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Germaine Greer furious at play based on her life by 'insane reactionary'
Feminist academic Germaine Greer has branded the writer of a comic play reportedly based on aspects of her life an "insane reactionary" who "holds feminism in contempt".
Her wrath was provoked by Joanna Murray-Smith's The Female of the Species, which pokes fun at militant feminism and questions whether ideological extremes stand up to the rigours of real life.
Ms Greer, who became a household name in the 1970s with the publication of her groundbreaking book The Female Eunuch, described The Female of the Species as "threadbare" and was said to have declined an invitation to its first night, and returned a copy of the script unread.
Although the characters are fictional, the play kicks off with an incident similar to one experienced by Ms Greer in 2000, when Karen Burke, a 19-year-old Bath University student obsessed with Ms Greer's work, broke into her house in Saffron Walden, Essex, tied her up and held her captive for an hour. Ms Greer was released after friends arriving at the house for dinner called the police after hearing shouting. Ms Burke later received two years' probation after admitting a charge of harassment.
In the play, a student called Molly holds hostage a feminist writer called Margot Mason. "Men aren't our problem – old feminists are," says Molly.
Ms Murray-Smith said her play was not a "character portrait" of Ms Greer, but the academic countered: "Why do the production team and the writer keep on referring to me, Germaine Greer, if they say it is not Greer they're writing about?" She told The Sunday Times: "Murray-Smith is an insane reactionary who boasts that she has not read a single feminist text. She holds feminism in contempt."
Ms Murray-Smith said: "I'm sorry she has formed that opinion of me without having met me or read my work. It would take a braver woman than me to write about Greer directly. However, my Margot does have many of Greer's characteristics. Both are charismatic, outrageous and irritating."
The Molly character was created to explore "what happens to the fans who find that the intellectuals they admire then renege on their one-time beliefs", she said, adding: "Despite what Greer says, I am a feminist."
Does a play or a film have to actually name a person for it to be clear that the central character is based on them? If your life is on public display, do you have the right to complain when people explore it, even in fiction? Is that the problem for feminism today - that old and modern feminists just can't agree, so end up getting nowhere? And can the hip young things responding to this possibly bear to discuss feminism without mentioning hairy lesbians, ugly bitter women or social outcasts...? Feminist academic Germaine Greer has branded the writer of a comic play reportedly based on aspects of her life an "insane reacti... more -
Indian students among the best in the world say Oxford University
The Oxford University considers Indian students among the best in the world and would like more of them joining its campus, Chancellor Chris Patten has said.
The university, which produced the likes of Prime Minister Manmohan Singh and Deputy Chairman of the Planning Commission Montek Singh Ahluwalia, has presently 257 Indian students on roll. But one-third of its students are from China.
"We want more Indian students because we want the best in the world to come to Oxford," Mr. Patten said. Most of the Indian students are in the Said Business School.
"About a quarter of the students are doing MBAs...but I would like to see more in social sciences and humanities, doing both under-graduate and post-graduate work," he said.
Though Indians are less in number, they have won more scholarships than the Chinese.
Last year, they won 54 different scholarships, including the prestigious Rhodes scholarship, according to an Oxford journal. "They (Indians) probably got more than China," the Chancellor said.
He said the number of scholarships may go up as the university improves its financial position.
"I hope as we develop our endowments we will be able to offer many more (scholarships) to post-graduate students in the next few years," Patten said. The university has developed a Master’s programme in South Asian studies.
For a one-year MBA programme, it could cost as much as Rs. 40 lakh, including the cost of tuition fee, boarding and lodging and the out-of-pocket expenses.
"It is a different world out here...We are gaining immensely," said Karandeep Singh Vohra, pursuing MBA at the Said Business School.
http://www.worldamazingrecords.com The Oxford University considers Indian students among the best in the world and would like more of them joining its campus, Chancellor... more -
Ben Stein's movie defending "Intelligent Design" being released Apr...
The movie "EXPELLED: No Intelligence Allowed" is a documentary about how the people promoting ID are claiming to be persecuted by the scientific community, who will not allow ID to be introduced into public schools.
There was a recent court case, Kitzmiller v. Dover Area School District, which determined that Intelligent Design was creationism in disguise. NOVA produced a documentary about the case that can be viewed on-line.
One of the positions the judge cited for his decision to rule against the teaching of ID in the class room was based on evidence found showing “the text referred to as a resource for ID, Of Pandas and People, had originally been a creationist text.”
www.pbs.org/wgbh/nova/id/
Q: What is science?
Q: Isn't evolution just a theory, not a fact?
Q: What is intelligent design?
Q: Why not teach intelligent design, or creationism, alongside evolution?
These questions can be answered at this link http://www.pbs.org/wgbh/nova/id/defi-qa.html The movie "EXPELLED: No Intelligence Allowed" is a documentary about how the people promoting ID are claiming to be persecut... more -
Ohio State celebrates first female Rhodes Scholar
Jessica Hanzlik is convinced that fortune, as much as anything, helped her become Ohio States fifth Rhodes Scholar. But David Tomasko, director of the Honors Collegium, knows otherwise.
The Rhodes Scholarship is one of the most prestigious honors available for college seniors worldwide; only 32 Americans each year are chosen to spend two years in graduate school at Oxford University in England.
Hanzlik, who is majoring in physics and French, is OSUs first female Rhodes Scholar and first overall since Buckeyes tight end Mike Lanese was honored in 1986. Jessica Hanzlik is convinced that fortune, as much as anything, helped her become Ohio States fifth Rhodes Scholar. But David Tomasko... more -
TV Bootcamp
TV Party by Blackflag this isn't. TV Bootcamp is the pivotal course in the television program at Hofstra University's School of Communication. The final exercise has carried a stigma of stressful work for many years. This piece shows a busy Sunday where the students are practicing for the final test. TV Party by Blackflag this isn't. TV Bootcamp is the pivotal course in the television program at Hofstra University's School... more
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Pasta Monster Gets Academic Attention
This weekend, academics and religious scholars will meet in San Diego to discuss religion and the essence of belief. Originally a satirical take on religion after the push for the teaching of Intelligent Design, the belief of the Flying Spaghetti Monster as the Creator gained momentum and caused the questioning of science and belief. The article states that "there's no more scientific basis for intelligent design than there is for the idea an omniscient creature made of pasta created the universe." This weekend, academics and religious scholars will meet in San Diego to discuss religion and the essence of belief. Originally a sati... more
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In Media Res
Daily, a different media scholar will present a 30-second to 3-minute clip accompanied by a 100-150-word impressionistic response. The goal is to promote an online dialogue amongst media scholars and the public about contemporary media scholarship through clips chosen for either their typicality or atypicality in demonstrating narrative strategies, genre formulations, aesthetic choices, representational practices, institutional approaches, fan engagements, etc. Daily, a different media scholar will present a 30-second to 3-minute clip accompanied by a 100-150-word impressionistic response. The... more
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USC Football Player Getting his MBA
Jeff Byers is a starting player on the offensive line for the best college football team in the country: USC. What makes this guy special, however, is not only his outstanding achievements on the field, but also his stellar academic performance. In three years, he's got his undergraduate business degree, and now, in his final two years of college football eligibility (he took a year off because of injury), he's getting his MBA from USC. What can't this guy do? Jeff Byers is a starting player on the offensive line for the best college football team in the country: USC. What makes this guy spe... more
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Organization to help students, professors profit from research
CITE is joining academics with potential real world business partners
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On Wikipedia Ennumerating Britannica Errors
I grew up believing that the Encyclopaedia Britannica was truly beyond reproach. When I was a teenager, my heroes on the ground were US Suppreme Court Justices (how little I knew!) and Mortimer Adler, who remains an inspiration. Oh to find that his work is less than perfect. Wait - actually, it dooes not change much about the spectacular contribution of Mr Adler, but it does teach us that there are no secondary "definitive" sources, except maybe Wikipedia - LOL I grew up believing that the Encyclopaedia Britannica was truly beyond reproach. When I was a teenager, my heroes on the ground were U... more
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