Tag: institutions

  • The Rubber-Meets-the-Road Test

    The Rubber-Meets-the-Road Test

    Critical librarianship is everywhere. The reading lists, the conference panels, the bios. Nobody is against it. The profession has learned to wear the critique like a lanyard. Sara Ahmed, writing about institutional diversity work, calls it “doing the document.” The report that stands in for the action, the statement that substitutes for the risk. The…

  • Sophisticated Extraction: Wrathion and the Politics of Allegiance

    Sophisticated Extraction: Wrathion and the Politics of Allegiance

    The first time I encountered Wrathion in Mists of Pandaria, I was suspicious of him in the way you are suspicious of someone who is performing transparency. He tells you who he is. He explains his motives. He places himself above the factions with a reasonableness that is almost disarming: I don’t care who wins…

  • The Vanilla Boss: Ragnaros and the Politics of Not Knowing the Patch Notes Changed

    The Vanilla Boss: Ragnaros and the Politics of Not Knowing the Patch Notes Changed

    Before I go into Molten Core now, I dismiss Thunder. My spirit beast, a creature of genuine power, hard-won and irreplaceable, waits outside. Then I equip the gray bow. The one I keep specifically for this type of encounter in legacy content. The one that makes the fight last long enough to feel like a…

  • The Long Surrender: Kael’thas Sunstrider and the Politics of Injury

    The Long Surrender: Kael’thas Sunstrider and the Politics of Injury

    There exists a version of Kael’thas Sunstrider that is easy to disregard. The raid boss. The villain monologuing in Tempest Keep. The prince who delivered his people to the Burning Legion and called it strategy. That version is available as pure spectacle. A fallen figure whose arc resolves cleanly into betrayal, whose choices can be…

  • The True Believer: Kel’Thuzad and the Politics of Abstention

    The True Believer: Kel’Thuzad and the Politics of Abstention

    We have good language for the villain. The usual villain announces herself through overreach, through the document drafted before anyone has said yes, through the meeting called to ratify a decision already made. Her opposition has a known, familiar outline. It can be named, contested, organized against. What institutional life has worked very hard to…

  • The Crack in the Throne and the Banshee’s Cry

    The Crack in the Throne and the Banshee’s Cry

    There is a moment in the lore of World of Warcraft that has been rattling around in my brain lately, vibrating at the same frequency as my research and other conceptual work. It’s the moment Sylvanas Windrunner breaks free from the Lich King. It was an infrastructure failure. The Frozen Throne, the literal seat of…

  • No Outside on the Expressway

    No Outside on the Expressway

    Near the end of No Other Choice, Man-su sits in his car on the expressway. The traffic has stopped. Around him are enormous trucks carrying lumber destined for the paper mill. The trucks tower over his small car. He cannot move. The vehicles box him in on every side. At first, the image reads as…

  • When You See It

    Cassandra, the Trojan princess. According to the Greek myth, Cassandra was given the gift of prophecy by Apollo. She could see the future clearly. She could recognize danger before it arrived. She could warn others about what was coming. But when she refused Apollo, he twisted the gift into a curse. Cassandra would still see…