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What’s Wrong With “Extreme Audit Culture”

Scholars around the world are concerned about the effects of an extreme audit culture in higher education, one in which researchers’ productivity is continually measured and, in the case of the REF, directly tied to research funding for institutions. - Nature

The American Right Attacks Wikipedia

While most of the planet sees Wikipedia as a generally reliable source for basic facts on everything from Ansel Adams to ZZ Top, it is increasingly conventional wisdom in much of the American right that it has been taken over by leftist cadres hell-bent on pushing a neo-Marxist agenda. - PastPresentFuture

Apple Must Pay Ireland $14.4 Billion In Back Taxes, Rules EU’s Highest Court

Finally closing a case that started in 2016, the European Court of Justice agreed with the European Commission (the European Union's executive branch) that Ireland, where Apple has its EU headquarters, gave the tech giant "illegal" benefits and unfair market advantage by charging a tax rate of under 1%. - Axios

LACMA’s New Building Won’t Be Opening Until 2026

The new home for the museum's permanent collection, designed by starchitect Peter Zumthor and named the David Geffen Galleries, was initially scheduled to open in 2023 but has suffered several delays. LACMA's permanent collection has been in storage since 2019. - Los Angeles Times (MSN)

Harvey Weinstein Hospitalized For Emergency Heart Surgery

The disgraced film producer and convicted-then-unconvicted rapist was rushed to New York City's Bellevue Hospital from Rikers Island, where he is being held pending the retrial of his 2022 rape case, whose guilty verdict was overturned in April. - Variety

2024 Praemium Imperiale Awards To Maria João Pires, Shigeru Ban, Ang Lee, Doris Salcedo, Sophie Calle

The 15 million yen (roughly $105,000) prize, intended as an arts equivalent of the Nobel prizes, go to Pritzker Prize-winning architect Shigeru Ban, Oscar-winning director Ang Lee, Portuguese pianist Maria João Pires, sculptor Doris Salcedo, and conceptual artist Sophie Calle. - ArtReview

Interim No More: Peter Oundjian Appointed Colorado Symphony’s Music Director

The former music director of the Toronto Symphony (and, before that, longtime first violinist of the Tokyo String Quartet), Oundjian stepped in as principal conductor in 2022 following the departure of music director Brett Mitchell. He begins a four-year contract starting in fall 2025. - 9News (Denver)

John Eliot Gardiner, Fired By The Ensembles He Founded, Creates New Ones

In July, the board of the Monteverdi Choir and Orchestras broke ties with the conductor, 11 months after he punched a singer in the face. Now Gardiner is launching the Constellation Choir and Orchestra, which in December will tour with the same program his former groups are performing without him. - The Guardian

“Gentle Giant Of Chamber Music In America,” Anthony Checchia, Has Died At 94

He was the longtime general manager of the Marlboro Music Festival, Vermont's great summer school for music students, and founding artistic director of the Philadelphia Chamber Music Society, which he developed into one of the busiest and most prestigious chamber music series in the country. - The Philadelphia Inquirer

Actor James Earl Jones, 93

The actor amassed nearly 200 screen credits during his brilliant 60-year career. - Deadline

Montreal Closed Streets To Cars. Pedestrians Came. The City Was Enlivened

As of this summer, eleven streets in total have been transformed into seasonal pedestrian-only destinations, creating almost ten kilometres of walkable car-free surfaces across several boroughs. The experiment has proven so popular that it has drawn praise, and not a little astonishment, from visiting urban planners. - The Walrus

Charles Ives Was Born 150 Years Ago. Why Are We Conflicted About His Music?

Even our orchestras and instrumentalists perform him far less than they should. If it follows that the present Ives sesquicentenary is insufficiently observed, that is all the more reason to take stock. - The American Scholar

Can Language Unify Black Culture?

Everyone knows what it means to capitalize “Black.” But how does it feel? On your tongue, on the page? If we act like affect isn’t what truly rules how we talk to, and around, one another, we won’t get to the whole of the matter. - The New Yorker

How To Keep A Community’s Soul While It’s Under Gentrification Pressure

In order to be successful, any urban regeneration has to tap into the local culture and heritage of a place. This means embracing what makes the area unique, whether it’s through traditional arts, music, local stories, or even something like baking bread. - The Conversation

Nabokov Said Rereading Distinguished Who The Real Readers Are. He Was Wrong

The correct and virtuous way to read, according to those who knew about reading and writing, was to reread. Rereading was that which separated the real reader from the average book consumer. - Paris Review

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