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August, 2008

  1. Taquerias in Columbus Ohio

    August 24, 2008 by elenamary

    I read an article and was subtly offended by it but I didn’t have a way to articulate why. I’ve been thinking about the article since I read it on Thursday. Then today while driving to pick-up a friend of mine who hangs out with a lot of hipsters, it hit me. What would it be like if I picked up a Spanish language newspaper written by some Latinos who wrote of hipsters moving into their neighborhood and what they were like, and how they viewed their new neighbors and asked them what they thought of racism?

    The article is about a photographer Alexandra Copley (her Taqueria blog), who currently has a photography exhibit of taco trailers around Columbus, Ohio. I want to make it clear, I am not offended by Alexandra Copley’s work. It is more that I have a sense of my people being displayed as other worldly as entertainment like zoo animals.

    It reminds me of a night when I was hanging out with a bunch of international students from Latin America who were attending OSU, when some sorority girls stopped and seemed entertained at watching us play dominoes, share food, and speak in Spanish. One of the girls said excitedly “I feel like it’s Culture awareness night!” She didn’t mean it as offensive and she was a sweet enough person but it made me uncomfortable. This article gives me a similar feeling, as does the idea of the exhibit. What are the true thoughts of hipsters and yuppies who go that gallery? How do they actually view people of color? What do they gain from the exhibit?


  2. DNCC – bloggueros to keep an eye out for

    August 24, 2008 by elenamary

    The DNCC starts tomorrow, and I recommend keeping an eye on the following bloguerros who will be in attendance:

    Al Giordano: of Narco News has his blog, The Field: Al Giordano Reports the U.S. Presidential Election, where he will be covering the convention.

    Edmundo Rocha (aka Xicano Power): his bog ¡Para Justicia y Libertad!: Because there are some things still worth fighting for. I like Xicano Power’s blog a bit more than some in that he’ll put more smack down while others tip-toe around what they want to say in order not to offend…and Xicano Power is not worried about offending.

    Liza Sabeter (AKA Blogdiva): Bloguerra of Culture Kitchen and the Daily Gotham. Blogdiva gives a radically honest perspective on everything she covers. I tend to read Culture Kitchen a lot more than the Daily Gotham. Culture Kitchen covers many topics I am interested in (Race, Politics, Gender, Class, Pop Culture) and Daily Gotham focuses mostly on issues concerning the State of New York.

    Mamita Mala: one of the first blogs I ever started reading was this one. I expect most news to be slanted by a either a male or heterosexual or white perspective, you won’t get that with Maegan’s blog, Mamita Mala – One Bad Mami: One Radical Nuyorican Mami Writer Livin’ In the Revolutionary Mami’hood.

    Matt Ortega: One of my favorite bloguerros will also be at the convention. His blog is crisp and easy to read, his blog is self titled Matt Ortega.

    (If there is a bloguerro you think should be added to the list, and I am sure there are, please let me know)


  3. Biden announced as VP candidate, politicos yawn.

    August 23, 2008 by elenamary

    I expected (and am smug about it) that Biden would be announced as Obama’s VP candidate, as such I was not shocked at the news today.

    I give you a link to my previous post on Biden and my favorite Biden quote regarding Obama:

    “I mean, you got the first mainstream African-American who is articulate and bright and clean and a nice-looking guy,” Biden said. “I mean, that’s a storybook, man.”

    Best of luck to the two senators.


  4. Twitter Etiquette

    August 20, 2008 by elenamary

    As you can tell no real posts this week (or for the rest of it) as I am super busy IRL.

    I did however just get a super tweet from Elizabeth on Twitter Etiquette, and yes I got it via twitter.

    For those of you who don’t know what twitter is, I think a great summation of it and its absurdity is given in the etiquette guide:

    Technically, this isn’t an article about the things Twitter does, it’s an article about the ways in which you can accidentally annoy people with Twitter. Should you choose to avoid Twitter, that’s fine. Enjoy your coffee. Ours is cold now because we were photographing the latté art to share with all our friends, but you can drink yours in solitude.

    If you are interested in know what kind of “Twitter” I am, I guess I would probably say I am for the most part a “responder”.


  5. Nostalgia

    August 18, 2008 by elenamary

    I haven’t put any pics on my flickr account in about a year…and I just reordered a year of it after having let it lapse for almost two years I think…anyway…looking at pictures…well it makes me nostalgic…

    Mis Amigos sofa

    Thomas und Frank

    the guysers


  6. Beauty of education

    August 17, 2008 by elenamary

    I sat with a friend who did his bachelors in electrical engineering and with another friend who is an English professor. Engineering friend was trying to convince English prof friend that solving a challenging math problem can sometimes be as beautiful and fulfilling as reading a wonderful novel. He was right, and she couldn’t see it. Not because she isn’t brilliant (the contrary) but because she had never learned math the way he had.

    I was terrible at math. Absolutely horrible. In college I tested into pre-college algebra but I worked my way through the high level math classes required for a BS in economics. There were moments of beauty in math. Moments where I saw things in ways I never had. I saw logic in ways I never knew were possible and it was astounding and satisfying. I cried in an economics course a few years ago, because I was astounded at how differently I was viewing things. On Thursday, in organic chemistry, I had a similar yet completely new moment of awe, where I found myself filled with wonder. I was seeing the molecules, I could picture them, their movements, their arrangements, the natural art of it all something I never knew that existed. It is an overwhelming feeling of bewilderment when you realize that this beauty has always been there and not only could you have never comprehended it before, you didn’t even know it existed.

    It brought home my mother’s advice that I often quote, no one can ever take away your education. Even if I were to fail this class, or never go back, or lose everything, I would still have a different perspective because of chemistry. I will look at all problems differently not just chemistry but literature, language, math, art, they are all intertwined. This moment of lucidity also fortified that education needs to be free and accessible to all ages.

    Our education shouldn’t be a career training path that is predetermined but one that is flexible and encourages us to grow and view things differently. If our citizens want to take a class on the Bible as literature, or microbiology, it shouldn’t be required that they be grad students in English, or Nursing students. Instead it should be offered because if we have a well rounded, well educated society, we can view things from an interweaved and poetic perspective.