Texas Tech University System’s censorship of all content related to gender and sexuality is in contravention to Regents' Rules, e.g., 04.04.03: faculty must encourage "free inquiry in the classroom...and maintain a climate of mutual respect which will enhance the free interplay of ideas.”
Posts by Deena Varner
Thanks for this. Happy to meet a kindred AmStudies spirit, despite the circumstances!
I'm not sure 2 leads directly to → 3. Joking aside, I really am on here tonight because I'm at a total loss...
I wish I weren't so averse to social media and being in the public eye, as this definitely sounds appealing
🙏
Of course. Not a dig at all, just making sure the details are correct. Thanks for posting about this.
I've literally had panic attacks. I'm terrified.
He's the new chancellor. Same provost.
I'm not entirely certain our provost *does* want to be our provost, under this regime...
Any similarly specific suggestions for faculty?
It's been radio silence since this memo, excepting a message from the Provost to follow the chain of command (read: don't contact the Provost's office). This is far beyond what we were told to expect in the wake of the previous memo—when we were informed that we had to follow the "law" re: gender.
I am completely bereft. This has been going on for months, with varying degrees of guidance, but this one takes it. I am terrified of what's happening, for myself, my students, my colleagues, the public I serve.
www.texastech.edu/downloads/25...
Our first post is an invitation! Join is to explore creative methods in carceral geography with these amazing people. Register here: events.humanitix.com/cgwg-worksho...
It was lovely working with @virvere.bsky.social on this wonderful review of Carceral Worlds: Legacies, Textures, and Futures, which foregrounds "how people feel and experience [a multiplicity of] carceralities."
This conversation among recent political prisoners captures so many subtleties and contradictions of social life in prison—and a plug for their new book, City Time
Ahed’s Knee seems to be about the nationalist/racist/bureaucratic/authoritarian state, but the film within the film (the critique within the critique)—the *sympathy* and *admiration* for Ahed Tamimi—is a brilliant take on the structural relationship between liberalism and state violence.
For the last time: The illegal / legal immigrant distinction is a manufactured crisis designed to mask deeper anxieties about white supremacy and generate support for nativist policies.
This executive order essentially mandates that universities develop a complex surveillance infrastructure to monitor each and every employee at any and at all times, framing all faculty and staff as threats to national security.
All employees of Texas universities "must be routinely reviewed to determine whether or not things such as criminal history...might prevent [them] from being able to maintain the security or or integrity of the infrastructure."
Personal travel to China requires notifying the state in advance and submitting "a post-travel brief outlining details of the trip, including the dates and purpose of travel."
Employees of Texas universities are no longer permitted to travel to China for teaching, research, or any other professional purposes. Greg Abbott has unilaterally crippled ties between American and Chinese academics. gov.texas.gov/uploads/file...
Toward an Intersectional Analysis of Money: Racial Capitalism, Stagflation, and Unemployment as Economic Policy David Stein American Quarterly Johns Hopkins University Press Volume 76, Number 4, December 2024 pp. 795-820 10.1353/aq.2024.a945171
I love a “drop everything and read” moment in my google scholar alerts for “carceral state.” New @davidstein.bsky.social article in American Quarterly! muse.jhu.edu/pub/1/articl...
This Black Friday, you'll probably notice the effects of inflation on price tags. What might not be so obvious though is its effect on the criminal legal system.
Each year, inflation makes the system more punitive – and that's not a good deal.
www.prisonpolicy.org/blog/2020/06...
Jailbots are like every recent #AI #surveillance horror movie squared. I wonder if someone watched Megan and said, let's do that in prisons! one.npr.org/i/nx-s1-5178...
I'm pretty sure they also think English is either knowing all the grammar rules or having read all the novels.
Whether time travel is literal (as with Kindred) or metaphorical (through devices like nostalgia or anachronism), how does this literature go beyond “lasting impacts” to help us understand the impossibility of radical social change without revolution?
Time travel and kinship networks make intergenerational trauma an easy lens through which to read Kindred, but the other novels I’m reading—about the prison society, Cold War conservatism, and the Cultural Revolution—also play with time/space as historiography.
I’m prepping a class about “literature of the fantastic” through the lens of political systems and social control. As the semester winds down, I was able to spend an entire Saturday doing little else but rereading Octavia Butler’s Kindred.