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	<title>Aaron McCollough</title>
	<link>http://aaronmccollough.com/blog</link>
	<description>I ENDURE</description>
	<lastBuildDate>Wed, 04 Feb 2009 03:31:26 +0000</lastBuildDate>
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		<title>John Seely Brown on Tinkering</title>
		<description><![CDATA[JSB is a sharp dude. This video offers lots of things to chew on regarding play and invention in learning.  As I watched it, I found myself in the unlikely spot of thinking about creative writing workshops and flarf simultaneously (if only he didn&#8217;t sneak in the bit about giving credit to those whose [...]]]></description>
		<link>http://aaronmccollough.com/blog/?p=87</link>
			</item>
	<item>
		<title>Is this true?</title>
		<description><![CDATA[From the Princeton Alumni Weekly&#8230;what humanists want from libraries:
Still, Grafton believes that humanists will want to wander the stacks. &#8216;Students need to be in the library because that’s how you learn your fields of scholarship,&#8217; he says. &#8216;I don’t actually think you can learn it on the Web in the way you learn it by [...]]]></description>
		<link>http://aaronmccollough.com/blog/?p=84</link>
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		<title>In the long run&#8230;</title>
		<description><![CDATA[&#8220;Long run is a misleading guide to current affairs. In the long run we are all dead.&#8221; — John Maynard Keynes
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		<link>http://aaronmccollough.com/blog/?p=82</link>
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		<title>ReBlog: Peter Klausler, American Cargo Cult</title>
		<description><![CDATA[From http://klausler.com/cargo.html
Peter Klausler on
Principles of the American Cargo Cult
&#8220;I wrote these principles after reflecting on the content of contemporary newspapers and broadcast media and why that content disquieted me.  I saw that I was not disturbed so much by what was written or said as I was by what is not.  The tacit [...]]]></description>
		<link>http://aaronmccollough.com/blog/?p=78</link>
			</item>
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		<title>Wordsworth/Keats: Some Class Notes</title>
		<description><![CDATA[Today, in the poetry intro class, we had a pretty successful conversation about Wordsworth’s Preface to Lyrical Ballads and Keats’ letters.  We are using Kwasny’s Poetics Anthology, Towards the Open Field.  As I expected, students found the philosophical tenor of the language a bit challenging (and also a bit dull, I think).  [...]]]></description>
		<link>http://aaronmccollough.com/blog/?p=73</link>
			</item>
	<item>
		<title>Note</title>
		<description><![CDATA[If the Internet (along with its models of &#8220;globalizing&#8221; interconnectivity and hyper-subjectivity) represents the most significant and meaningful leap in technology in our era, and this leap has   (will have) major implications for the way we think about reality and actuality, should poets not be thinking against its grain as much as along [...]]]></description>
		<link>http://aaronmccollough.com/blog/?p=72</link>
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		<title>Blogging on the go</title>
		<description><![CDATA[Now that wordpress has a working app for the iPhone, I am hoping to be a bit more regular in making posts.  
The whole idea of blogging from a mobile device seems like it could exaccerbate the problems that often keep me from blogging in the first place (namely, the temptation to blurt things [...]]]></description>
		<link>http://aaronmccollough.com/blog/?p=71</link>
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		<title>A Kind of Schizoanalytic Stroll</title>
		<description><![CDATA[MUTO a wall-painted animation by BLU from blu on Vimeo.
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		<link>http://aaronmccollough.com/blog/?p=69</link>
			</item>
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		<title>New Review of Little Ease at Word For/Word</title>
		<description><![CDATA[Adam Strauss has written an astute review of my most recent book Little Ease over on the new issue of Word For/Word.  Stop on by for lots of other good stuff.
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		<link>http://aaronmccollough.com/blog/?p=68</link>
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		<title>Neighbor-love and Daniil Kharms&#8217; &#8220;The Old Woman&#8221; (more notes towards an unquiet metaphysics)</title>
		<description><![CDATA[I’ve been thinking about the idea of “the neighbor” for a long time.  I was raised in the Methodist Church in Tennessee by parents with fairly eccentric views on religion (at least for the bible belt), and my reception of Christian doctrine and dogma was always pretty bipolar.  On the one hand, I [...]]]></description>
		<link>http://aaronmccollough.com/blog/?p=67</link>
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