Here is the link. I couldn't copy it here with the hyperlinks https://docs.google.com/document/d/1_ufal2kI4n-LTKKpp62Rw_QK_hyx0wuklQxk-Nu7_fQ/edit
My two questions from this week have emerged from the Judith Butler piece, A 'Bad Writer' Bites Back , both centered around the journal, Philosophy and Literature —which Butler describes as the self-proclaimed “arbiter of good prose.”  I agree with Butler’s staunch defense of questioning common sense and provoking “new ways of looking at a familiar world”, and was reminded of David Harvey’s quote in the introduction to his Companion to Marx’s Capital : “Real learning always entails a struggle to understand the unknown.”   Butler describes Philosophy and Literature  as a “culturally conservative academic journal” which naturally led me down a longer-than-anticipated visit to the journal's website . I was greeted with a video  presented by the Philosophy and Literature’s  editor Garry L. Hagberg, who rails against the “jargon infested” work that litters the journal’s field, locating Philosophy and Literature  in clear opposition to such bothersome clutter.  However, Hagberg...
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