TODAY WE HAVE THE BEST NEWS EVER!
Sociological Images founder and author and, more importantly, my Best Friend is now tenured! Congratulations Gwen Sharp! You are a genius, a damn good person, and you make people laugh. Nevada State College is incredibly to have you. Everyone else should follow you on Twitter!
SocImages News:
Tomorrow we’re launching a competition for a new logo. The top five sketches will receive $50 each and the winner will be invited to work with us to design a polished logo for $500. We hope you can help us spread the invitation far and wide!
Someone liked our post on high heels as a marker of distinction among women enough to cross-post it at Alternet. Us? We’re just happy to spread the word of good ol’ Pierre Bourdieu. In any case, we hope it’s the first of many!
I’m quoted, starting with the phrase “Let’s be frank,” in an article at Bitch about an administrative reluctance to take steps to improve the sexual assault policy at Occidental College and the ongoing efforts to make us a leader in this regard.
Speaking of sex at Oxy, a video recording of my talk on hook up culture at Occidental College is available here. The sheer enthusiasm of our wonderful students makes up for the bad lighting. You’re the greatest y’all!
Thanks to PolicyMic, the Huffington Post, and Jezebel for featuring our posts on everything from data on porn stars to vintage baby cages and our fight at Oxy.
Updates on Image Guides:
Sociology doctoral student Calvin Ho put together a set of his favorite SocImages posts about Asian and Asian America. It’s a great collection and we’re hoping he’ll revise it into an Image Guide.
I organized our a selection of our vintage stuff for Women’s History month and have published it here.
If you are a graduate student or professor who would like to make an Image Guide, we would love to hear from you! It requires picking a topic, browsing our archives, pulling out the most compelling posts, and arranging them in ways other instructors would find familiar and convenient. The guides can cover entire courses or be designed to help illustrate a theory, article, or book. Only the most fabulous sociologists do it.
Upcoming Lectures and Appearances:
The semester is starting to wind down and I enjoyed giving campus-wide talks at Harvard, Queen’s University, Pomona College, and my own lovely Occidental. Just two more before the semester is up:
- Apr. 2 — Citrus College — “The Promise and Peril of Hook Up ‘Culture’” (11:30am Handy Campus Center East Wing)
- Apr. 19 — University of Akron — “Anatomy of an Outrage: Female Genital Cutting and the Politics of Acculturation”; AKD Induction Ceremony Speech
I go on sabbatical next year to write in earnest, but I’d love to use my flexible schedule to do lots of public speaking as well. Visit my website if you’d be interested in having me. I have great talks on the value of friendship, the biology of sex differences, the politics of genital cutting and, of course, hook up culture. For Akron this year I’m doing an AKD Induction Ceremony Speech. Who can think of something nice to say about sociology? I can!!!
Tweets that Make Us Blush: Thanks Cassie!
Also, may we take a minute to have a giant nerd crush on Shankar Vedantam? He tweeted us twice this month! TWICE!
Social Media ‘n’ Stuff:
This is your monthly reminder that SocImages is on Twitter, Facebook, Google+, and Pinterest. Lisa is on Facebook and, sigh, Google+. Most of the team is on Twitter: @lisawade, @gwensharpnv, @familyunequal, @carolineheldman, and @jaylivingston.
In Other News…
Gwen Sharp has decided to use the new protection of tenure to start the Cockroach Liberation Front (CLF), dedicating to refurbishing the invertebrate’s image and fighting for their equal rights (recognition and redistribution).
The CLF’s first mission is to oppose the use of the cockroach in scientific experimentation. To that end, they staged a protest at the laboratory of a biologist at a local college, publicly exposing the senseless torture of these sensitive and complicated creatures.
Sociological Images stands with the CLF. Anyone who likes TV shows and cake is a friend of ours… and they should be a friend of yours too.
Lisa Wade, PhD is an Associate Professor at Tulane University. She is the author of American Hookup, a book about college sexual culture; a textbook about gender; and a forthcoming introductory text: Terrible Magnificent Sociology. You can follow her on Twitter and Instagram.
Comments 28
Kate — April 1, 2013
$500 for a logo? Way too cheap. My graphic designer friends would not approve. How long do you intend on using this logo?
Dave — April 1, 2013
I love the blog and cockroaches and I'm very happy to hear Gwen got tenure. You guys are doing fantastic work!
a professional artist — April 1, 2013
guys, you are making me very sad with this logo thing. Design "contests" treat artists like crap, I expected better from you. $500 is also WAY too cheap for a logo... I got twice that for the last design job I did.
Pay your artists... and maybe make a post about how people expect artists to work for ridiculously low wages you would not expect from workers of other skilled trades.
Eva — April 1, 2013
This is a wonderful blog and I've forwarded links to your great articles to many people. I'll continue to do so! But I was very disappointed to see your logo contest. Although your terms are somewhat better than other such contests, this is NOT the way you hire graphic design contractors...or plumbers, or doctors, or anyone else. You don't ask people to work for free in order to decide if you want to hire them. Please just put out the word via your blog or craigslist, etc. that you want to hire a logo designer, ask to see people's portfolios, and then hire the person whose work you like the most/has good references, etc. That's how it's done, pretty much just like if you were hiring an employee. The logo contest thing is so insulting.
milou — April 2, 2013
I completely agree with Eva, and her proposal here makes sense: "Take that $250 that you're going to spread among the top five sketches and add that to the $500 you'd be paying the chosen designer. Offering $750 for a logo, and apologizing that it's low, it's perfectly reasonable."
My dad is an illustrator, and this kind of stuff just makes it so much harder. Don't make everyone put in all the time and anxiety, in the hopes of getting employment, for a sketch they won't use again. Why don't you just advertise an offer of $750? See who responds and ask for some previous sample work. Hire based on that work. Then work with them to design the logo ...