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Tyranny of the Ethnography: How Lived Experience Corrupts the Social Sciences

by Toni Airaksinen

When Arleen, a single mother of two, was evicted from her Milwaukee apartment, she had one option. It was January of 2008, one of the snowiest years on record. With no safety net, Arleen did the only thing she could. She took her sons — Jori was thirteen, Jafaris was five — to the local homeless shelter. According to Harvard Professor Matthew Desmond, evictions used to be extremely rare. Who dare cast a mother and her children to the streets? When they did occur, evictions caused outrage, riots. But now, when families are evicted, community outcry is nonexistent. Bags are packed. Possessions are scavenged. A family is uprooted. Millions of the American urban poor have faced eviction. In Milwaukee, where Desmond conducted his field research,  a staggering 1 in 8 residents faced formal or informal eviction between 2009 and 2011 alone. This doesn’t just happen in Wisconsin. As Desmond says: “This book is set in Milwaukee, but it tells an American story.” Evicted: Poverty and Profit in the American City is an ethnography that...

January 9, 2017
comments 11
Spotlight

How Will History Remember Obama?

Published by Sumantra Maitra

Ta-Nehisi Coates started the revisionism over the most divisive and controversial President in post Cold war history, as Ta-Nehisi Coates is wont to do. Which is unfortunate, because Obama,...

January 8, 2017
comments 13
Foreign Policy, History

Students, Sex, Social Media and Why the Steven Galloway Affair Is so Murky

Published by Irene Ogrizek

On a frigid night a few years ago, a friend dragged me to an event at a popular Montreal bar. Students of a local graduate program in creative writing...

January 6, 2017
comments 2
Education, Features, Feminism
Editorial

Help Us Build Our Platform for Free Thought

Dear reader, Quillette has been proud to offer an independent source of unorthodox commentary since November 2015. With your support we wish to increase the frequency and variety of...

December 29, 2016
comments 11
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January 8, 2017

How Will History Remember Obama?

Ta-Nehisi Coates started the revisionism over the most divisive and controversial President in post Cold war history, as Ta-Nehisi...

by Sumantra Maitra
comments 13
January 6, 2017

Monks in High Towers: A Plea to Our Fellow Academics

“The man who knows more and more about less and less is becoming a public nuisance”¹ Emblazoned above the...

by Jonny Anomaly and Brian Boutwell
comments 7
January 6, 2017

Students, Sex, Social Media and Why the Steven Galloway Affair Is so Murky

On a frigid night a few years ago, a friend dragged me to an event at a popular Montreal...

by Irene Ogrizek
comments 2
January 6, 2017

Free Speech and Terrorism – Whatever you do, don’t mention Islam!

Trump will now be president. Thanks a lot, regressive leftists. Whatever you do, decent progressive people, when terrorism comes...

by Jeffrey Tayler
comments 15
January 5, 2017

Pundits are Blind to the Grassroots of Political Change

Last month, in Al Jazeera, Alasdair Soussi wrote about the rise of the “celebrity politician” honing in on the...

by Gearoid Murphy
comments 2
January 4, 2017

Rehabilitating Feminism

Several years ago, I came across a video of Muslim reformer Maajid Nawaz on Youtube where he explained the...

by Jacob Little
comments 11
January 2, 2017

The University as a Total Institution

Concentrated Power is Not Rendered Harmless by the Good Intentions of Those Who Create It — Milton Friedman Administrators...

by John Paul Wright
comments 16
January 1, 2017

Your Guide to Blaming Russia for Everything

There’s a secret that not many people know. It’s time you were briefed on it. Close the door and...

by Caleb Bridgeman
comments 5
December 25, 2016

In Praise of Ignorance

I recently had a discussion with a very intelligent woman, a Ph.D fresh from an Ivy League university. We...

by Simon Cullen
comments 59
December 23, 2016

Are the Gender Wars Just Getting Started?

The Victorian government has delivered an unexpected Christmas present to Australian conservatives: a parting of the ways with Roz...

by Timothy Cootes
comments 8
December 20, 2016

What is a Sexist?

What kinds of statements about men and women constitute sexism? Is it sexist to say, for example, that on...

by Jonny Anomaly and Brian Boutwell
comments 35
December 18, 2016

Islam’s Liberal Counter-Insurgency

A review of The Battle for British Islam: Reclaiming Muslim Identity from Extremism, by Sara Khan. Saqi Books (September 2016)...

by Jamie Palmer
comments 2
December 17, 2016

Not My Rights Movement

Currently, LGBTIQCAPGNGFNBA is believed to be the world’s longest acronym used to describe human sexual orientations and gender identities....

by Fred Litwin
comments 9
December 14, 2016

Expansion is no Longer the Answer to Improving the Education System

For 50 years, Australia’s policymakers have been persuaded that growth at every level of the education system would be...

by Dean Ashenden
comments 3
December 7, 2016

The Hijab and the Regressive Left’s Absurd Campaign to Betray Freethinking Women

Progressives should act like progressives – even when Islam is concerned The first woman in a hijab to anchor...

by Jeffrey Tayler
comments 32
December 1, 2016

The Social Justice Left and the Alt-Right: Our Divided New World

If you have ventured across the World Wide Web much further than cat pictures, recipes and nudie pics you...

by Ben Sixsmith
comments 19

Monks in High Towers: A Plea to Our Fellow Academics

by Jonny Anomaly and Brian Boutwell

“The man who knows more and more about less and less is becoming a public nuisance”¹ Emblazoned above the entrance to the religion department at Florida State University is an inscription: The half of knowledge is to know where to find knowledge. The imperative of knowing where to find knowledge cuts deeper than we might imagine in science. Knowledge isn’t quarantined off in a...

January 6, 2017
comments 7
Education, Features, Social Science
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