alixtii: Player from <i>Where on Earth Is Carmen Sandiego?</i> playing the game. (Default)
alixtii ([personal profile] alixtii) wrote2007-06-28 09:31 pm

Blessed by the ILL Gods and Other Stories

The book I ordered, Alice's Adventures: Lewis Carroll in Popular Culture by Will "I'm Not Allowed to Say I Think Hayden Panettiere Is Hot" Brooker, has arrived. I'll tell you what I think of it when I've finished. That means, so far, I've gotten books by this guy, [livejournal.com profile] henryjenkins, and [livejournal.com profile] rozk, but I'm still waiting for [livejournal.com profile] kbusse_blog's book to show up. Woes.

*

I posted fic Tuesday night, Emma and Kitty acting out one of the femslashier (and cross-gen-y) scenes from "The Snow Queen," in a way which actually fits into AXM canon. I thought my flist would eat it up. (Apparently not?)

*

Courtesy of [livejournal.com profile] slammerkinbabe: The Roberts Court continues to prove itself activist. (N.B.: My intent is to make fun of the "activist" meme, not to endorse it. There are times when when the Court should be activist [I have a very expansive view of Constitutional rights] and times when it shouldn't. The best government isn't the government which governs least, but the one which governs best. In other words, I'm unashamedly partisan.) Actually, looking at the front page of the New York Times, "activist" doesn't really begin to cover it. God they were busy. (And conservative. Oh, so very conservative. Much more than I actually expected, really. I guess stare decisis is a thing of the past.)

*

Earlier today, I was confused whether it should be "Do you want Mom and me to go to the store?" or "Do you want Mom and I to go to the store?" On reflection, taking out "Mom and" makes it pretty clear that the "correct" pronoun is "me" (as one would never say "Do you want I to go to the store?") but I'm still not sure why that is the case, or what all of the pieces in that sentence are doing. Sentences that I can't diagram vex me.

*

The rector at my parish, who will be retiring shortly (woes!), gave me two books by Pierre Teilhard de Chardin in order to clear out his own collection. I've only browsed through them, but in general I have to say I find theological works from that era absolutely fascinating, since besides a few pages of Tillich that I read and fell in love with in high school (yes, my Catholic high school had Tillich in its library) I've pretty much only read theology that was written since 1970 (mostly feminist, postmodernist, and/or liberationist theology) or else stuff like Aquinas and Augustine. The specific set of problems that a 1960's theology needed to address is similar in many ways to those of today, but alongside Beyond God the Father, Ecology & Liberation, and The Prayers and Tears of Jacques Derrida it sort of ends up looking rather quaint, if you know what I mean. (OTOH, some parts I read and I totally go "OMG, I can't believe he just said that.")

[identity profile] likeadeuce.livejournal.com 2007-06-29 01:36 am (UTC)(link)
Is "me" the indirect object?

[identity profile] mimoletnoe.livejournal.com 2007-06-29 03:02 am (UTC)(link)
by Will "I'm Not Allowed to Say I Think Hayden Panettiere Is Hot" Brooker
*dies*

That means, so far, I've gotten books by this guy, henryjenkins, and rozk, but I'm still waiting for kbusse_blog's book to show up.
I don't know what you have of Henry's, but Kristina's and Karen's book is really worth it! I got it back in... October? and am yet to find something as good and helpful for my research. That doesn't mean that you will like it, though, I'm just sharing my impressions here, fwiw.

[identity profile] azdak.livejournal.com 2007-06-29 08:13 am (UTC)(link)
"Me", like "Mom", is the object of want, hence it is in the accusative; and it is not the subject of "to go" (even though you are the person who will carry out the action) because "to go" is in the infinitive and therefore cannot take a subject. However, this is one of those areas of syntax where English is in the process of change - it's becoming increasingly common for speakers not to inflect the pronoun in situations like this, where the pronoun is paired with another noun ("Do you want Jim and I to help you?"). I think it only applies to the first person pronoun, though ("Do you want Jim and she to help you?" is clearly not acceptable) and is probably developing by analogy with "X and I" in the subject position (like the Queen always saying "My husband and I").

[identity profile] hermionesviolin.livejournal.com 2007-06-29 01:51 pm (UTC)(link)
I am *so* pleased to see someone owning the fact that what they really endorse is a court that's activist in the ways they would like.