Archive for: December, 2008

Check Out My New Header!!!

Dec 10 2008 Published by under Blogs and blogging

Ok, you lazy bums. Get out of your readers and come see what you’re missing!

Those are MY books, in MY office, with MY Rosie the Riveter bookends holding them up!

In case you are wondering, yes, my office walls are the color of this blog. (Last summer my chair said I could paint my office any shade of white. Rose is kind of like white, just with a lot of red in it, right??).

I took the picture (obviously — it’s out of focus and not centered) but the header only looks half as good as it does thanks to the efforts of Frauke at Croco Designs.

Every time I look at my blog I feel like it’s really mine now! So happy!!!

21 responses so far

Bookworm award/meme: Sister Outsider by Audre Lorde

Dec 08 2008 Published by under Blogs and blogging, Feminist contentions

So, Lori tagged me with a Bookworm award.

She obviously did not read the post in which I indicate that meme participation is one of the Ten Things I Never Do Online.

Here’s how it works. Open the book closest to you, not your favorite or most intellectual book, but the book closest to you at the moment, to page 56. Write out the fifth sentence, as well as two to five sentences following there.  Then send it along to five other people.

In the interest of not being an ingrate, I decided to follow half the rules. Hence this entry.

Unless I am in my bedroom, and not just there, but actually either in my closet, or in my bed, the closest book to me will be nonfiction, and that is true at this moment. It’s Sister Outsider by Audre Lorde (1934-1992), who described herself as a “black, lesbian, mother, warrior, poet”.

Sister Outsider, a collection of essays and speeches, was actually reissued last year, but I have the 1984 version (see image), and page 56 is amazingly appropriate for a romance blog.

It is from a speech Lorde gave in 1978 at Mount Holyoke, “The Uses of the Erotic: The Erotic As Power”. She defines the erotic as a feminine, spiritual power that women have been taught to devalue, except in a superficial sense.

The erotic functions for me in several ways, and first is in providing the power which comes from sharing deeply any pursuit with another person. The sharing of joy, whether physical, psychic, emotional, or intellectual, forms the bridge between the sharers which can be the basis for understanding much of what is not shared between them, and lessens the threat of their difference.

Another important way in which the erotic connection functions is the open and fearless underlining of my capacity for joy. In the way my body stretches to music and opens in response, hearkening to its deepest rhythms, so every level upon which I sense also opens to the erotically satisfying experience, whether it is dancing, building a bookcase, writing a poem, examining an idea.

The self-connection shared is also a measure of the joy which I know myself to be capable of feeling, a reminder of my capacity for feeling. And that deep and irreplaceable knowledge of my capacity for joy comes to demand from all of my life that it be lived within the knowledge that such satisfaction is possible, and does not have to be called marriage, nor god, nor an afterlife.

This is one reason why the erotic is so feared, and so often relegated to the bedroom alone, when it is recognized at all. For once we begin to feel deeply of all the aspects of our lives, we begin to demand for ourselves and from our life-pursuits that they feel in accordance with that joy which we know ourselves to be capable of. Our erotic knowledge empowers us, becomes a lens through which we scrutinize  all aspects of our existence, forcing us to evaluate those aspects honestly in terms of their relative meaning within our lives.  And this is a grave responsibility, projected from within each of us, not to settle for the convenient, the shoddy, the conventionally expected, nor the merely safe.

I wonder whether Lorde’s definition of the erotic is really captured in the lingo of weeping pussies, penis barbs and explosive orgasms. That’s the central question of this blog, actually, but I’m not even close to trying to answer it directly.

5 responses so far

Review: My Lord Footman, by Claire Thornton

Dec 07 2008 Published by under Reviews

My Take in Brief: I am so sorry this is a category romance that has the typical lifespan of a gnat, because it deserves a wide audience.

Wine Pairing: In an effort to disclose subjective elements that may have shaped this review, I feel compelled to report that, in order to get in the mood for Parisian romance, I imbibed my first glass two bottles of this year’s Beaujolais Nouveau while reading this book.

Continue Reading »

7 responses so far

Review: The Unsung Hero, Suzanne Brockmann

Dec 04 2008 Published by under Reviews

My take in brief: I did like it, but it felt a bit slow, and I felt the juggling of three romances detracted from all of them.  However, I think I just tried the wrong one by this author, and I have already bought another Brockmann.

Series: Yes. Published in 2000, it is the first of Brockmann’s phenomenally successful Toubleshooters Series, the 13th of which was released this year.

Heroine and Hero: Pediatrician Dr. Kelly Ashton, divorced, commuting from work in Boston to the Baldwin’s Bridge to take care of her dying father, Charles Ashton, wealthy patrician WWII vet. Navy SEAL Tom Paoletti, recuperating from a head injury at his uncle Joe Paoletti’s house, next door to the Ashton residence. Uncle Joe, a landscaper, served with Charles in WWII and they have been friends ever since.

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12 responses so far

Academic’s Apologia Scale

Dec 03 2008 Published by under Academia

Like everyone, I laughed my ass off when I read Jane’s Romance Apologia Scale over at Dear Author. It’s one of the best posts of 2008.

December is a very busy time for academics on a semester schedule, especially those of us with significant teaching loads. With Jane’s permission (thanks Jane!), I have adapted her scale.

Earn one point for each number 1 answer, two points for every number 2 answer etc. The higher your score, the more likely you are to: have tenure, be a man, or be entertaining several outside offers.

When a senior colleague emails you to ask if you can proctor his exam so he can take his kids on vacation, the correct response is:

  1. Ignore him.
  2. Make up an excuse having to do with your ailing grandmother and her geriatric cats.
  3. Sure, can I have them write an essay on hypocrisy in the classroom?
  4. Fuck off.

When a student stops by your office, not during office hours (which he has assiduously avoided all semester) and asks, “Are you busy?” the correct response is:

  1. I am never too busy for my students.
  2. Ok, but I’d like to start by letting you know why uninterrupted office time is so important to my work.
  3. No, I was just sitting here looking for something to do. Let me quit my solitaire game.
  4. Fuck off.

You must love exam week, since you don’t have to do anything!

  1. Yup.
  2. Actually, it’s a vitally important week for the learning process since students have a last chance to exercise their new skills and I have my final opportunity to provide constructive feedback.
  3. I have 100 students, 300 exams and papers, and no T.A.. What do you think?
  4. Fuck off.

Would you mind arranging for the holiday gift for the secretary?

  1. Of course not.  Would you like me to pick up something for your wife while I’m out?
  2. Actually, I don’t celebrate the holidays.
  3. Are you aware that I do not have a closer relationship to her than you do simply because we share a gender, and that, in fact, I probably spend less time with her than any of you guys since I do so much of my own administrative work?
  4. Fuck off.

Can I have an extension, Professor? I am just incredibly busy right now. You have no idea.

  1. I can’t imagine. Of course. Is there anything else I can do to help?
  2. Let’s talk about it. I am pretty busy, too, and requests like this can wreak havoc with my tight end of term schedule.
  3. Let’s see. I have one full time job, one part time job, significant volunteer commitments, children, pets, and a household to manage. Busy? Never heard of it.
  4. Fuck off.

Professor, did you get a chance to watch that movie/read that book/listen to that CD I lent you?

  1. Yes, and you know what? I really underestimated Pamela Anderson/O.J. Simpson/Whitesnake. Thank you!
  2. Actually, I have been swamped lately. Would you mind if I held onto it for another week?
  3. Yes, and I’ve grown so attached to it you cannot have it back. Ever.
  4. Fuck off.

A reporter sends the proofs for a university magazine article featuring your work. It’s almost as well written as your first grader’s homework, with slightly more accuracy than the U.K.’s News of the World. Of course, they go to press in three hours:

  1. Do you mind if I make a few changes? I’ll have it back to you by the end of business today.
  2. I’m afraid I’ll have to speak to your editor. Maybe we can work together to have it ready for the next issue.
  3. My passport’s in order –  how much would it cost me to get to Guam?
  4. Fuck off.

A colleague in another department asks if you would read an Honors thesis and attend a thesis defense for a student you have never met, to help her graduate on time.

  1. Ok, I think I can squeeze it in.
  2. Wow! That thesis topic is so interesting, but I’m afraid it’s not my area, so I’ll have to pass.
  3. Why not? A diploma from here isn’t worth the paper it’s written on anyway.
  4. Fuck off.

Fortunately, I only feel like answering 3 or 4 a couple of weeks of the year. Unfortunately, this is one of them.

13 responses so far

The Case of the Mysteriously Appearing TBR Pile

Dec 02 2008 Published by under Uncategorized

[This is part one of a two part post on my relationship to my TBR pile.]

I’ve been thinking about the changes that my romance reading has wrought in my life. It’s no fun blogging about the obvious ones: I’m less dissatisfied with my life of drudgery now that I can escape into fantasy on a regular basis; I’m more likely to excuse bad male behavior because I understand how hard it is to be a man; I have a reliable way to satisfy various psychological needs created by a patriarchal culture that cannot fulfill them; I’ve lost several IQ points, considering that every minute of romance reading could have been spent with Chaucer or Dickens; and my ability to tolerate moral ambiguity has gone straight to “h-e-double-hockey sticks”, as we say round these parts. ;)

But none of those things really matter to me given a much more serious state of affairs:

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17 responses so far

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