday: history of the menstrual cup

11 Monday Jul 2011

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history, multimedia monday, web video

via Tenured Radical.

Just a quick disclaimer: I personally use and love the menstrual cup, which is our house is referred to as “the horrendous device.” But before that I used and thanked the Goddess every month for tampons. So while I will happily share my positive experience with the menstrual cup I am not judgy about other peoples’ preferences if they happen to differ from my own. Bodies are all different!

multimedia monday: photograph of jesus

06 Monday Jun 2011

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history, MHS, multimedia monday, web video

It’s been awhile since I posted a multimedia Monday post. This one is courtesy of my friend Heather, who is a former colleague at the MHS and now works in documentary film-making. While at the MHS, she worked on processing image permission requests (a job I now handle), so when she saw this film she figured it had my name all over it. I particularly love the stop-motion animation approach the film-maker used.


Photograph of Jesus by Laurie Hill in association with the Getty Images Short & Sweet Film Challenge from Hulton Archive on Vimeo.

I can’t say I’ve received a request for a photograph of Jesus … yet. But I’ve only been working on image permissions for five months, so I figure it’s only a matter of time.

You can read more about the context in which the film was made on Vimeo.

post-thesis thursday

28 Thursday Apr 2011

Posted by Anna Clutterbuck-Cook in media

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family, fun, thesis, web video

So yesterday at 4:57pm Eastern Standard Time, I sent the following tweet to my twitter account:

And then Hanna and I put on our sneakers and sandals and walked out into the beautiful spring evening to visit our local Staples and print out two complete copies of my Master’s thesis, “How to Live?: The Oregon Extension as Experiment in Living, 1964-1980.”

I’ll be presenting my work at the Simmons College History Department’s graduate colloquium on May 9th. At some point shortly after that, I plan to post details over at my OE Oral History blog about acquiring a copy of the thesis and viewing the presentation online. I’ll cross-post or link out from here, so those of you who are interested can stay tuned for further details.

Meanwhile, I offer this music video in self-congratulations for the past four years of work. I don’t know why this was the song I found rattling around in my head during these final days of revision. I haven’t listened to this album in ages — not since shortly after I moved to Boston. Maybe it’s my subconscious trying to come full circle. Anyhow. As someone who’s always found her work to take longer than originally planned, and who has (as my mother wrote in a recent email) found myself living an “unexpected life,” I like the underlying message of this song.

More soon!

"all of the slurs we called each other were gender neutral"

03 Thursday Mar 2011

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feminism, humor, web video

May I say: Vag Magazine FTW!

Vag Magazine Episode 1: “Fumbling Toward Ecstasy” from Vag Magazine on Vimeo.

My latest issue of Bitch magazine contained an interview with two of the creators of the online serial “Vag Magazine,” which follows the internal politics of a group of young women who have taken over a mainstream women’s magazine in an effort to subvert the patriarchy.

Hilarity ensues. Hope y’all enjoy!

zinenotes: unschooling diaries no. 1

17 Thursday Feb 2011

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children, education, zines

I recently ordered the first volume of P.S. Pirro’s new zine, unschooling diaries (no. 1 “In Media Res”) from Mud River Press. It’s a lovely little 16-page booklet bound with twine. P.S. is a blogger, artist, author, and (as is evident from the title of the zine) an unschooler.

I’m a novice in the zine genre, so I won’t attempt to review this in the context of zines as an established medium, or the culture of self-published magazines. I will say that — as much as I love blogging and love reading other peoples’ ideas on the internet — there’s something tangibly delicious about actually holding a physical object that has been created by another human being. The texture of the paper and twine, the ink on the page. The font chosen, the images used. There’s something in that experience that I find uniquely pleasing.

Perhaps that’s the librarian in me talking? I dunno. But just the pleasure of holding an actual physical copy of unschooling diaries somehow seemed well worth the $3 cover price. Even before I opened the volume.

diaries reads like a cross between a chapbook and someone’s commonplace book. Each page contains a distinct thought or idea, although arranged together they do create something sustained and connected. Integrated. I think my favorite idea might have been this one (p. 2)

How to unschool
1. Don’t go to school
2. Find stuff you like to do
3. Do that stuff
Some unschoolers choose to go to school.
Find the operative word in that sentence.
Hint. If it isn’t a choice,
it isn’t unschooling.
There are dogmatic homeschoolers just like there are dogmatic believers in schooling. I’ve always appreciated that my folks consciously chose not to go the dogmatic route, and instead worked with my siblings to find a middle way … both of them ultimately attended public school (one part-time, one full-time). And yet my parents still considered our family a “homeschooling” family. Because the point was that we were forming a life that worked for us, and tailoring the learning experience for each of us kids. It’s about the philosophy of childcare and about how we understand human nature and the relationship of human beings to the natural and social world. Not about whether or not you set foot in school spaces.
Anyways. That’s about all I can say about unschooling diaries thus far. If you’re interested, you can purchase your own copy at Mud River Press or follow P.S. at her blog: unschooling & other persuasions.

live-blogging "downton abbey" (episode no. 4)

31 Monday Jan 2011

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blogging, british isles, live-blogging, movies

So here we are at the last live-blog for “Downton Abbey,” Season One. You can read the snark (you know you want to!) in full over at …fly over me, evil angel….

9.16: [Sybil] A: Someone’s got something up her sleeve! M: Someone’s not going to a charity. [Lady and Maggie Smith] M: This is that scene! A: The voice cracks… [as Maggie Smith rationalizes house geography] H: It’s the delivery… M: It’s fantastic… A: I could watch that scene over and over for hours. M: She’s all about practicalities. A: Well, it’s about image, right? Whatever you do is okay so long as society doesn’t find out. M: I wonder if Grandma’s going to back Mary so much now.

9.18: [Anna and Bates, ‘I’m not sure the world is listening.’] A: Good point. [William and Daisy] A: That’s…a stunned look. M: I’m surprised people can’t read Daisy like a book!

I have to say I’m sort of … disappointed in the series as a whole, although invite me back for the visual pleasure any time! And the acting is solid-to-stunning throughout the cast. No; my disappointment comes from what they didn’t do with the script. At least in this first season. At its heart, “Downton Abbey” seems to be really invested in the Edwardian aristocrac, and portraying the intact stratified class system as ultimately a good thing. People within the story flirt with challenging it, but they’re always won over in the end to this way of life: the lord, the estate, the upstairs/downstairs social organization. None of the women seem to see how to break free of the life-paths they’ve been set. Very few servants are asking if that’s the life they want … and when they do, they’re inevitably brought back into the fold.

It’s not that I expected this film to be about socialist revolutionaries. But given that there were radicals in England at the time — often asking very trenchant questions about the “common sense” assumptions concerning class and gender — it rings a little false to have those social critiques all but absent in the world of DA. Particularly since it’s a show that keeps hammering home in the introductions that it’s all about “change.”

I’ll be interested to see what they do with Season 2.

live-blogging "downton abbey" (episode no. 3)

24 Monday Jan 2011

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blogging, british isles, humor, live-blogging, movies

It’s a busy day at work today, folks, and I don’t have time for an elaborate introduction / cross-post. Though I will say two things: 1) every line out of Maggie Smith’s mouth continues to be pure gold and 2) if Bates the valet and Anna the housemaid fail to have some sexytimes — or at least implied sexytimes — by the end of the series, there will be serious dedespondency in our household. You can read our third live-blog of “Downton Abbey” over at …fly over me, evil angel… and catch up with installments one and two there as well. Spoilers after the jump. You have been warned.

live-blogging "downton abbey" (episode no. 2)

17 Monday Jan 2011

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blogging, british isles, humor, live-blogging, movies

Lady Mary prepares to be unwise in her flirtations.

Following up last week’s live-blog of the first episode of Masterpiece Theater’s “Downton Abbey,”
Hanna and I, along with our friend Minerva, gave a repeat performance last night for the second episode (we’re halfway through the series, people! can you stand the drama?!)  You can read the whole blog post over at …fly over me, evil angel....
Obviously Spoiler Warning: Downton Abbey, Episodes One and Two. Return after you’ve seen it if you don’t want any plot points to be given away.
A few tantalizing tidbits …

9.23: [as Bates and Anna giggle] M: Kiss. Each. Other. Please, honey! Make him drop the cane! I’m sorry; I need some smexy times! A: Yeah, he needs to grab her ass… M: There’s a table right behind you!

9.24: [Harriet shows up] H: Go, Harriet! M: Oh, I like you!

9.25: [as Maggie shows up] M: Oh, Maggie — I don’t like you now! M: [as wife defends procedure] Oh, good for you! A: She [Maggie Smith] is so good at that “What? People are contradicting me?”-look.

9.26: [as procedure continues] M: Whoa — that so ain’t right! H&A: Hush!

And predictions for the second half …

Halfway through the show! Guesses all ’round…

A: So the little redhaired girl is going to go off to be a secretary.

M: Bates and whatsherface need to come to some kind of agreement. Understanding.

A: Yeah.

H: Thomas needs…a shagging or a comeuppance…

M: Thomas is going to blackmail his way out of that house.

A: He’s going to use that information to get himself leverage somewhere, somehow.

M: I do think it will backfire.

A: Yeah, he’s going to try. I don’t know what O’Brien wants…but she’s going to be there with him.

M: Her motivation, other than being spiteful, is…

A: If she was acting as if the family was under threat…but she hates everyone!

M: I think she just wants to see people ruined.

A: It’s a very malicious sort of…youngest daughter needs to find some sort of voice.

M: She’s gettin’ close. Middle daughter — all middle daughter is going to end up a little shafted in this story.

A: Which is sad. But yeah. I want to see Maggie Smith and Harriet Jones…

H: Go at it. Oh, god, yes.

M: …preferably in that little cottage parlor. Epic.

[General agreement and headnodding]

Head on over to Hanna’s blog for the full post.

"live-blogging" downton abbey

10 Monday Jan 2011

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blogging, british isles, humor, live-blogging, movies

Hanna and I, along with our friend Minerva, watched the first episode of Masterpiece Theater’s “Downton Abbey” last night and live-blogged it for a post that Hanna put up this morning over at …fly over me, evil angel….

Obviously Spoiler Warning: Downton Abbey, Episode One. Return after you’ve seen it if you don’t want any plot points to be given away.

Because who doesn’t want to see Maggie Smith
play Dowager Lady Crawley?

Rather than post the whole thing here, I’m sending the blog traffic her way. But here’s a taste of the wit you have in store:

9.20: [Dowager Lady and Lady plotting to save money and estate] M: Granny is manipulative and awesome. A: Yeah, it would be a little frightening to be on her side — but it would be frightening to be on the side that wasn’t her!

9.21: [Daisy mooning over sulky footman] M: Daisy is going to end up in the family way… A: And not quite understand how it happened. H: Does she only have one dress? M: Yeah. She’s so going to end up pregnant.

9.22: [lawyer and Lord discussing new heir] Oh god, not Manchester! A: The midlands! “There are worse professions.” “…..Yes.” M: Oh — snap!

. . .

9.57: [Duke: “You might tell that footman I’ve gone up.”] H: Well, you’re not the game there, honey! M: God, how did women survive this time? H: Vibrators. A: I don’t know if vibrators would solve their financial problems…

9.58: [Thomas kneels in front of Duke] Moment of stunned silence. A: This is like slash that gives you the ‘no feeling.’ M: …this is still a little hot. This is like Upstairs, Downstairs with a gay twist! H: They’re…quite sweet? M: Oh — not sweet. H: Nope, not sweet. [as threats pass between footman, Duke] M: Oh, wait — I feel some angry sex coming on…maybe not…maybe…awwww…no slashiness. A: Well, he was being a bit of a bastard. H: Yeah…Maurice without the nice ending. M: Wow… [as footman tries to master his emotions.] H: Yeah…kind of touching.

Read the rest over at …fly over me, evil angel… and watch for the second installment next Monday.

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