It's that time of year again, when another school year lurks around the corner. In my previous life, I'd be prepping the cases for my "beloved" 416 (certainly much LOVED by my students), and finding strange videos to show my consumer behaviour students. Well, those days are long gone. Now I'm looking at another year of fun classes and term papers, of lectures and exams, of inane class discussion by my classmates, and TOTAL FREEDOM!!!!!
Time now to take stock of what I did this past summer. Apart from cutting the fucking grass, that is.
I read, of course. As most of you know, I enjoy reading. But I realize that I've scaled back my ambitious summer reading list, now that I have to read tons of stuff for school. Still, reading gives me immense pleasure. Let's see if I can recount my summer reading so far:
Strategies of Containment by Gaddis
The Cold War, a New History, by Gaddis
The Power of Babel, by McWhorter
Ancient Rome, by Baker
The Rise and Fall of the British Empire, by James
Words on the Move, by McWhorter
and now struggling through Kissinger's A World Restored (I say struggling, because it's pretty dense and quite a hard read. But very interesting).
Up next, Tyrant, by Greenblatt.
I also did a Harvardx online course on Hamlet's Ghost. So very illuminating! And now I'm working on one about Star Trek and its impact on science and technology. If you're wondering, these things are free and are available via Harvard https://www.edx.org/course Check it out!
OK, all work and no play is not good. So I also baked loaves of rye bread. Gotta be my favourite baking project. No machines either. People who use bread machines to make bread are not REAL bakers, haha.
Oh, almost forgot, I also finished a short story, submitted it, got rejected, and resubmitted elsewhere. Let's hope I have good news to share later on.
If you have been following the news, you'd know about the protests in Hong Kong. Whatever your political persuasion, you gotta give the protestors credit for having the courage to protest a dictatorship, especially while living in the shadow of a PLA (Communist Chinese Army) garrison stationed in your very city. As you know, I was born there, so while I have no allegiance to Hong Kong anymore, it was my place of birth. What I read dismays me, and I fear for the people there. We all know what dictatorships do when pressed against the wall. Read Tianenman Square from 30 years ago. It's a major surprise to myself that I am following the events there so closely. I have never done this before.
I'm not going to let political stuff get into my blog much, but I thought I'd share with you something that's dampening my summer mood. Alas, we are all prisoners of our geography.
One month (or so) to go before school starts. I can't wait!
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