Archive: The Gnovis Blog

  • Inception: How I ruined it for myself

    I watched Inception. I talked to people and read reviews before watching it. It seemed like there was a general consensus about it being a good science fiction movie. I used to love science fiction movies, but I have lost interest in them because every time I watch a movie, I find millions of things that do not make sense scientifically. For me, good science fiction should show what current science can’t, and may even lead or direct scientific endeavor.

    Category: The Gnovis Blog

  • Was a vote for Bristol a vote for Sarah?

    Bristol Palin’s appearance on Dancing with the Stars , one of America’s most popular TV shows, sparked a lot of outrage.

    Category: The Gnovis Blog

  • When I Was Your Age, We Had The Internet….

    The easiest part of grad school: the fact that even when I’m distracting myself, I can still sort of, in a roundabout way, say that I’m ‘studying’ the intersection of communication, culture and technology.

    Luckily, I’ve been through the formative education years and finally get to focus on what really excites me on both a personal and academic level. Unfortunately for high school students, they still find themselves in a limbo of experimentation and expertise when it comes to navigating scholarly work and personal interest.

    Category: The Gnovis Blog

  • A Tale of Two Pies: Consuming the Metaphor

    “Food is a rich source of metaphor, whether in women’s fiction or in the general culture; whether offered out of generosity or sacrificial self-denial, whether served with grace or slovenliness, artfully or with poisonous malice; whether it serves as a vehicle of celebration or cerebration, satiety or seduction. Eating is an act charged with potency…. (1998: 317).” – Eileen T. Bender, “The Woman Who Came to Dinner: Dining and Divining a Feminist “Aesthetic.”

    Category: The Gnovis Blog

  • Citing Kindle: A Tale of Many Formats

    This semester, I congratulated myself for my technological savvy: I could read several of my assigned books for class on the Kindle app, available as a free download on my Android phone and Windows PC.

    Category: The Gnovis Blog

  • Black Bodies and The Practice of Home

    This past weekend I attended the National Women’s Studies Association Annual Conference in Denver, CO. I also had the opportunity to spend concentrated time with 3 other Black woman scholars—an experience that is rare in graduate school for many Black students (a story we tell each other often).

    Category: The Gnovis Blog

  • A Faithful Approximation: E Pluribus Nullus Pt. II

    In keeping with the theme begun in my last post, my entry today will continue to explore Anderson’s ‘imagined community’ as it relates to American military recruitment ads.

    Category: The Gnovis Blog

  • Twitters tweeting: What's the point?

    Two scrambled eggs, coffee, orange juice…delicious. 7:52 a.m.

    banana…all mushed up. i hate eating like a toddler. 12:24 p.m.

    chocolate milkshake and A TUNA MELT! makin’ serious progress. 4:47 p.m.

    Category: The Gnovis Blog

  • Conflating Space: Street Art 2.0

    This past Friday and Saturday, November 5 and 6, I attend two events in relation to the Irving Contemporary’s opening of Street Art 2.0 . While inescapably positioned within their own institutional realities, both events raised issues surrounding the role of context, intention, and the formation of meaning, and activated positions of artist and audience (as viewers and interpreters) in their prospective ways.

    Category: The Gnovis Blog

  • E Pluribus Nullus

    E pluribus unum – “out of many, one”

    Category: The Gnovis Blog