God I'm still mad about this shit "We need to move away from possessive language in the family. My son/daughter --> a juvenile in a domestic unit I participate in My wife --> a female member of the polycule I attend" YA DID IT YOU DONT OWN ANYTHING HAPPY NOW
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THE YEAR IS 2078 Perfect individual social liberty has been achieved No one owns anyone else anymore Everyone sleeps and dies alone
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Relationship archetypes are Actually Good Even when it's an asymmetric relationship Especially then, probably These seem to have been almost wholly dissolved. Only the parent/child bond struggles on Barely Here are some fun examples
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1. Master/pupil. Old varient: master taught the pupil daily; was involved and invested in his/her success; pupil worked in master's lab/atelier/whatever, shared meals with master, given parting gifts at graduation Today: relationships are passing, regulated, superficial
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When TAships were being handed out my first year as a PhD student, the grad director got us together and warned us that we should put exactly as much time into teaching as would let us get student ratings sufficient to get funding next quarter. Anything more was career suicide.
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With their extra time Profs can publish more empty calorie study that wont advance anything other than their tenure review Be real professors you know this to be true How many bullshit filler papers have you written
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While general trends in society probably have not helped this /thinning/ of student-teacher relationships was probably a natural response to the decline of informal moral codes in the face of Administration and lawsuits I think about this essay a lot http://laurakipnis.com/wp-content/uploads/2010/08/Sexual-Paranoia-Strikes-Academe.pdf …
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2. Child relationships with nonparental adults generally. Older people may be able to confirm that these were once common. Coaches, ministers, aunts and uncles, teachers, scoutmasters, neighbors; others?
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Today: kids have thick relationships with their parents and that's about it. Kids don't have freedom of movement until they get a car (and even that's rarer). Multigenerational homes are gone Every formal organization is paranoid about lawsuits
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Replying to @eigenrobot
You know who esle has a thick relationship with their parents Lacked freedom of movement and had to move back home and benefited from a dynastic structure without even knowing it Thats right, Oedipus!
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