"The Impact of Journal Rankings on the Discipline of English in Australia" is out in the @AusHumReview https://t.co/QD1ICJTrWm Loved working on this project.
Latest issue of Australian Humanities Review has a bunch of good stuff in it, including an essay by me on the state of criticism in the neoliberal university
This recovering academic has had a relapse: my response to John Guillory's 'Professing Criticism' in @AusHumReview, with thoughts on antinomianism, pleasure in criticism, and why so-called 'public' writing often sounds awkward or vapid.
https://t.co/qEx32mch24
🌟 Happy July 1st! 🌟Latest AHR is live, aligning with our new June/December schedule! 🌟 This issue features an essay on journal rankings plus a special section, "Professing Criticism in the Antipodes." https://t.co/irbBXzOPqZ @GelderChristian@beneltham@raewynconnell@lyndang
In the latest @AusHumReview, John Frow writes that intergenerational injustice is “the [failed] actions taken by one generation to transfer a world in an enhanced state to those who come after.” Read @alexandrakreese, @JVLamond and other responses here. https://t.co/GeJ4XVftPy
Latest AHR is out featuring forum on John Frow’s “On Intergenerational Justice” with responses by @JVLamond and many more. Also see the essay on Australian “eco-crime fiction” and reader response by @RJFether, @emcpotter, Miller & Bowles. @monique_rooney https://t.co/eF4IzfPMj4
RIP Ross Gibson
Remembering him with Simon Robb's great review of his book The Summer Exercises (2008)
https://t.co/h3yWA9RilG
@calc_anu@monique_rooney@UpswellP
Essays Shayne Bowden, Rachel Campbell & James Maher, Kim Cunio, Dieter Daniels, Richard Elliott, Daniel Fishkin, @mactra, Peter Jaeger, @Douglas_Kahn, Caleb Kelly, Sally MacArthur, Julian Murphet, David Toop, and Stephen Whittington, and see @GuyDavidson12 on David Toop
‘Silence is a taboo in mass media today—technical and economical. If the signal is too low, an alarm function switches on an emergency program to fill the gap’ writes Dieter Daniels in AHR70’s special section ‘Seventy Years of Four Minutes, Thirty-three Seconds.’
In ‘Fifteen Million Merits,’ an episode of Black Mirror, Bing must use merits earned from hard-earned pedalling to temporarily mute the surround-sound noise of his sleeping cell. In the rental car, I can ‘mute’ but I cannot turn the sound off.
Essays by Shayne Bowden @deterra, Rachel Campbell & James Maher, Kim Cunio, Dieter Daniels, Richard Elliott, Daniel Fishkin, Mack Hagood @PhantomPower14, Peter Jaeger, Douglas Kahn, Caleb Kelly, Sally MacArthur, Julian Murphet, David Toop, Shelley Trower, Stephen Whittington.
https://t.co/mAWLF5y5a0
Out now AHR70 (November 2022) and it is all about sound and silence. It features a special section titled ‘Seventy Years of Four Minutes, Thirty-three Seconds’ about the reach of John Cage’s 4’33”. Happy Reading! @monique_rooney (AHR editor)