Monday, September 7, 2009 - 1:41 AM
My top ten notes, quotes, flotsam and jetsam from four days at the American Political Science Association's annual meeting in Toronto, Canada:
1) I predict a bevy of papers over the next six months with titles like:
2) Someone had the whimsy to locate a Hooters restaurant right next to the conference center. And no, I do not know who went there.
3) Pehaps related to the Hooters thing, the book room at APSA had a new wrinkle this year -- free five minute massages from a local massage school. And hell yes, I took advantage of this offer!
4) Said by a book editor as someone was buying one of his press' books: "Yeah.... good luck slogging through that one."
5) Books available for just three bucks at the conference -- indicating that these titles had either jumped the shark or never caught fire:
6) Overheard: "I have to tell you my Cornel West and Ronald Reagan anecdote."
7) Someone asked a female political scientist with an ankle tattoo whether it was Tibetan. She replied, "No, it's Elvish."
8) In conversation: "Things I do not worry about disappearing: death, taxes, and [a prominent political scientist's] ego."
9) I was puzzled and saddened by the paucity of panels about the financial meltdown and Great Recession. I was really puzzled and saddened by the low attendance at the few panels that addressed this topic.
10) The most gratifying thing I heard at the conference: "Your zombie post was awesome!!!"
EXPLORE:ACADEMIA, BAD POLITICAL SCIENCE BEHAVIOR, FOREIGN POLICY COMMUNITY, HUMOR, POLITICAL SCIENCE
Re: the number of panels about the financial crisis, I heard a number of people saying that this is really put up or shut up time for the field of international political economy. If there's ever a moment when a field *should* be able to say something interesting, it's now and the field is IPE. So far, I'm not encouraged.
"I was puzzled and saddened by the paucity of panels about the financial meltdown and Great Recession. I was really puzzled and saddened by the low attendance at the few panels that addressed this topic."
maybe everybody's already read...
Thomas Friedman's Hot, Flat and Crowded
Naomi Klein's The Shock Doctrine
Andrew Bacevich's The Limits of Power
Noam Chomsky's Failed States
John Mearsheimer and Stephen Walt's The Israel Lobby and U.S. Foreign Policy
...and they figure the american economy's jumped the shark.
*shrug*
start quaking in your boots when papers start appearing like...
"Neocons Jumped Shark on September 11, 2001"
now, then...
what to do for an encore...? hmmm...
how bout a twofer false flag, blaming iran and north korea for a little nuke going off in america?
that would clean up the remaining members of the axis of evil, wouldnt it?
Borders used to flog titles like this at extreme discounts. Perhaps they still do, but not here in London alas.
It used to be interesting to read this stuff two years after the fashions changed. Apart from saving money, it can be amazing to see how well ideas hold up (or not) after a bit of aging.
Daniel W. Drezner is professor of international politics at the Fletcher School of Law and Diplomacy at Tufts University.
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