the rebels

Saturday, December 27, 2008

having a merry little musical day


I'm zoning in my iTunes....making nifty additions to my playlists.....now to find my lil' ipod....so freakin' little...and get a new car stereo that will play on these new tunes (and finally rescue my Neil Diamond cd thats been trapped in my car for over a year!)


Friday, December 26, 2008

Me and Shelley, one Dec. snowy night....the beginning of the winter wonderland Vancouver 2008...the first I remember since 1996....when Commercial Drive felt like we were in Moscow in the 20's...or something...Wii is playing in the distance....i am comfortably numb...needing a good workout and massage....

Wednesday, December 10, 2008

'mismeasuring' memories


In a university, not far away, not too long ago...i was sitting in a hermetically (i actually spelled this correctly! wow) sealed humanities building, taking a course called Race and Racism:the beginnings of the 'race' concept. One of my favourite books is by Stephen Jay Gould "The Mismeasure of Man" . We used another book called: "Designer Genes" speaks about 'eugenics' being used in Malaysia during the 70's/80's...sterilization of the poor so there would be less poor people...i was shocked to learn that Canada was guilty of the practice too...

Tuesday, December 9, 2008

mismeasuring men

The New Sciences of Detection (http://chnm.gmu.edu/courses/magic/police/policework.html)

By the 1880s, urban police forces began developing new techniques for keeping track of criminals, especially new techniques of record-keeping. Most of these techniques were heavily influenced by criminology, a field of study which sought to discover the relationship between what people looked like and their character.

This is the frontispiece of Italian criminologist Cesare Lombroso's Criminal Man, published in 1887 and reprinted in Stephen Jay Gould, The Mismeasure of Man. Lombroso searched for a relation between appearance and character

Lombroso claimed that to the trained eye, the eye of the detective, these people would clearly be organized into categories. Those in group "A" are all shoplifters, "B" are swindlers, "H" are purse snatchers, "E" are murderers, etc. A crowd of strangers is rendered into categories. And supposedly you can see a man's real character at a glance.

Lombroso often lamented the fact that his fellow Europeans were skeptical about his work. But he took comfort from the fact that Americans loved it. His work was far more influential in the United States than anywhere else.