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“Terminal junkies rejoice! Now you can use Cucumber to test your command line interfaces just like you do for your web apps.…”
Monthly Archives: September 2010
links for 2010-09-13
Coincidentally
It is no coincidence that I’m reading Steven Moore’s The Novel: An Alternative History. Yes, I happened to jog quickly into the Ann Arbor District Library the other day to pick up my Mom’s eight weekly mysteries. And for no reason at all I stopped to browse, and there it was in the oft-regarded but underpopulated 000–002 shelf of New Acquisitions.
I’d never heard of it. Has a naked lady on it, which I admit is a plus. It’s a lovely crinkly brown, under its acetate. It’s got heft. The basket was mostly empty.
So grab; into the basket it went.
Yeah, that sounds like coincidence. It’s not. I insist.
Because I’ve been at the Bloom again lately. And the Rorty. And the Pragmatists more generally, and thinking about that perennial soapbox of mine: What’s wrong with all those stupid smart people over on the other side of Division Street?
And that very selfsame day, I crack this ink-stained mother open (fore edge stained no doubt by a prior New York Times subscriber, not the local fishwrap folks; covers shaken; corners lightly bumped), and right there on page one (1) Moore launches right in and provides more than an echo of the thumps my soapbox makes: a parallel line of attack, as ’twere. His introduction alone is worth your reading time, especially if you are a literate bookish library-infected person like those I seem to accumulate in my immediate social network.
[Aha: and here the point begins to gleam through the random-seeming chance.]
Because I’ve been thinking about an eight-year-old project, one I framed but have been too broken to implement for near a decade. And it’s about critical engineering. Not critical as in “crucial”, but more the wordy and literate and communicative reflection that literature has enjoyed and frittered away these last few years. Not more straightforward or telegraphic, but rather literate itself, and inspiring and poetic.
Where is the literature of engineering? Where is the literature of science? Why is it so stultified, as if the culture were a package offered by the fucking cable company, and you had to buy those channels of illiteracy with your Discovery Network?
And why do we stomach that other antipathy, the I don’t do math crap that humanities majors and Great Literary Minds proclaim?
All right, all right. Don’t get me started.
Nah, fuck it.
It’s not a zero-sum game, people. How dare the humanities go into closed session and block out all makers of this stuff we have? How dare the makers of this mess of stuff we wrap ourselves within ignore millennia of beauty and promote their history-blind notion of contextless progress?
And here Moore traipses into my bathroom [What? Tell me you don’t read in the bathroom; if you don’t you don’t love it enough.] with his amusingly targeted arguments against the foundationalism in literary criticism, and I’m like, “Hey, this man he is the dude. He has afforded me a big brown acetate-wrapped brick of complementary insight into the selfsame problems I face in a vaster, more malformed literature than even those expensive bottom-shelf litmags limn.” And then I’m like, “Hey, we should totally invite this dude to come to town and ride the teeter totter!” and “I should totally throw a copy of this at Cosma Shalizi and see if it sticks.”
And me, liking all these things, I flip to a rear flap, and there he is.
In town.
A useful sensitivity to coincidence is not a trait engendered by a broad and ranging mind (which I disavow having one of, anyway, being normal), nor of a supernatural mystical gullibility, but rather it is a practiced and targeted response to that web of social networks in which we all walk. A fostering of beneficial coincidence comes easiest to those with feet in many circles. From ignoring the borders most other people sense as walls. From passing notes between the brain and hands: He likes you.
One draws a circle beginning anywhere. But you also have to keep the pen moving, is all I’m saying. Elliptically.
What? You want succinct and targeted prose?
This is a book. He is a local author, this little bald man I expect to meet someday soon. I had no idea he was a local author when I started touting his book. But it’s good enough that I’ve started touting it after reading three chapters. Thus, it’s a good book. Go and buy it and read it.
And me, I am going to invite this gentleman to lunch.
What is your academic paper for?
No, really: Why did you write it? Why did you stay up two days before the extended deadline, typing furiously and graphing these arbitrary-seeming charts and wrestling with the layout software and the publishers’ vanilla template so you could wait for some of your peers (read: “betters”) to thumb through it desultorily, looking for obvious grammatical gaffes or misspellings, only then to rubber stamp it? Why did you feel the need to travel to [relatively distant foreign city] to stand in this ill-fitting suit and mumble about it in front of this not-quite-reconciled slide deck which, counter to most of our understanding of how computers work, is actually out of order and missing some pictures?
Was it to inform us? The easy targets—your thesis advisor and chairman and dean and editor and even unto your spouse and parents—they already pretty much know all they need to about this stuff. Everybody outside that social circle within telephone reach, odds are, doesn’t care.
Was it to promote your field? Past your thesis advisor/chairman/dean/editor, who actually has read every word of your paper?
Not I.
Was it to travel? To sell something? To demonstrate to whatever committee currently controls your life that you have spent the last few months “productively”? To build your CV, or make a splash in the thrilling field of [your field here]? To get your next job?
If you wanted to inform us, why didn’t you just tell us? All of us. There is email. There are blogs, available for free. Tell us.
Have you considered that you are transforming the library (possibly, but rarely, libraries) where the scarce physical copies of your work will be stored into mere County Courthouses, where birth and death records are maintained in perpetuity for legal reasons and the occasional amateur genealogist?
If you wanted to build your field, or tout and expand your particular specialty, why not just tell the people most likely to adopt your innovations? This thing here, it smacks of spam; it says you cannot be bothered to identify colleagues, and instead must rely on random suckers. By telling this to five interested, salient people, I bet you could spread the word in a way that would ensure its dominance.
Or have you not bothered to learn the other influential and receptive people in your own field? Think on that a moment.
If you wanted all along to do something else you’re not telling me… hey, I’m willing to believe and support that. Your paper was a ticket, in that case, or an advertisement. And that modality has a long and thriving publishing history in the sciences and in engineering fields around the world.
This paper then is a piece of instant ephemera, isn’t it? After you’ve traveled, gotten your next job, patented that cool new widget: this is the ticket stub in the public scrapbook, the snapshot they make of you and your one-time boyfriend at the top of the log flume in the amusement park, and offer to sell you at the exit.
Could you maybe stamp that at the top? “I had to write this down so they would give me $175 so I could afford on my wages to travel to some far off place and broaden myself, and maybe have some fun, by meeting others just like me.” “I had to prove to some dude that I could ape his sensibilities.” “I had to get the fifth entry on this scavenger hunt of a resumé.”
Those might be good things to place in the paper itself, maybe between the abstract and the useless keyword list, for the casual reader’s benefit.
Or did you write this with delight? Delight in your work, in your progress, in your field and its implications?
Did you write it to tell me, not in these fucking granite stone steps of words, worn dangerously round by years of passive use by monks through the ages, but in poetry? In your choice of haiku, psalm, pentameter?
So where are you, in this?
Did you write it to efface yourself? To blend in against the throngs of nearly identical agents of abstraction?
Mm hmm. I think you maybe did.
Yeah. That worked.
Otherwise, do this: Sit down now, having written this thing, this scrap, this bone that implies no dinosaur but rather a common cow, and start again. Make me laugh. Make the goddamned hairs stand up on my arms. These are words, which do not exist in a cultural vacuum but instead reach across the ages in links to Plato and Byron and David Foster Wallace, to Tolkien and Darwin and Jesus Christ. To novelists, poets, essayists, preachers, and all manner of communicators of delight.
Where are you, in these words? No, wait—I don’t really care. Where is the delight in these words? Make me see that, and you may follow.
You are not allowed to keep delight to yourself. Moron. This, above all the other things, is the thing the Academy has lied you into misunderstanding, with its delayed gratifications and postponements of your life: Delight, kept secret, always fades to nothing.
You are being trained to disappear.
But I think maybe you, this reader, because you have made it this far, you still have a gleam of curiosity in you, some spark of delight left burning and warming you.
Say it. Invoke the muse we still possess, out here in the world. Say it in too many words (though carefully chosen), be too long (there are no page limits), be wordy, be florid, and above all be engaging.
More people will read your work, given some flavor or some spice or some interest and even one goddamned joke—perhaps even a scrap of that body-filling awe that drew you to this work yourself—than will ever sit squirming in the chair at the conference, or dive deeper than your published abstract.
Otherwise, you and your delight are lost. Look at the marriage and death records in the County Courthouse, and tell me where you see the love, the grief, the joy and pain in them.
Your paper is headed to the courthouse of your scant society even now. I will not see it again.
Make us another one. Build yourself one in which you can live.
This convention of unreadable, distant, self-effacing, four-page, two-column, Times Roman fact is not a bow to “reality”, you know. Reality doesn’t give a damn what you say about it, or how many words or pages you use.
It is, rather, the very mechanism by which your career makes you its prey. The sound of droning-but-succinct academic “prose” is the sound of your soul’s bones being chewed by your Institution.
Those other words, the long-form prose, the writing skills you should have learned in your “breadth” training, when instead somebody made you start focusing on your specialty: those are the only sword you are afforded, with which you might, possibly cut your way free.
Otherwise: you’re institution-poop for sure, child.
Sing, or fade. Sing, or die.
Write better.
Now.
Happy Labor Day
Introduction to Industrial Supervision, published in 1945, appears never to have had its copyright renewed. Happy [American] Labor Day.
When I get my OCR software (Abbyy FineReader 9.0 Professional) reinstalled on my stupid Windows virtual machine, I’ll provide the text as well.