Don't worry msbelle, you can come live with me. Of course, I'll be retired and living on a fixed income too, but that's okay.
My kids are so dang tired tonight. I think it's been a very long week for all of us.
'Conviction (1)'
Off-topic discussion. Wanna talk about corsets, duct tape, or physics? This is the place. Detailed discussion of any current-season TV must be whitefonted.
Don't worry msbelle, you can come live with me. Of course, I'll be retired and living on a fixed income too, but that's okay.
My kids are so dang tired tonight. I think it's been a very long week for all of us.
"7 or 7:20"
Ha!
At some point today my apartment was without power (flashing clocks) and there are large tree branches down in my neighborhood. The cats don't seem traumatized though.
New JibJab! [link]
I just finished watching Chess in concert.
That is not my Chess.
IOChessNews, I got a kids book and a cheap set to teach the kids.
Cool, Cash!
Decapitated and partially amputated rabbit on my inside doormat this morning. It's a bit . . . larger than the usual fare. I think maybe they might be working their way up to taking down a deer. Or me.
I just came downstairs to a thoroughly eviscerated box of kleenex.
Loki has issues with paper.
Ha! I love the Loki stories.
So my thesis adviser just rejected my general idea around assisted reproductive technology. Told me that the topic is outside of the scope of humanities. Isn't humanities general enough?!
I had to then begin to rework my idea which is now something like this:
My previous thesis idea was to look at early modern cookbooks to figure out what it said about women's literacy. They were very personal books, because women used those books to "transact" literacy, either by what was written in the book (handwriting practice/notes/etc), or how they were used and adapted (changes women made to advice/recipes etc.)
In some ways, looking at what women are currently writing about their experiences with assisted reproductive technologies (ART) is a modern day equivalent. The difference is the that women are primarily writing blogs now and not notes on in the margins for how to salt fish.
My interest in their writing is multifold: the topic is interesting to me because I have a personal connection. But also, what I'm most interested and perhaps what is most humanities-related is how women are writing about their experiences, what it says about their conceptions of their own "femaleness" or their own role in their own families, and why they are using this specific medium to express their ideas.
Sound more convincingly humanities related?
Also, previous post totally TLDR!
I fell asleep with the baby on his bed and now I'm all discombobulated. I need to stop doing that.