joneilortiz

joneilortiz is a PhD student in the Film & Media department at the University of Pittsburgh.

Bank Forbids Use of Social Networking Sites to Screen Job Applicants

Isn’t this a whole lot more practical, and ethical, than inspiring vague fears in teens and jobseekers — that everything they do and write will come back to haunt them, that they’re constantly being watched, that their future depends on keeping-up appearances (a problem I go over here)?
You won’t find Amegy Bank of Texas CEO [...]

Amazon ‘glitch’ removes sales rank from gay books

Interesting case of ranking algorithms as covert mechanisms of inclusion/exclusion:
A “glitch” on Amazon.com has caused the sales rank to be removed from gay- and/or lesbian-themed books by James Baldwin, Gore Vidal and others. (via, April 12th)

The Man of Commerce, 1889, by A.F. McKay

The Man of Commerce, 1889, by A.F. McKay, originally uploaded by joneilortiz.

Sitcom Maps and American Mythology

I love the idea that our everyday world is overlaid with (or better yet, haunted by) a vibrant, fictive universe of characters and storylines, spin-offs and syndications. And so, apparently, does Dan Meth, whose Pop-Cultural Charts series maps much more than the geography of TV sitcoms. These maps are also, to be sure, a blueprint for the [...]

BLDGBLOG Book Release

The much-awaited BLDGBLOG book is out. Sounds like the visually-stunning, encyclopaedic tour de force we’ve been expecting: 
“It’s got five major chapters and a huge bibliography; it’s got interviews, full-color photo spreads (by Simon Norfolk! David Maisel! Edward Burtynsky! Ilkka Halso! Bas Princen! and more!), as well as original illustrations by my colleague at Dwell, Brendan Callahan; it’s [...]

Detroit Green-Ready Houses Going for $100

Somehow I missed this inspiring development: artists are moving in to Detroit, buying up houses for dirt cheap and converting them into linked-up, green artist communities.
A local couple, Mitch Cope and Gina Reichert, started the ball rolling. An artist and an architect, they recently became the proud owners of a one-bedroom house in East Detroit [...]

Facebook Forever

I love the idea that, as Ulla remarks in the comments, “we are really not that much more advanced than the 1700’s …” Perhaps we do, on the whole, tend to overestimate the degree to which new forms of social ties are historically novel. Maybe Facebook is merely the next phase, or version, of a much more [...]

Neil Levi on Carl Schmitt and the Question of the Aesthetic

It’s a common accusation of the left that politics, liberal and conservative alike, becomes “aestheticized” through persistent suspensions of law and declarations of emergencies. But what, exactly, Neil Levi asks, in a timely, subtle paper on Carl Schmitt, is so “aesthetic” about political decisionism, a doctrine still fresh on our lips in the Obama era. [...]

Synaesthesia, Aristotle, and Product Experience

Synaesthesia, Aristotle, and Product Experience

“Sunaisthēsis is the distant origin of the modern “synaesthesia”; the verb from which it was drawn, sunaisthanesthai, can be found in two passages of Aristotle’s treatises. “Formed by the addition of the prefix ‘with’ (sun-) to the verb ‘to sense’ or ‘to perceive’ (aisthanesthai), the expression in all likelihood designated a ‘feeling in common,’ a [...]

Face recognition and the Islamic niqab

Der Spiegel reports of another “Veiled Woman Removed From Bus in Denmark“:
“For Amina Farah Suleiman, it was the fourth time in a few months that she has been kicked off a bus in the harbor city of Odense. Her Islamic niqab only had a small opening for the eyes, and the driver refused to accept [...]

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