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Scrotum
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Tightening
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Just in
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time for Bloomsday, the British publisher Picador has issued a new
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"reader-friendly" edition of Ulysses in Europe, and scholars are
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declaring it a travesty. The 10,000 alleged improvements include punctuating
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Molly Bloom's famous monologue and rewriting knotty sentences. Some of editor
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Danis Rose's changes may seem merely cosmetic--the famous evocation of the
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"scrotumtightening sea," for example, appears as "scrotum-tightening." But, as
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a reviewer in the Irish Times noted, adding that hyphen "loses the contractive
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effect on the male appendages of an early-morning dip." Indignant Joyceans also
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quarrel with Rose for fiddling with Joyce's use of dialect (substituting "Cor
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blimey" for "God blimey") and slicing the "Oxen of the Sun" chapter into 11
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separate sections. Perhaps the most vocal critic has been Boston University's
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John Kidd, who in 1988 also exposed legions of errors in Hans Walter Gabler's
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so-called "Corrected Text" of Ulysses . Kidd's own seven-volume Norton
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edition of Ulysses is due out next year.
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Nabokov's
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Blues
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Vladimir
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Nabokov's taxonomies of Latin American butterflies, long disparaged as armchair
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entomology, turn out to be top-drawer science, according to a recent article in
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the New York Times . In the 1940s, the émigré novelist held a part-time
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job at Harvard's Museum of Comparative Zoology and published the first
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attempted classification of an obscure group of blue butterflies known as
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Polyommatini . For years, Nabokov's study attracted more attention from
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literary critics than from scientists. But in 1993, lepidopterists Kurt Johnson
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and Zsolt Balint embarked on a new study of the butterflies, and then compared
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their results with Nabokov's. The duo's findings are published in "Nabokov as
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Lepidopterist: An Informed Appraisal," in the current issue of Nabokov
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Studies . Of the seven generic names established by Nabokov, five were
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deemed still valid, and the two mistakes could be attributed to his not having
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had enough samples. In recognition of this achievement, the lepidopterists have
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christened some recently discovered specimens of the Polyommatini with
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Nabokovian names, such as Madeleinea lolita .
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Suicidal
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Tendencies
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Using the
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same data, the nation's two leading medical journals have reached opposite
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conclusions on the consequences of legalizing assisted suicide. Last winter,
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the New England Journal of Medicine surveyed more than 5,000 doctors in
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the Netherlands and found that, despite euthanasia-friendly laws, the country
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had experienced no significant upswing in doctor-assisted deaths. An
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accompanying editorial argued that the Dutch experience should alleviate
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fears that legalizing assisted suicide would lead to "widespread involuntary
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euthanasia" performed on society's weakest members. A new report in the
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Journal of the American Medical Association, however, looks
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at the same questionnaires and claims that doctor-assisted deaths in the
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Netherlands have in fact skyrocketed--by 27 percent over the past five years.
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The questionnaires also revealed, JAMA says, that an alarming number of
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physicians had administered fatal doses of painkillers to "fully competent"
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patients without their approval. Now each journal is accusing the other of
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masking political commentary as science. For more on the assisted-suicide
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issue, see Slate's "Dialogue."
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The
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Showalter Fan Club
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Princeton
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English Professor Elaine Showalter's recent polemic, Hystories: Hysterical
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Epidemics and Modern Media , argues that such supposedly organic illnesses
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as Chronic Fatigue and Gulf War syndromes are simply psychological disorders.
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The claim has so angered Chronic Fatigue Syndrome sufferers that they've turned
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out in large numbers to heckle Showalter on her book tour. They've also erected
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a Web
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Site devoted to debunking Showalter's arguments. One section, called
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"Handling
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Showalter," suggests questions for sufferers to ask the author when she
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swings by their local bookshop, such as: "Is Elaine projecting? Isn't it true
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that those who have emotional problems often project their problems onto
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others? And so, aren't you yourself doing this?" Other recommended questions
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include: "Are you psychiatric?" and "How well is Elaine?" On another page,
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which features testimonies from people who've had run-ins with Showalter, one
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Washington, D.C., contributor recounts asking the professor to sign his copy of
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the book--with an apology.
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Baby
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Talk
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A recent
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article in Science
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claimed to rebut Noam Chomsky's theory that our capacity for language is
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hard-wired in a particular--and uniquely human--module of the brain. Last
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December, three cognitive psychologists at the University of Rochester played
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two-minute audiotapes consisting of short nonsense words (such as "bidakupado")
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for a group of 8-month-old babies. The infants, they found, listened longer to
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subsequent tapes that didn't contain these words than to those that
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did--suggesting the babies had "learned" the words. According to the Rochester
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team, the findings suggest that our language-learning abilities may have to do
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with our general cognitive prowess, not with any particular language "module."
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But a gallery of letters published in the May 23 issue of Science says this finding hardly undermines Chomskyan linguistics.
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MIT's Steven Pinker argues that the Rochester researchers fail to comprehend
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that "learning words and learning grammar are ... different computational
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problems." In other words, it's not our vocabularies but our ability to string
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words together that is a distinctively human evolutionary adaptation.
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Veritas
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Last week, Harvard University
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owned up to some embarrassing real-estate deals. Over the past eight years, the
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school acquired over $88 million of real estate in the Allston section of
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Boston without revealing its identity to prospective sellers. At first, Harvard
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officials excused the ploy by saying that if community members had known they
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were dealing with an institution worth $9 billion, they would have demanded
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exorbitant premiums. After the Boston Globe and Boston Mayor Tommy
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Menino raised a ruckus, however, Harvard's communications director admitted
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that the school had committed a "breach of trust," and promised to be more "up
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front" in future maneuvers.
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--Compiled by the editors of Lingua Franca, The Review of Academic
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Life . Click here
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to visit their site or to subscribe.
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