Wednesday, June 30, 2010

Newcastle uni (Australia) bully claims: Academic says harassment led to illness

THE University of Newcastle has agreed to cover the medical costs of an academic who claimed she suffered years of bullying and harassment at work that led to a psychological illness.

Microbiologist Michelle Adams said she was one of dozens of staff who had suffered bullying and harassment in recent years at the university and she believed it was an "ingrained culture" at the institution.

University vice-chancellor Nick Saunders said he did not believe bullying or harassment was a problem at the institution.

But he confirmed 57 complaints were investigated last year.

"To my knowledge bullying and harassment is not a major problem at the University of Newcastle in the context of an organisation that employs and teaches 35,000 staff and students," Professor Saunders said.

Dr Adams's case dates back to 2003 when she raised allegations of plagiarism against two fellow academics.

Following the allegation Dr Adams said she was treated like a "leper", frozen out of communication with colleagues, bullied in meetings and the hostility got so bad she was afraid to enter the staffroom.

In a statutory declaration to a Workers Compensation Commission conference last month she detailed being left off important emails, given an hour's notice by email to attend meetings at Ourimbah when she was at the Callaghan campus and feeling isolated.

"In the end I feared going to work and there were times when I would just break down and cry," she said.

"It has gone on for so long that it is hard to remember what life was like before all of this."

The University of Newcastle branch of the National Tertiary Education Union and Newcastle University Student Union launched a major anti-bullying campaign last year.

The unions said there was a "large volume" of cases in which staff and students reported ongoing bullying and harassment on campus.

Education union vice-president Rod Noble said in some cases staff had been forced to leave the university as a result.

"For some people there are fears of retribution and some are simply too afraid to speak out," Mr Noble said.

"People have left as they have felt that was the only way to resolve it."

Several former Newcastle University academics who spoke to The Herald confirmed a "culture of fear" and said if people spoke up they "risked their careers".

Professor Saunders said there was simply no evidence of a culture of bullying.

He said the university's complaints office dealt with 33 formal, or written, cases of harassment and bullying last year that were made by 27 people, with 22 cases upheld against 16 people.

Of them 17 cases related to bullying with 12 cases upheld against six people.

A further 24 informal complaints of harassment were made by 24 people and seven related to bullying. None of the seven informal complaints resulted in an investigation.

Professor Saunders said bullying and harassment was not tolerated and it was clearly against the university's code of conduct.

Punishment ranged from counselling to the university taking action for misconduct.

From: http://www.theherald.com.au

Tuesday, June 29, 2010

animals and animality, the results:

My friend M and I rolled east into Kingston on Sunday, the last day of the conference, in our rented insect-like vehicle. It was beautiful and warm and I have never been to Kingston before. We walked around a flea market, and I bought a book published in 1912 ($10) and a book published in 1996 (95 cents).

The conference itself, centering on the question, what is "the animal" (what is "the animal"?), brought together scholars from different schools and fields. We got to hear a polemic paper calling for "vegan cinema" to replace the obviously "species-ist" cinema that we take for granted. There were obviously major issues here that the scholar overlooked, including, but not limited to, his assertion that animal actors are like slaves, and that all animals should be disallowed from appearing in films. Does a form of vegan cinema thereby seek to cease representing animals at all?

The best papers that I heard worked instead to theorize not a revolution in animal rights, but to change our conception of animals themselves. Animal rights seems to presuppose that we humans understand what rights are best for animals. But an animal can never give its assent or voice its opinion in the litigious language of rights and judgements. In claiming that we "understand" another being, according to Emmanuel Levinas, we extricate ourselves from our ethical responsibility to him. The rhetoric of animal rights follows the same internal logic as the argument for hunting and killing animals: that ultimately, humans know what's best.

Walking away from the conference, M and I were still not sure, in the end, what it was that this conference meant by "the animal." By creating a discursive category and calling it "the animal", academics cordon off animals from an idea of animal, and as the conference made clear, there are as many ways to conceptualize an animal as there are animals in the wide wild world.

Saturday, June 26, 2010

fellow academix: Lady Gaga Call For Papers @ UPenn

What we have all been waiting for: a LADY GAGA CFP

For the upcoming collection of critical essays entitled Performance and Identity: The Music of Lady Gaga, I am soliciting essays on a range of subjects that illustrate the influence and impact of Lady Gaga and her music. Essays will come from a range of scholars, including artists, music theoreticians and practitioners, psychologists, sociologists, cultural anthropologists, linguists, literary and theatre scholars, etc.. Junior faculty are encouraged to submit an abstract. Essays, though still critical in nature, should have a broad appeal to readers. 
Sample topics may include (this list is not exhaustive-contributors are by no means limited to these): 
Stereotyping American Culture in Lady Gaga
Race
Sexuality
The Use of Art in Lady Gaga’s Work
The Language and/or Linguistics of Lady Gaga’s Work
"The Big City"
Performance Theory
Fashion
"Ethno"/musicology
Women’s Studies
Please address inquiries and send abstracts of up to 500 words and a brief CV (as Word docs) to the editor, Richard Gray (rgray@cn.edu). Abstracts are due on Monday, August 16, 2010. Authors will be notified of their acceptance by the end of September and will be expected to submit completed essays of 5,000-8,000 words (with notes in accordance with format guidelines provided upon acceptance) in November 2010.

Friday, June 25, 2010

powerful un-proportion



Saw this show in the Distillery District today at Engine Gallery. Absolutely in love with Costa Dvorezky's disproportional figures and strong, strong bodies. Look how massive and iron-wrought her feet are. It's hard to see in this version, but the oils absolutely glow with kinetic force held fast. Below is Dvorezky's self-portrait "with wolf cub." Look at his hands! And his forearms! He's an artist-blacksmith.  



Wednesday, June 23, 2010

YVR: featuring breakfast! lunch! dinner!

To me, airports feel as though they exist on perpetual conveyer belts, and the minute you enter them you are traveling. I have just eaten the fastest omelette ever, at Milestones in Terminal A. Everything is slick and greased and eggy-smooth. The side of fruit is a little bruised; these cooked eggs are still holding movement. I'm Toronto-bound and adore being in transit.

Tuesday, June 22, 2010

Summer readings

1. Backfire basics - The keys to backfire
2. Checklist of mobbing indicators
3. The Bullying Boss [In Academia]
4. Injustice destroys justice...
5. Are they claiming that you are emotionally unstable?
6. Raw Thought: Causes of Conformance
7. Misery of Dysfunctional Meetings
8. Crusade against the jerk at work
9. Effects of Psychological Harassment
10. Groupthink
11. Ten Signs of an Incompetent [Academic] Leader
12. Why grievance procedures are inappropriate for dealing with bullying
13. Whistle blowing - supporting governance in higher education
14. Complaint against Michael Scott, Universities and Colleges Union Solicitor
15. Identifying the work place psychopath
16. 25 Top Workplace Bully Tactics
17. The Peter Principle in Academe
18. Psychopath Checklist
19. Kingston University witness intimidation
20. The Concorde Fallacy
21. Workplace Bullying - Researchers
22. The Abilene Paradox - Why Team Members Won't or Can't Help
23. Why Does [ACADEMIC] Mobbing Take Place?
24. Avoiding Academe's Ax Murderers
25. Making the Star Chamber Work
26. Workplace bullying and mobbing in academe: The hell of heaven?
27. Workplace Bullying ‘Epidemic’ Worse Than Sexual Harassment
28. Eliminating Professors. A Guide to the Dismissal Process. By Kenneth Westhues
29. Workplace Bullying In Academia: A Canadian Study
30. So you want to know how some universities waste taxpayer money and who the biggest offenders are?

Monday, June 21, 2010

things upon which to fixate...

...while writing a bibliography of Romantic Aesthetics:


from the extremely well-wrought blog of Miss Lazarus, whose thoughtful musings we should all frequent, as she writes etymologically-inspired gems such as these: 

Ever wonder why they call "zero," in the sport of tennis, "love?" Well, zeros tend to look like eggs...and in French, "the egg" translates to "l'oeuf." And then some linguistic magic (mispronunciation) happens, and there you go. The egg becomes love. 
culinary delights & words.. two of the most wonderfully mutually-reinforcing aspects of my life.

shivers of disgust: their tiny taxidermied faces

I'm all for high-fashion and I appreciate a nice fur coat, but this disgusts me.

Claudia Schiffer by Mario Testino (Fashion Gone Rogue)

Sunday, June 20, 2010

"prepare them to get fired": why choose a humanities degree?

It seems like every summer there is a collective exhalation of indignant praise for a humanities-heavy education in an attempt to prop-up all those graduates newly released from the safely padded handcuffs of their respective universities. In last Saturday's Globe and Mail, John Allemang interviews Martha Nussbaum about the importance of those overzealously-used, jealously-guarded humanities buzz-words: "critical thinking",  "breadth of knowledge" (see Post-colonialism), and "imagination". Without these skills, particularly the first, there would be no space, it seems, for people with English degrees (or worse, Art History degrees) to cross over into the real world and make money. Thus, every summer we get to read about how important the humanities are, but every fall-winter things seem to rebound so that by summertime we are back where we started. I don't get it. No one is going around telling people that in the humanities they make you memorize lines from Shakespeare and waste four years of your life, but every year that seems to be the exact presupposition that these annual editorials are combatting ONCE AGAIN.


The Globe's Allemang has done an excellent job asking questions that feel new and might give skimming readers pause for thought. He asks, Do you really believe our leaders want us all to improve our critical thinking? Surely a servile populace suits the needs of the many. To which Nussbaum responds,


"For a while they can coast along in that belief, but something blows up in the end. NASA, the space administration, is a good example of that [...] [H]ow a culture of yes-people produced the disaster of the space-shuttle Challenger: you could see the O-rings were dangerous at a certain temperature, but no one was willing to point that out, and they packaged the data the way they thought their leaders would want to hear it.
"Now, NASA has reformed its culture and is much more encouraging of dissent. People are saying that BP and all the other oil companies should take a page out of NASA's book and reform their internal culture."*


...Do you [Nussbaum] feel obliged to prepare them [new Uni grads] for the big surprise when their values of critical thinking don't fit the needs of the workplace?


"I'm giving the graduation address at our law school, and I'm thinking of these wonderful people so full of critical ideas who are going to work for law firms. They'll be under great pressure to narrow themselves [...] So our responsibility is to strengthen the side of personality that wants to stay focused on that goal and help them fight the forces in life, including overwork, that militate against that need."


And finally, my favourite question: And then prepare them to be fired from their law firm for doing so?


"You just have to figure out how you in your particular situation are going to do it. It might be through being a critical voice in your law firm. It might be writing short stories if you can carve out a space. It might be through being a productive alum of your university. Or it might be through bringing up children who can think critically."
***
In addition, UBC's Miranda Burgess reminds us, in an editorial to the Victoria Times Colonist, of the positive aspects of an English degree:

English degree well worth cost
A writer lists "English literature" as a university degree subject with no practical value (June 3). He states that its students should be prevented from borrowing public funds.
Your readers need to know that 96 per cent of BC graduates with English degrees describe themselves as satisfied or very satisfied with their education. Eighty per cent say that the knowledge they gained at university is useful in their working lives. They work in fields ranging from education to corporate communications, advertising, high tech and journalism. They are prepared for further work in fields from law and medicine to business administration.
In light of these facts it's no surprise that former U.S. Treasury secretary Henry Paulson, U.S. Supreme Court Justice Clarence Thomas, Nobel Laureate for medicine Harold Varmus, astronaut Sally Ride, film directors James Cameron and Steven Spielberg, television producer Linda Bloodworth-Thomason, former Disney CEO Michael Eisner, president of BBC America Worldwide Herb Scannell, many writers (including Tom Clancy, Philip Roth, and Stephen King), London Metropolitan Police Commissioner Ian Blair, former U.S. governors Mario Cuomo and Pete Wilson and our own Gordon Campbell all majored in English at university.
Learning to think critically, read incisively and communicate clearly is always practical.

Obviously we all know on whose side I stand. Every summer, at least.



*I wholeheartedly agree that big oil should reform its internal structure, especially its "advisory structure". When you have your own internal advisors working to keep the government happy AND the people who pay you (big oil) happy, there is not a lot of wiggle-room between doing the minimum (for the environment, let's say) and looking to be promoted. Promotions out of advisory roles are often into management positions. Why would big oil promote a dissenting environmental advisor into a management position?

image #1 care of New and Blue Blog, image #2 care of fffound

nonsense language dances

I am reading/trying to read this book, and this is what I get in the Forward:
David Michael Levin explains, “[i]n Das literarische Kunstwerk, translated for the first time, here, into English, Roman Ingarden has employed the powerful method of phenomenology in order to penetrate the underlying ontological essence, or mode of being, of the literary work and to make explicit the corresponding side of subjectivity, within whose structures the underlying modes of givenness peculiar to the literary entity are lawfully established” (xvi).
THAT DOESN'T MAKE ANY SENSE MR.LEVIN. THAT IS UNHELPFUL. WHY DO EVEN YOUR NOUNS SEEM TO ME VERB-LIKE? WTF. This is how literary criticism ceases to be useful: when the subject becomes massively amorphous and the language becomes uberspecific, and between these two things, the work itself ceases to exist. The indefiniteness of the "idea" and the opacity of the language take over, like an interpretive dance inside a waterfall: where everything appears to mean something but actually its just wet nonsense. 


Isn't it the work of the critic to make clear(er) for the reader the big ideas and to use language to his/her advantage? I want distillations of thought, people, not mystical "modes of givenness."

Wednesday, June 16, 2010

in which i realize the homosexual subtext

I mean, I know there's a song about a threesome, but I've loved this musical longtime and have never realized that "Darling Bry," the reluctant Brit, is not just frigid. 
He's carrying on an affair *with the same man* as Sally. 

The kind of story that gets better with age.

Tuesday, June 15, 2010

Academic Bullying: A Problem on College Campuses

When Dr. Faith Edwards found herself facing false accusations that she had tampered with her superior’s car in an attempt to harm him, it became the latest bizarre episode in what she described as a harassment campaign against her. Eventually winning a wrongful termination lawsuit against the Michigan higher education institution where she had been harassed, Edwards, a nursing professor, took her story Thursday to the annual meeting of one of the nation’s largest faculty organizations to spread awareness of “academic bullying” and campus workplace violence.

“It was like drowning and no one sending you a buoy,” said Edwards, who told her story during a session at the American Association of University Professors (AAUP) conference in Washington, D.C.

The disintegration of civility in higher education is a growing concern for university faculty who say the disrespect has reached epic levels not only between professors and students but also among colleagues. Women and faculty of color are often the targets of mistreatment, but increased competition and societal shifts have demonstrated that no higher education professional is immune. In addition to academic bullying, the incidence of workplace violence is no longer rare in higher education. High-profile cases, such as the February killings of three University of Alabama-Huntsville professors allegedly by a co-worker, were prominent in higher education news this past academic year.

“It’s coming up in many of our sessions,” said AAUP director of communications Robin Burns. “It’s always been a problem, but people are really talking about it now.”

“It’s becoming a more prominent issue,” said Janet Tompkins McMahon, a conference presenter and an assistant professor of nursing who is moving to Towson University from Francis Marion University. “We need to be prepared to deal with this and avoid detrimental consequences that could harm everyone.”

Edwards said she believes the bullying she experienced stemmed from a number of reasons. Prior to the car tampering accusations and other incidents, Edwards had been unexpectedly away eight weeks from her job as an assistant professor at her school’s nursing department after suffering a medical emergency. Her absence had put a strain on the department, requiring five different faculty members to cover her classes, she said. But, as soon as she was able, Edwards returned to teaching.

But things had changed. The once popular Edwards was quickly ostracized by her colleagues and pressured by her supervisor to resign. Edwards, who was on track for tenure and held the only doctorate in the department, was berated in faculty meetings, attacked in evaluations, and publicly denigrated in e-mails, she said.

Matters worsened for her, but Edwards battled the offensive that led to her dismissal from the university. A lawyer, an ulcer, and thousands of dollars later, she won her case in court but was not entirely vindicated.

“Your parents always tell you to fight for what you believe is right,” she said, adding that she has decided to use her experience as a case study for academic bullying and to advise others about analyzing the health of institutions. “But it’s damn hard.”

And for professors teaching the millennial generation, good manners are no longer the norm among students, McMahon said, adding that young people today feel entitled to everything—even grades they don’t deserve. Asking for extra credit, complaining about assignment deadlines, making excuses for incomplete work are characteristic of modern students, she added.

To adjust to her students’ learning styles and remain sensitive to their needs, McMahon characterized them as Wizard of Oz archetypes, which are the confused scarecrow, the insecure Tin Man, the cowardly lion, and the focused Dorothy. Understanding student personalities, she said, helps professors avoid triggering behaviors that could lead to potentially dangerous stress in the classroom.

“Be careful. A house could fall on you,” McMahon said, alluding to the fate of the wicked witch in the Wizard of Oz.

In a 2005 study published in the Journal of Nursing Education, researchers reported examples of increased problematic behavior, everything from leaving class early or sleeping in class to verbal abuse and plagiarism.

Presenters at the AAUP sessions on academic bullying suggested instructors develop standards of practices that are consistent and published clearly in course syllabi with explicit wording that emphasizes strict adherence. If the behavior is not immediately confronted and reported, the incivility could escalate, presenters said.

Paul Howe, a conference presenter and business instructor at Caldwell Community College and Technical Institute in North Carolina, said he believes the audacity of his students’ excuses and classroom behavior is tied to the societal emphasis on consumerism.

“Students often ask me why they aren’t passing if they pay for classes and come every day,” Howe said. “They actually think, since they pay, they should get good grades without doing the work.”

From: http://diverseeducation.com

...the only excuse for making a useless thing is that one admires it intensely...


"The studio was filled with the rich odor of roses, and when the light summer wind stirred amidst the trees of the garden there came through the open door the heavy scent of lilac, or the more delicate perfume of the pink flowering thorn." 
Oscar Wilde, The Picture of Dorian Gray

 



Sophie Srej by Wendy Bevan for Marie Claire Italia, June 2010, via Fashion Gone Rogue

Monday, June 14, 2010

You can just tell that Eugenides was reading Nabokov when he wrote The Virgin Suicides. That book steeps slow omnivorous language through pores of neologisms and words resurrected from antiquity; from Nabokov, Eugenides stole mood lighting and made it fierce and mysterious.

Now, in this curious collection, Eugenides curates love stories from giddy to grotesque, West to East, Alice Munro to Chekov. But the Nabokov is the ligature binding this body of work. The story is called "Spring in Fialto," and recalls in that fuzzy-yet-crystal clear Nabokovian manner the coincidental and fleeting meetings of Nina and Victor, two Russian expats. Now engaged to other people, now broken up with or married to other people, now unhappy with other people, the two invariable suspend the litigiousness of their lives and fall outside boundaries and into each other. And it's all so slippery:

"I call her Nina, but I could hardly have known her name yet, hardly could we have had time, she and I, for any preliminary; "Who's that?" she asked with interest-- and I was already kissing her neck, smooth and quite fiery hot from the long fox fur of her coat collar, which kept getting into my way until she clasped my shoulder, and with the candor so peculiar to her gently fitted her generous, dutiful lips to mine" (235).

You barely know that they are meeting for the first time before he's kissing her. I had to re-read the passage and try to figure out where they were: alone? outside? still in the parlor with all the rest of the people? And then there's the peculiarity of her response: candor, and generous, dutiful lips. Lips that are used to being kissed, and know what it is to do in such a situation. Generous because they are free to pull away?

Conclusion: read this.

first-class wasp murderer

that's me

Fresh Vogue Italia, circa 2008

Sunday, June 13, 2010

reasons not to learn german

"How canst thou translate the language of cat-monkeys? Fie on such fantasies!"
--Charles Lamb, on translating Goethe, 1814.

                                                           also, some good weekend things...

                  ...texts from lovely sister...
                                                         ...deep in deep cove...
...gospel from the country of Africa...
                                                                                               ...becoming an Eastvan roofclimber
         .......reading love stories by Nabokov (more to come on that subject)...
                               ...sunshine tortoise...

Workplace bullying rife in the sector, union claims

One in ten have suffered physical or violent abuse, while 41 per cent report intimidation, UCU study finds

Two-fifths of further education employees have been bullied at work in the past sixth months, with one in ten reporting violent or physical abuse, according to a report by the University and College Union (UCU).

The incidence of bullying is far higher than in other industries, the union said. And, according to the report, managers and supervisors are responsible for much of the problem.

Overall, 41 per cent of FE respondents to the UCU survey carried out in November 2008 said they had been bullied in the preceding six months, compared with 34 per cent of those surveyed in the higher education sector.

The report, Who Listens? Bullying in Further and Higher Education, compared its findings with those in a survey of bullying across different occupations and industries in Britain in 2000 which found that 11 per cent of people had been bullied in the preceding six months.

But despite the reported incidence of bullying in FE, 69 per cent made no official complaint. Of those who did, 52 per cent who had been bullied by another employee said the response of their institution had been “bad or very bad”.

The report found that 72 per cent of those who had been bullied blamed managers or supervisors, compared with 33 per cent who cited other colleagues, 7 per cent who said it was subordinates, and 6 per cent who blamed students.

The most likely forms of bullying included: being given tasks with unreasonable or impossible deadlines; being given an unmanageable workload; and being subject to excessive monitoring of work.

Other types of bullying included: being humiliated or ridiculed; being asked to do work below levels of competence; gossip and rumours; and having opinions ignored.

Ten per cent said they had experienced violence or physical abuse in the previous six months, with 2 per cent saying they experienced this sort of bullying on a monthly basis. One in ten reported unwanted sexual attention.

The Association of Colleges’ (AoC) employment director, Evan Williams, voiced concern about the sample size of the survey, as only 324 FE employees responded, and said that it was two years out of date. [Imagine that!]

“The agreement on bullying and harassment was drawn up in 2008 and AoC jointly ran roadshows with the unions to raise awareness of these issues among employers and unions,” he said.

Sally Hunt, UCU general secretary, said: “The level of bullying in further and higher education is alarmingly high. With both sectors facing huge cuts and the very real possibility of heavier workloads, it is essential that robust measures are put in place to support staff.”

Nadine Cartner, director of policy for the Association for College Management, representing some 4,000 FE managers, said the association was producing a handbook aimed at addressing the problem.

“Good colleges, by definition, seek to deal with and eliminate bullying through values of respect, openness and courtesy, together with a zero- tolerance approach when bullying occurs,” she said.

From: http://www.tes.co.uk

----------------

From the report:

Lack of confidence in UCU

Didn't believe the UCU would be supportive (others filed complaints & union not very supportive). (HE)

I am scared to use the union as in my experience from a range of colleagues things became worse and UCU were unable to prevent anything so I'm worried that if I make a complaint this will lead to further unjustified intervention in my work and my life at work will be even worse than it is at the moment and the bullying will continue...

...If you have reported any form of bullying from individuals employed by your institution, how satisfactory was the response of your institution to your complaints? Of those in further education who reported any form of bullying from individuals employed by their institution, only 26% said the response of their institution to their complaints was fairly or very good; 52% said the response was bad or very bad. Of those in higher education who reported any form of bullying from individuals employed by their institution, only 15% said the response of their institution to their complaints was fairly or very good; 57% said the response was bad or very bad...

...Have you ever witnessed bullying at work over the last five years? 73% of respondents in further education said they had witnessed bullying at work over the preceding five years, compared with 67% of respondents in higher education...

Friday, June 11, 2010

"...their conjugal solidarity was daunting..."

"How nice. They did things together. Traveled, showered, bickered, and said vile things about people who had never done them any harm. Their conjugal solidarity was daunting."

Rivka Galchen reads Leonard Michaels for the New Yorker Fiction Podcast

Thursday, June 10, 2010

Why mediation does not work...

Because of the serial bully's Jekyll and Hyde nature, compulsive lying, charm and plausibility, the validity of this person's testimony cannot be relied on in disciplinary proceedings, appeal hearings, and under oath at tribunal and in court. Emphasise this when taking action.

Mediation with this type of individual is inappropriate. Serial bullies regard mediation (and arbitration, conciliation, negotiation etc) as appeasement, which they ruthlessly exploit; it allows them to give the impression in public that they are negotiating and being conciliatory, whilst in private they continue the bullying. The lesson of the twentieth century is that you do not appease aggressors.

The disordered thinking processes of the criminal / antisocial mind are succinctly described in Stanton E Samenow's book 'Straight talk about criminals'. For example:

"Certain people who I term non-arrestable criminals behave criminally towards others , but they are sufficiently fearful [and knowledgeable of the law] so that they do not commit major crimes. We all know them: individuals who shamelessly use others to gain advantage for themselves. Having little empathy, they single-mindedly pursue their objectives and have little remorse for the injuries they inflict. If others take them to task, they become indignant and self-righteous and blame circumstances. Such people share much in common with the person who makes crime a way of life. Although they may not have broken the law, they nonetheless victimize others." (Chapter 8, The criminal mind exists independent of particular laws, culture or customs)

In Samenow's 1984 book 'Inside the criminal mind' he uses this description:

"Some criminals are smooth rather than contentious, ingratiating rather than surly, devious rather than intimidating. They pretend to be interested in what others say. Appearing to invite suggestions, they inwardly dismiss each idea without considering its merits. They seem to take criticism in stride but ignore it and spitefully make mental note of who the critic was. They misuse authority and betray trust but are not blatant about doing so. With the criminal at the helm, employee morale deteriorates. His method of operation sooner or later discourages others from proposing innovative ideas and developing creative solutions." (Chapter 6, Work and the criminal)

From: http://www.bullyonline.org

Pantisocracy

how is it possible that I JUST LEARNED THIS??!!


"Pantisocracy (meaning "government by all")* was an utopian scheme devised in 1794 by the poets Samuel Taylor Coleridge and Robert Southey for an egalitarian community. They originally intended to establish such a community on the banks of the Susquehanna River in the United States"


See Wiki Page








*(but I thought, upon first glance, that it must be a society of pants. Like in those adorable books)

Peeping Tom

from the always-worth-checking fashion gone rogue
"The artistic critic, like the mystic, is an antinomian always.  To be good, according to the vulgar standard of goodness, is obviously quite easy.  It merely requires a certain amount of sordid terror, a certain lack of imaginative thought, and a certain low passion for middle-class respectability.  Aesthetics are higher than ethics.  They belong to a more spiritual sphere.  To discern the beauty of a thing is the finest point to which we can arrive. Even a colour-sense is more important, in the development of the individual, than a sense of right and wrong.  Aesthetics, in fact, are to Ethics in the sphere of conscious civilisation, what, in the sphere of the external world, sexual is to natural selection. Ethics, like natural selection, make existence possible. Aesthetics, like sexual selection, make life lovely and wonderful, fill it with new forms, and give it progress, and variety and change"

--Oscar Wilde, The Critic as Artist: With Some Remarks Upon the Importance of Doing Nothing 

  

Wednesday, June 9, 2010

the second image that comes up if you google "men"


a shirtless calendar of Mormon hotties. WTF.

Just tell yourself he's a baby murderer

what to do when last weekend's hot date has not yet called you back.

Workplace Mediators Seek a Role in Taming Faculty Bullies

College faculty members who are bullied or abused by coworkers often feel they must either suffer through it or quit. Soon, however, colleges may be pressed to give them a third option: requesting the intervention of a mediator or arbitrator to try to turn their workplace situation around.

What is unclear is whether such interventions will make life more tolerable for bullies' victims or leave them feeling more beat up than they were before.

Colleges already frequently use various forms of third-party intervention, broadly known as alternative dispute resolution, to try to keep complaints of unlawful discrimination from turning into costly legal battles. Noting that such disputes often involve allegations of bullying or other forms for workplace abuse, two prominent organizations that provide alternative dispute resolution plan in the coming months to undertake a national campaign to urge colleges to use that same approach in handling complaints of mistreatment that do not necessarily violate any civil-rights laws.

The effort is being led by the American Arbitration Association, a nonprofit provider of alternative dispute resolution based in New York, and by the ADR Consortium, which consists of companies and individuals that offer such services. Also involved is the Institute of Human Resources and Industrial Relations at Loyola University Chicago, which plans to do research on the effectiveness of the approach.

In a paper scheduled for presentation Wednesday at the annual conference of the American Association of University Professors, Lamont E. Stallworth, a professor of human resources and employment relations at the Loyola institute and a founder of the ADR Consortium, and Myrna C. Adams, an organizational consultant who formerly served as Duke University's vice president for institutional equity, argue that alternative dispute resolution offers an "ethical, professional, and cost-effective" way to deal with bullying and other forms of workplace incivility.

By handling bullying complaints confidentially in such a manner, the paper by Mr. Stallworth and Ms. Adams says, colleges can help keep the victims of bullies from developing psychological or health problems as a result of their stress, and can avoid the costs associated with having to replace faculty members who otherwise might quit their jobs in response to the bullying they have experienced or witnessed.

Mr. Stallworth and Ms. Adams acknowledge, however, that they cannot point to any research showing alternative dispute resolution to be an effective means of dealing with bullying. And many experts on bullying argue that what research actually shows is that mediation by some third party is an ineffective means of dealing with bullying, and may even leave the victims worse off.

"There is great consensus about the futility of [alternative dispute resolution] to work with bullying," Gary Namie, director of the Workplace Bullying Institute, said in an e-mail message.

In a September 2009 article in Consulting Psychology Journal, Mr. Namie and Ruth Namie, his wife and partner in running the Workplace Bullying Institute, wrote, "Traditional conflict mediation ignores the targeted worker's need for justice and acknowledgment of the harm" and "focuses only on current and future circumstances, ignoring the past."

"If there is a power imbalance between target and bully, as there often is, mediation can harm the target," they said.

Bully for You

Workplace bullying is a big concern in academe and a source of much misery for some faculty members.

Kenneth Westhues, a professor of sociology at the University of Waterloo, in Ontario, has devoted much of his career to studying "mobbing"—the type of bullying that occurs when a bunch of people gang up on someone—and has found academe to be rife with such behavior. Mobbing, he says, occurs most in workplaces where workers have high job security, where there are few objective measures of performance, and where there is frequent tension between loyalty to the institution and loyalty to some higher purpose. Colleges fit that bill.

The AAUP's annual conference this week has three sessions devoted specifically to faculty bullying. In their paper, Mr. Stallworth and Ms. Adams describe how bullying in academe can take forms other than mobbing, including "regulation bullying," where the victim is forced to comply with unnecessary rules; "legal bullying," which involves using legal action to control or punish a person; "pressure bullying," which involves making unreasonable time demands; and "corporate bullying," in which an employer abuses a worker who cannot easily find another job.

They blame three common features of academic environments—big egos, an individualistic ethic, and tolerance for behaviors not accepted elsewhere—for the prevalence of bullying behavior in such settings.

Bullies and Victims

In a paper scheduled to be presented on Thursday, three researchers from Wilkes University, in Pennsylvania, will discuss the results of a survey that asked faculty members in economics and business about bullying behavior. They found that among such academics, men are more likely to be bullies than women, both genders are about equally likely to be victims, and older faculty members are more likely to be bullies and younger ones to be victims.

The most common type of bullying behavior faculty members engage in, the Wilkes researchers found, is discounting another person's accomplishments, followed by turning other people against their victim, or subjecting their victim to public criticism or constant scrutiny.

The researchers—Jennifer Edmonds, associate professor of statistics and operations management; Dean Frear, assistant professor of organizational behavior; and Ellen Raineri, assistant professor of business—caution that their survey had a low response rate. Just 60, or 2.7 percent, of the 2,200 faculty members they contacted via e-mail responded to their questions, they said, and thus their findings may be skewed by sampling bias.

But a 2007 online survey of more than 7,700 adults conducted by Zogby International for the Workplace Bullying Institute similarly found that, among workplaces in general, men and bosses are disproportionately represented among bullies, and women and people in nonsupervisory roles account for a disproportionate share of victims.

Other survey research by the institute has found that only a small fraction of workers who complain about bullying to their employers feel that a fair investigation was conducted, that they were protected from further bullying, and that their bully suffered consequences. The far more common outcome was for the employer to do nothing and for the victims to be retaliated against and eventually lose their jobs.

The institute's 2007 survey found that workplace bullying was four times as prevalent as discriminatory harassment that is prohibited by law. The organization has been urging states to adopt what it calls the Healthy Workplace Bill, a measure that gives workers who have been subjected to an abusive work environment the right to sue their employers. Since 2003, 17 states have considered such legislation, but none has yet passed it into law. The New York Senate passed such a measure last month, but the State Assembly has yet to vote on it. The bill's opponents include many business leaders and the mayor of New York City, Michael R. Bloomberg.

Among the other nations that have passed laws intended to curb workplace bullying are Belgium, Denmark, Finland, France, the Netherlands, and Sweden. Quebec adopted such a law, called the Quebec Psychological Harassment Act, in 2004.

Different Perspectives

A key element of the campaign planned by the American Arbitration Association and the ADR Consortium is persuading colleges to adopt anti-bullying policies and codes of civility. That way, although alternative dispute resolution would not be used unless both sides agreed to it, the alleged perpetrator would have an incentive to enter into the resolution process, to avoid facing disciplinary action.

Christine L. Newhall, senior vice president of the American Arbitration Association, said in an interview on Tuesday that many types of dispute resolution could be used in such situations, including fact-finding, binding or nonbinding arbitration, or mediation in which a facilitator tries to bring together both sides. She is confident that well-trained providers of such services can resolve many bullying-related conflicts in academe, just as they settle many other workplace disputes.

"Sometimes the bully does not even know they are a bully," Ms. Newhall said.

Mr. Stallworth is playing a central role in the effort as both a faculty member at the Loyola institute and program director of the ADR Consortium, which he established in 1995. A veteran user of alternative dispute resolution to settle complaints of illegal discrimination, he says he became interested in research on workplace bullying several years ago and has been considering how to apply the expertise of those like him to such conflicts.

If mediation can be used to resolve disputes over equal-employment opportunity, Mr. Stallworth said in an interview this month, "then there is no reason why we cannot structure mediation protocols—or, for that matter, arbitration protocols—to deal with any issues of power imbalance in workplace bullying disputes."

Martin F. Scheinman, a prominent professional arbitrator and mediator who helped set up the Scheinman Institute on Conflict Resolution at Cornell University, said in an interview Tuesday that he similarly sees the potential of alternative dispute resolution to defuse such workplace conflicts in academe, especially in situations where one side may not even be entertaining the perspective of the other.

"When people don't get what they want, they don't say, 'Maybe it has something to do with me,'" Mr. Scheinman said.

Mr. Stallworth said that he and other leaders of the effort plan to invite higher-education associations to join it, and to offer local and regional training to colleges in dealing with bullying and incivility. When problems crop up on campuses, the American Arbitration Association and the ADR Consortium will provide referrals to people affiliated with or trained by them who can provide conflict-resolution services.

The groups involved with the effort plan next year to host a national summit on alternative dispute resolution in Washington. They intend to devote much of the conference to discussions of bullying and incivility at colleges, and plan to invite various higher-education associations to participate.

Dangers Ahead

"I go for anything that works," Mr. Westhues, the mobbing expert at the University of Waterloo, said this month. He cautioned, however, that even the best-intentioned approaches to bullying can backfire. For example, many colleges have been adopting "respectful workplace" or "dignity at work" policies calling for people to be civil to their fellow employees, but he has watched bullies bring frivolous complaints under such policies as just one more means of tormenting their victims.

"From my research, the bottom line that I come to is that there is no substitute in the workplace for adroit, fair management or administration," Mr. Westhues said. If a college embraces alternative dispute resolution but "you have an administration that is basically incompetent or lacks imagination in working out ways for people to live with each other, what you are going to have is an endless series of disputes going to some formal dispute-resolution mechanism."

In an article published in August 2004 in the British Journal of Guidance and Counselling, Patricia Ferris, then a doctoral student in industrial organizational psychology at the University of Calgary, studied organizations' responses to bullying and found that "mediation was frequently unsuccessful due to power differentials between the employee and the bully, inexperience on the part of the person conducting the mediation, and lack of understanding of the differences between bullying and interpersonal conflict." In fact, she said, mediation "was the most damaging response to employees" because they often felt betrayed by organizations that did not provide the help they sought, and ended up seeking more psychological counseling, on average, than people who worked for organizations that either did nothing about bullying behavior or had policies against bullying which they rigidly enforced.

Mr. Stallworth argues, however, that there are many types of bullying behavior and many approaches to alternative dispute resolution, and some forms of mediation do not require the two sides to even have any contact with each other. He said he is confident that the approaches he advocates will be effective in a variety of situations involving bullying in academe, and that they are preferable to the choices the victims of faculty bullies now face.

"So many people have dealt with the consequences of being bullied," Mr. Stallworth said. "We all know how terrible it is to be treated in that fashion."

From: http://chronicle.com/

Monday, June 7, 2010

an homage to Anna Rae


The thing about grad school, is that people are thrown into this intense environment, where they become fast friends over questions of literature, theory, and insane workloads. And then, they leave. With infinite sadness, I lament the leaving of our very own Anna Rae, Americanist and pioneer academic style blogger, fashionista and vintage queen. Anna's blog, the tights that bind, is an inspiration. Yesterday, over crepes and lattes, Anna furnished me with these definitions which are all too true, and all to pertinent to my life RIGHT NOW...

NERD. Nerr-d. noun. Someone who is interested in learning for the sake of learning. Someone who, given any sort of intellectual stimulus, attempts to understand and master said thing.

GEEK. Ghee-ck. noun. Someone who is extremely well-versed about a particular interest. For example, a film geek, a movie geek. Geeks are part of a culture of other geeks, engaged with each other about topics pertaining to their area of interest. Geeks, unlike nerds, are not interested in learning about things outside of their area. 

DORK. Dohr-ck. noun. Someone who is both cerebral and socially awkward.

What do you think? Do they work?

Anna, I will miss you, Vancouver will miss you, and UBC English Grad Lounge will never be the same, xoxo, and bon voyage!

Saturday, June 5, 2010

word gambles


"The German Gestus and Gebdrde, like their English equivalent, "gesture," derive from the Latin verb gerere meaning "to carry"—in German tragen, as in the verb ubertragen: to translate. As a carrying movement, gesture poses the question of value and conservation principles. Meaningfulness is what makes movement a gesture. Thus… Freudian psychoanalysis converts fleeting movements into gestures-infinitely small, we would say divisible, movements now become the bearers of obscure meaning. As a result, the everyday takes on a gestural capacity."

Kevin McLaughlin, "The Coming of Paper: Aesthetic Value from Ruskin to Benjamin." MLN, Vol. 114, No. 5, Comparative Literature Issue (Dec., 1999), pp. 962-990Stable URL: http://www.jstor.org/stable/3251038 

reasons to love vancouver

bald eagle sighting on my seawall run!

I was that person that stands there, pointing it out to other runners, like, "look! look! a bald eagle!" These other runners, however, *continued running* as they noted the massive bird, and did not allow my static position (I eventually feigned stretching) to impede their progress.

Friday, June 4, 2010

this i am excited about


“The difficulty is how to begin an opera, that is, how to find its musical atmosphere. Once the opening is composed, there is no more fear.” Giacomo Puccini





spending the day thusly

   academic tattoo possibility?

Thursday, June 3, 2010

dirty word

As in: "at last a philosophy developes [sic] itself, partly satiric, partly consolatory, concerned only with the regenerative vigour of manure, and the necessary obscurities of fimetic Providence" (944).

--John Ruskin, Fiction-- Fair and Foul


Fimetic: having to do with dung 

Wednesday, June 2, 2010

is picking up virulent feminism to combat worser symptoms


mixed media, Wangechi Mutu

& we were talking about this selfsame thing last nite...

...I believe the fact of their being unhappy is in itself a violation of divine law, and a sign of some kind of folly or sin in their way of life...

-John Ruskin, Pre-Raphaelism

Problem being, that first you must have security, food and water and shelter, a sense of belonging in society, maybe even financial security, etc. Happiness is so contingent. But I love Ruskin, so I choose to believe that he is talking about people who get degrees in things they hate, go up to the oil sands for years and live in surroundings they hate, doing work that is both immoral and unfulfilling, and then complain that they are unhappy. 

Why didn't you do a degree in music history, then. 

Tuesday, June 1, 2010

Sir Peter's GUARDIAN ANGEL!

Sir Peter's GUARDIAN ANGEL!

The Times Higher Education article
announcing Sir Peter's stepping down as Kingston's Vice Chancellor was swamped with very critical comments from readers highlighting his contribution to workplace bullying. I admit they presented a very unflattering image of the man.

As of today (1 June 2010) all these critical comments have been removed from that blog. What was left is a wash out. Does Sir Peter have a guardian angel?

Anonymous
--------------
No, he has expensive legal help that threatens THES with legal action so the latter removed the 'offending' comments and replaced them with the following statement:
  • Editor's comment

    We welcome free speech but not comments that are libellous, unlawful, harmful, threatening, abusive, harassing, tortious, defamatory, vulgar, obscene, invasive of another's privacy, hateful, or racially, ethnically or otherwise objectionable. Any postings of this nature will be removed.

    Ann Mroz, Editor