Last year I read Ace by Angela Chen. It’s a book about asexuality and it had a huge impact on me. Among other things, it allowed me to reimagine a life where romantic and sexual love isn’t the end goal.
I don’t usually put much stock in identity days, but if you’re looking for a good read, why not add Ace to your Libby?
#GenerousReading #amreading #books
I finished reading The Queer Art of Failure by Jack Halberstam this week. I read it because I have been thinking a lot about failure for my #HigherCalling project, which asks what work is and how we can do it well under violent conditions.
It's apparently a classic, but I had never read it so I thought I'd share some reflections in the spirit of #GenerousReading.
#highercalling #GenerousReading
I’m slowly working my way through Sara Ahmed’s Complaint! and her discussion of career advice, buried in chapter 6, should be required reading for all of us.
Fellowship Application, Janel Pineda, Lineage of Rain
https://www.haymarketbooks.org/books/1658-lineage-of-rain
#GenerousReading
Finished reading After the Ivory Tower Falls, an analysis of the past and future of higher ed by journalist Will Bunch.
The book describes higher ed in the US as a “failed experiment” and a “disaster,” from the idealism of the GI Bill to today’s exorbitant debt and false meritocracy.
It makes a strong case for decentering universities in favor of funded training opportunities for young people.
Today in #GenerousReading, thinking about reputations:
“If you can become a complainer before you make a complaint, or even without making a complaint, you can make a complaint without becoming a complainer.”
Happy Sunday everyone. Today I’m reading “After the Ivory Tower Falls,” and thinking about what our future might look like, if college isn’t at its center. #GenerousReading