Dave Badtke’s Blog

Quiddities — Musings essential and frivolous

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New York Times

"Just a Family: A multiracial family gathers to talk about being mixed race in America."

. . . or as the French say, plus ça change, plus ça reste la même: the more things change, the more they stay the same.

Those of us who don’t experience discrimination tend to forget, since we believe our society has moved past racism and bigotry, that others do not share our experience. When we go to the store, no one notices us one way or another.

Susan Saulny writing in the  New York Times last Thursday finds that some multiracial couples are too-often explaining their family’s complexions to strangers who should, at a minimum, think empathically before speaking. Take, e.g., Heather Greenwood’s experience:

“How come she’s so white and you’re so dark?”

The question tore through Heather Greenwood as she was about to check out at a store here one afternoon this summer. Her brown hands were pushing the shopping cart that held her babbling toddler, Noelle, all platinum curls, fair skin and ice-blue eyes.

The woman behind Mrs. Greenwood, who was white, asked once she realized, by the way they were talking, that they were mother and child. “It’s just not possible,” she charged indignantly. “You’re so…dark!”

I encourage you to visit Sherman Alexie’s FallsApart.com. All my students of English 1, and this semester of English 370 as well, will remember Lester FallsApart from Smoke Signals, a weather forecaster who has been broken down at the crossroads since 1972.

When you visit, you should join Alexie’s email list, for if you do, you’ll start receiving emails, as you might suspect, that challenge you to think. In particular, the email I received today, the contents of which you’ll find below, squeezes the Petrarchan sonnet form down from 14 lines to 14 syllables with some interesting results:

Hey, folks,

Been working on this new little form. A little sonnet in the form of a couplet. First line 8 syllables, second line 6 syllables, mimicking the 8-6 lines in a stanza structure of a Petrarchan sonnet.

The two lines must rhyme and, as in the Petrarchan sonnet, there must be a thematic turn between the two lines…

So here are a few:

Simultaneous sun and rain,
I am addicted to pain.

That tree is ten thousand years old,
But doesn’t have a soul?

I don’t care if there is a God,
But I fear there is not.

Of course, I married my mother
And so did my brothers.

Shouldn’t we think more of the worm
Than of the predator bird?

Yes, I have often battled Grief.
Both of us used our teeth.

Rather than comments on Jean Paul Sartre’s Being and Nothingness, which I unsuccessfully tried to understand while reading next to a pool in Monrovia, Liberia in 1968, the heat unbearably baking my brain, these are links to impossible “being”:

DID I MISS ANYTHING?

Tom Wayman
From: The Astonishing Weight of the Dead. Vancouver: Polestar, 1994.

Question frequently asked by
students after missing a class

Nothing. When we realized you weren’t here
we sat with our hands folded on our desks
in silence, for the full two hours

Everything. I gave an exam worth
40 per cent of the grade for this term
and assigned some reading due today
on which I’m about to hand out a quiz
worth 50 per cent

Nothing. None of the content of this course
has value or meaning
Take as many days off as you like:
any activities we undertake as a class
I assure you will not matter either to you or me
and are without purpose

Everything. A few minutes after we began last time
a shaft of light descended and an angel
or other heavenly being appeared
and revealed to us what each woman or man must do
to attain divine wisdom in this life and
the hereafter
This is the last time the class will meet
before we disperse to bring this good news to all people
on earth

Nothing. When you are not present
how could something significant occur?

Everything. Contained in this classroom
is a microcosm of human existence
assembled for you to query and examine and ponder
This is not the only place such an opportunity has been
gathered

but it was one place

And you weren’t here

A few articles in the New York Times that might be of interest:

1) The same U.S. agency, DARPA, that initially funded the development of the internet is now offering a half-million dollars, to be awarded on 11/11/11, to an organization that will research stellar exploration. Are you interested?

Unfortunately, since gravity is so weak, some 36 orders of magnitude — 36 powers of 10 — weaker than the atomic force holding atoms together, objects in our Milky Way are very, very far away. Indeed, the nearest star beyond our Sun is Alpha Centauri, approximately 4.3 light years or 25 trillion miles from Earth.

Interstellar travel is a tall order. It would take Voyager 1, humanity’s fastest artifact, now traveling 38,000 miles an hour relative to the Sun, more than 70,000 years to reach Alpha Centauri, if it were headed in that direction.

2) A team of scientists has discovered single-celled fossils that are 3.4 billion years old, which is only a billion years after the formation of Earth. This is surprising for many reasons, not the least of which derives from the modern definition of a planet, which is a body large enough to clear its orbit of debris. This is one of the reasons Pluto, too small to accomplish this, was demoted from its planet status.  But this also means that Earth was being constantly bombarded during the first billion years, a period called the Late Heavy Bombardment, that created an environment so hot that life was not possible.

3) “The Kids Are Not All Right,” Joel Bakan writes, because these times are not like previous times. While each older generation tends to believe that the younger generation doesn’t measure up, the corporate culture that has evolved during the past 30 years is definitely a change from the past. The push to recognize corporations as “people” using legal arguments that have been so effective in the development of human rights has created an ethical dilemma because corporations have ever-increasing power whereas other groups that historically lacked rights — African Americans, women, children — lacked power. And corporations’ power to influence us, as we’ll see in my English 1 class during our discussion of advertisements, has had a profound influence on how our children think and behave.

I hope you had a restful and interesting summer.

Links to your class can be found at the top right of this page or you can go to QCounty.com, where the link path to my Solano classes is a bit shorter.

After my older son Luke earned his degree at UC Santa Cruz, he went to Japan where he has been ever since. That was almost two decades ago. He created Knee High Media in 1996, and my younger son Joe went to work for Luke after Joe graduated from Haverford College in 2002.

Luke is married to Kaori, whose family lives in Yaizu, south of Tokyo. Joe is married to Mina, who is also Japanese though she grew up in Germany. While Joe and Mina now live in New York City, they also have strong ties to Japan.

Shorty after the quake and tsunami in Japan, Joe sent me a link to an article in Japan Times, a publication for which both Luke and Joe wrote. In his email Joe wrote,

It is an interesting piece, and for me, strangely, one of the most strongly emotional of any I have read so far. Ssomething about the use of the language, so incredibly Japanese, brings out the strength of will and spirit that we are seeing in people. I’m not sure if it will come through for you, too, but I found myself very struck by it.

In the article by Kaori Shoji, you’ll discover that  tensai means heavenly disaster.

Sherman Alexie

Grammar’s important to good writing in the same way appropriate dress and personal hygiene are important to interpersonal relationships: if someone is oddly dressed or in need of a wash, it may be hard to penetrate the facade to find the person. Similarly, if grammar is off, it may be difficult to understand what is being written.

But good grammar without good ideas is not worth anyone’s time, which is why I’m always happy when good writing is shown by science to be chock full of good ideas.

While Shakespeare lacked the math to calculate a Lorentzian coordinate transformation, he would have felt right at home with Einstein’s relativistic understanding of  how space and time are linked, an idea that Rosalind explains to Orlando in As You Like It, Act 3, Scene 2, when she tells him how time varies in the forest: “. . . Time travels in divers paces with divers persons. I’ll tell you who Time ambles / withal, who Time trots withal, who Time gallops / and who he stands still withal.”

And now we have confirmation in The New York Times, 2/15/2011, that Sherman Alexie captured essential truths about bullies in The Absolutely True Diary of a Part-Time Indian. The best friend of Arnold Spirit, Jr., the narrator and hero of this memoir-novel, is Rowdy, a bully who beats up everyone, including Junior. But when Junior leaves the reservation to attend Reardan High School, he’s ridiculed by a group of bullies led by Roger, “the Giant” (64).

Since Junior has already instructed us in the 11 Spokane Indian Rules of Fisticuffs (61-62), we know that a fight is inevitable when Roger says to Junior the most racist thing that Junior has ever heard in his life. So Junior knocks Roger on his ass.

“‘You punched me,’ Roger said. His voice was thick with blood. ‘I can’t believe you punched me’” (65).

But then Roger surprises Junior by not retaliating, thus violating the Spokane Indian rules, which is surprising even though Roger is white.

As Roger walks away, Junior calls out in confusion:

“Wait,” I called after Roger.

“What do you want?” Roger asked.

“What are the rules?”

“What rules?”

I didn’t know what to say, so I just stood there red and mute like a stop sign. Roger and his friends disappeared.

I felt like somebody had shoved me into a rocket ship and blasted me to a new planet. I was freaky alien and there was absolutely no way to get home.

According to the article by Tara Parker-Pope in The NY Times that reports on research done at UC Davis, Roger is following  rules that specify how bullying is used to increase status to a point but shouldn’t be taken too far lest the bully lose status, the reasoning being that if one is already at the top, as Roger is, one has less to prove. Rowdy, on the other hand, is at the bottom of the status pyramid and has nothing to lose by taking his bullying too far:

Highly publicized cases of bullying typically involve chronic harassment of socially isolated students, but the latest studies suggest that various forms of teenage aggression and victimization occur throughout the social ranks as students jockey to improve their status.

The findings contradict the notion of the school bully as maladjusted or aggressive by nature. Instead, the authors argue that when it comes to mean behavior, the role of individual traits is “overstated,” and much of it comes down to concern about status.

“Most victimization is occurring in the middle to upper ranges of status,” said the study’s author, Robert Faris, an assistant professor of sociology at U.C. Davis. “What we think often is going on is that this is part of the way kids strive for status. Rather than going after the kids on the margins, they might be targeting kids who are rivals.”

Educators and parents are often unaware of the daily stress and aggression with which even socially well-adjusted students must cope.

. . .

The researchers used . . . data to construct complex social maps of the schools, tracking groups of friends and identifying the students who were consistently at the hub of social life. “It’s not simply the number of friends the kid has, it’s who their friends are,” Dr. Faris said. “The kids we’re talking about are right in the middle of things.”

Using the maps, the researchers tracked the students most often accused of aggressive behavior. They found that increases in social status were associated with subsequent increases in aggression. But notably, aggressive behavior peaked at the 98th percentile of popularity and then dropped.

“At the very top you start to see a reversal — the kids in the top 2 percent are less likely to be aggressive,” Dr. Faris said. “The interpretation I favor is that they no longer need to be aggressive because they’re at the top, and further aggression could be counterproductive, signaling insecurity with their social position.

Astrophysicist Neil deGrasse Tyson with Chaser the Border Collie

If you haven’t heard about Chaser the Border Collie, you’ll be amazed. The link is to a short segment on ABC or you can find the complete video on NOVA’s website.

And if you have heard about him, I’d like you to contemplate how amazing Chaser is.  Here’s a dog who is able to associate arbitrary names, at least from Chaser’s POV since he doesn’t speak English, with stuffed toys, which are equally arbitrary from his POV.

Could you do this? Not knowing the context of the object you’re seeing, would you then be able to associate an equally arbitrary name with this object, and do this a thousand times over?

Sure you could, and probably in less time than Chaser — but maybe not.

Since a metaphor is a substitution that replaces one thing for another, Chaser is clearly a champion metaphor machine. It’ll be interesting to see how this research helps us understand and model the nature of animal thought.

I hope you had a restful and interesting winter break.

Links to your class can be found at the top of this page or you can go to QCounty.com, where the link path is a bit shorter.

October 1 marked the 50th anniversary of Nigeria’s independence from England, and the journey from an exploited colony to a democratic nation has been anything but smooth. Secretary of State Hillary Clinton said, during her 2009 visit, that the World Bank reported that Nigeria lost over $300 billion, almost 1/3 of a trillion dollars, over the past 30 years as a result of corrupt practices. For a country with a population of 155 million and a per-capita income of just $1,160,  losing this kind of money to exploitation and corruption is especially damaging because of the inequality it creates.

Graduate student Adegbola Ojo at the University of Sheffield is trying to make this inequality graphically visible on his website:

The main findings from the atlas include:

  • More than 70 percent of children within Toiling Country Dwellings and Middle-class Country Dwellings are unlikely to be enrolled in school
  • Out of every 100 households in most areas, there are less than 10 where females own either land or a home.
  • The pattern of inequality among women who receive assistance from doctors during childbirth suggests that almost half of the country´s potential mothers will have to relocate from their current residences to other areas for a state of national equilibrium to be attained.

Take a look at the various maps that are available. Go to the help file to understand how the indices are calculated.

One longs to have the kinds of maps that one can peruse on Dr. Ojo’s website available for the U.S. as well. Do they perhaps exist already?