This is the first post in what will doubtless be a dismayingly long series of occasional rants.
Via Grace Ioppolo on Twitter, here’s Simon Schama in The Observer:
“Shakespeare is in the unique position of speaking universally while not losing any of the intensity of the language of where he comes from,” said […]
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Last week, I saw two performances in London. One was the kind of show I tend to love and generally want to see much more of at home in Toronto: a contemporary staging of an old play (Richard Brinsley Sheridan’s The School for Scandal); the other was the kind of show I tend to […]
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Responding to Joshua Green’s challenge (thanks, Sarah Werner!), here are my humble contributions to this new emerging meme:
Breaking news.
He so excited, he so excited!
David Brooks […]
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Pictograms are fascinating images. Their purpose is to communicate as much as possible with the greatest economy of expression; they are designed to achieve both maximum comprehension and inclusivity.
Some pictograms are gender-specific – we all know this one:
The Replacements might lament the abidingly binary sartorial signifiers – either outdated or always-already
Paul Tuns has a meandering piece in yesterday’s Ottawa Citizen that ends up arguing against proportional representation, claiming that it is “a solution that is worse than the supposed problem it addresses.” One could debate this claim, but I won’t. Reasonable people can disagree about the advantages and disadvantages of PR. But […]
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From a recent report in The Guardian on the British government’s plans for the further deconstruction of England’s university system:
The government is also keen to encourage more corporate sponsorship of university places. The accountancy firm KPMG has unveiled a plan to pay fees for students at universities including Durham, in a training programme leading […]
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The Globe and Mail outdoes itself with a truly spectacularly awful piece of statistical hackery. That’s all I can say.
Who really benefited from vote splits this election? – The Globe and Mail.
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Hours after the election had been called for Stephen Harper’s Conservatives last Monday, I, slightly shellshocked, posted this tweet:
A week later, I would mend the PTSD-induced grammatical shortcomings, but my analysis of the election results hasn’t changed substantially. Let me explain.
A Tale of Two Waves
Depending on how one looks at the […]
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Holger Syme's work is licensed under a Creative Commons Attribution-NonCommercial 3.0 Unported License.Images may be reused as long as their source is properly attributed in accordance with the Creative Commons License detailed above. Many of the photos here were taken at the Folger Shakespeare Library; please consult their policy on digital images as well.