Category Archives: Carnivals

Skeptical Spineless Feminist Anthropologists

The 49th Meeting of The Skeptics’ Circle is up on Autism Street.
Four Stone Hearth Anthropology Blog Carnival – 4th Edition – is up on Yann Klimentidis’ Weblog.
Circus of the Spineless #15 is up on Words & Pictures
The 28th Carnival of the Feminists is up at Diary of a Freak Magnet.

In Darwin’s Footsteps

The Tangled Bank Survey #68: The Voyage of Discovery is up on Down To Earth. Captain Daniel Collins commandeers H.M.S. Tangled Bank full of ship naturalists.

EduBlogging of the week

The Education Carnival #96 is up on History Is Elementary.

The Best Liberal Blogging of the Year

Carnival of the Liberals is back home for the 1st Anniversary Edition at Neural Gourmet. Happy Anniversary!

Tuesday Carnivals – medicine, environment, education

Grand Rounds, Volume 3, Number 11 is up on The Antidote.
Carnival of the Green #56 is up on Urban Eco.
Carnival of Homeschooling from the Land of Lincoln is up on Corn and Oil.

NeuroBlogging of the week

Encephalon n°12: demandez le menu! is up on AlphaPsy.

Academic Blogging of the Fortnight

Teaching carnival #17 is up on silver in sf

NC blogging of the week

Tarheel Tavern #93, North Carolina’s mountains, is up on Nicomachus.

GeneBlogging of the Month

Mendel’s Garden #9: Gene-gle Bells Edition is up on Salamander Candy

TreeBlogging of the Month

Festival of the Trees 6 – Taking Root and Bearing Fruit – is up on Arboreality.

Bio::Blogs today

Bio::Blogs #6 – The conference edition – is now up on Nodalpoint.

Help Us Help Ourselves #1

The first edition of a brand new carnival is now up on Faux Real Tho. It is chockful of informative posts and practical advice on a range of topics all having something to do with ways to survive when short on money. I found some very useful advice already.

Carnival of Liberals – Big Anniversary Challenge!

Carnival of the Liberals is turning One next week. TNG of Neural Gourmet will be hosting the Big Anniversary Edition on December 6th and he has asked people to submit their best post (of course!) – but not the best post of the week: the best post of the year! However, that post cannot be one that has already been submitted or published on a previous editions of the carnival.
Although I have hosted one of the first editions, I believe I have submitted only once (I do not remember which post – perhaps the one about the Love/Hate of Hillary) and NEVER had a post actually appear on the carnival so I am pretty free to submit anything I want.
Welll, help me out. Go to my Archives and look at categories like “Politics” or “Ideology“, or go and browse my old blog or the choice posts from it and YOU, the readers, pick which of my posts (not older than a year) I should officially submit. Let your choices be known in the comments and let’s see which post wins the popular vote.

History Blogging of the fortnight

History Carnival XLIV is up on Barista

Nursing blogging of the week

Change of Shift – Volume One, Edition Twelve – is now up on Fat Doctor.

BirdBlogging of the week

I and the Bird #37 is up on Five Wells.

EduBlogging of the week

The Carnival of Education: Week 95 is up on A History Teacher.
Carnival of Homeschooling #48 is up on The Common Room.

MedBlogging of the Week

Grand Rounds Vol. 3, No. 10, now up on Notes from Dr. RW

Bugs and Trees

Send your submissions for the Festival of the Trees by tomorrow.
Also, send your submissions for the Circus of the Spineless by December 4th.

Medical Imaging of the Week

Radiology Grand Rounds – VI – now up on Spot Diagnosis

NeuroBlogging of the week

The Synapse #12 is up on Dr. Deborah Serani’s blog

Godlessness of the week

Carnival of the Godless 54: Christmas Shopping Time! is now up on Hellbound Alleee

NC blogging of the week

Tar Heel Tavern #92 – Thanksgiving Edition – is up on Slowly She Turned

Misuse of History of the month

Carnival of Bad History No 11 is up on Philobiblon

Holiday Cornucopia of Carnivals

I am assuming that many bloggers will ease up on posting over the holiday break, but there is still plenty of good stuff to read – just browse the latest carnivals:
Tangled Bank #67: Giving thanks for science – now up on Newton’s Binomium
The 48th meeting of the Skeptics’ Circle: last will and testament – now up on Decorabilia.
Four Stone Hearth #3.1: Food for, uh, Thought – now up on About: Archaeology.
Carnival of the Liberals #26: The War On Thanksgiving Edition – now up on Stump Lane.
The Carnival Of Education: Week 94 – now up on The Education Wonks.
Week 47 of the Carnival of Homeschooling is up on Tami’s Blog.

EnviroBlogging of the week

The latest edition of the Carnival of the Green is up on Organic Researcher.

MedBlogging of the Week

Grand Rounds – Volume 3 number 9 is now up on Doctor Anonymous

Child Medicine Blogging of the Week

Pediatrics Grand Rounds #16 are up on Aetiology.

NeuroBlogging of the week

Encephalon #11 is up on The Mouse Trap.

NC blogging of the week

Tar Heel Tavern #91 – Last Minute Edition is up on Slowly She Turned

All the creatures big and small

The new edition of Animalcules, the microbiological carnival, is up on Baumhaus
For somewhat larger animals, visit Friday Ark #113 up on Modulator

History Blogging of the fortnight

History Carnival XLIII is up on Axis of Evel Knievel

Nursing blogging of the week

Change of Shift, Volume One, number Eleven is up on Life in the NHS.

Carnival of Citizens

There is a new carnival in town: Carnival of Citizens:

The public sphere is in disarray. Dominated by demagoguery, mudslinging, and dogmatic regurgitation of partisan talking points, there’s scant room left for fair-minded deliberation about the issues we care about. The Carnival of Citizens is a response to this challenge: it aims to foster genuine dialogue between bloggers of diverse perspectives, to bring us one step closer to the ideal of a healthier, more deliberative, democracy.
——–snip————
The Carnival of Citizens covers all topics of “public debate”, i.e. politics and applied ethics, very broadly construed. This may include issues of broader cultural interest – e.g. science, religion, and philosophy – insofar as they connect to public discourse or matters of general interest. We also invite “meta” discussion about the public sphere, rational discourse, and general civic issues.

The first edition will be held on Philosophy, et cetera. The entries are due by November 23rd:

Submissions are invited on any topic relevant to public debate. For example, suppose you have the attention of a friendly and reasonable “opponent”: what would you want to discuss with them? To advance your own view, what crucial insight or argument would you bring to their attention? To better understand their view, what would you like further explained?
Alternatively: you might write a post explaining why you deviate from the “party line” on some particular issue (as suggested by Tim). Or you may be able to think up other possible approaches that align with the carnival’s civic values — if so, go for it!

EduBlogging of the week

The 93rd Carnival of Education is up on What It’s Like on the Inside.
The 46th Carnival of Homeschooling is up on Sprittibee.

Green Grounds

53rd edition of the Carnival of the Green is up on Triplepundit.
Grand Rounds – the Monty Python edition – is up on The rumors were true.

Bards Invade The Tar Heel Tavern

Here is another first in the world of blog carnivals – a fusion! Billy is hosting the Tar Heel Tavern (NC blogging) and the Ringing Of The Bards (poetry) all together. It is a virtual visit of blogging poets to North Carolina. Enjoy!

International Carnival Of Pozitivities

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Welcome to the fifth international carnival of pozitivities, blog carnival about HIV and AIDS founded and managed by my friend and neighbor (and great blogger) Ron Hudson.
I have to say that preparing this carnival has been quite an eye-opener for me and that I have learned so much. I feel it would be presumptious of me to write any editorials for today’s entries so I will just list them with brief quotes from each post, but I warmly recommend that you take your time and read each and every post here – perhaps they will be eye-openers for you as well.
Eric Jost of Confessions of a gay male feminist: Is HIV a Gay Disease?

The campaign has garnered a lot of public scrutiny and media attention because of a series of print ads and posters it posted in GLBT-owned and operated businesses. The posters feature the image of a male couple embracing with the tagline, “HIV is a gay disease. Own it. End it.”

Jim Johnson of Straight not narrow: Condi Rice Swears In (gasp!) a Gay Guy!</a

Yep, you could practically hear right-winger’s underwear getting twisted up as those words came out of Rice’s mouth.

Doug Ireland of Direland: THE GLOBAL AIDS CRISIS: PLEASE TAKE 8 MINUTES TO WATCH THIS VIDEO

We wish the AIDS problem would go away. Sometimes, we pretend it has.

Steve Schalchlin of Living In The Bonus Round: A Christianist Columnist Wakes Up?

It’s not going to change. And do you know why? Because justice and fairness for gay people is a moral imperative. Politically, conservative Christianists are simply on the wrong side of history and the wrong side of what’s right and wrong.

Chad Orzel of Uncertain Principles: Unhappy Anniversary

And let’s also applaud, encourage, and most importantly fund the efforts of the people who are working to bring that same security to the rest of the world.

Tara C. Smith of Aetiology: Emerging Disease and Zoonoses #16–the origins of HIV

I mentioned how much you can learn from, well, animal shit. That’s exactly what this study boils down to.

Sandra Porter of Discovering Biology in a Digital World: No, I don’t worry about AIDS anymore

I worry about date rape drugs and my daughters. I worry about young girls in communities that refuse to talk about protection. I feel sad that this epidemic is perpetuated by social mores, ignorance, and sexism.

Shelley Batts of Retrospectacle: A Neuroscience Blog: Where “Thin Means AIDS”; African Women Become Obese

As more and more women are acquiring AIDS in South Africa, a new trend is emerging: in order to not look HIV positive, women are becoming obese in large numbers.

David Ng of terry*: A GAME OF TWENTY QUESTIONS

AMERICAN: Hmm… Can I get it online?
ETHIOPIAN: I’m sorry, sir. I do not understand your meaning, sir. On where, sir?
AMERICAN: Online… You know, like at eBay or Amazon?
ETHIOPIAN: I do not think so, sir. You do not need to go all the way to the Amazon, sir.

Anupam Singhal of The Science Creative Quarterly: HELP, I NEED A VACCINE! (OR H.I.V. FOR SHORT)

Before I met Andrina, I had this mental picture of an HIV-positive African woman who was physically weak and emotionally devastated by the terminal illness with which she was afflicted.

The Dreamer of Nightmare Hall – Welcome to my nightmare: Mangled In The Medical Machine – Part 3

When you’re poz, surgeons don’t want to operate, coming up with every sort of excuse. A nurse I spoke with told me in private that surgeons are the most homo and HIV phobics he’s dealt with. He also said that in his experience they also have this attitude that people with HIV are not worth expending as much energy on as HIV negative patients.

Ron Hudson of 2sides2ron: The Angles of the Mirror

Soon I will need a mask to make myself less ghoulish, but I am lucky now to be passing through a phase where only I and old friends who rarely see me can discern the extent of my wasting.

Ten-K of Save Gay Life: Testing Upheaval

How else could he imagine that today’s medical treatments for AIDS have eliminated HIV stigma? Anyone who has been a victim of stigma knows that stigma is not a function of fact.

Florence Ferreira, guest-posting on 2sides2ron: How to Survive the Doctor’s Office

As in a job interview or negotiation, preserving your power when entering the doctor’s territory takes a proactive approach. It requires psychology and homework.

Vadim of Neweurasia: Tajikistan: HIV/AIDS problem in Tajikistan

Rahmon also says that the labor migrants are considered to be in the group of high risk. They don’t even realize that they have a great risk to be infected.

Jody Kuchar of Grey Matter Flatulence: Condo Cowboys

Apparently the old axiom of believing that people your parents’ age don’t engage in sex still exists among today’s more ‘enlightened’ young people. Given some thought, the fact that AIDS is growing among senior citizens should not be a surprise to anyone.

Carolyn of Texas AIDS Blog: Accountability and World AIDS Day 2006

The concept of accountability is a complex one. It is certainly au courant in the US, being used in one way or another in just about every political campaign we see these days. I’d like to see some exploration of the concept in terms of the current HIV epidemic in Texas.

Connor MacEachern of Where in the world is Connor MacEachern?: Halfway there?

In a country where cheating is a way of life, and AIDS is viewed by some as an inevitability, there is still a long way to go. Much longer than, say, nine years.

Reverend Tom Okeyo Obiero, guest-blogging on 2sides2ron: A Glimpse of AIDS in Kenya

Most people–mothers, wives and children–are infected and affected with the issue of HIV/AIDS in our community. The old are left with young children to feed, clothe and educate while the resourceful people are dying of AIDS. This made me come up with ideas to help these people stop the spread of HIV/AIDS and to see that those who are hurting are getting ways out of their problems.

Wes Fiser and Dr. Wessner of The AIDS Pandemic: The Condom Controversy: religious fundamentalism and the fight against AIDS in Zambia (click on the post title to listen to the podcast)

The condom controversy raises important questions as to the role of NGO involvement in health policy when NGOs are limited by their supporters of the religious right. Are they doing more harm than good in fighting the AIDS pandemic?

Brian of Blogswana: Our Children

Occasionally I come across a slogan, a tagline, or a quote that I really like.

JP of Japundit:Japan’s HIV Problem

One expert says that the number of people who actually have AIDS is four to five times the level being officially reported.

Next edition of the carnival will be in one month from now. Watch the homepage and Ron’s blog for the announcement of the next host.

Metapolitics

Carnival of the Liberals #25 – the Metapolitical edition – is up on Philosophy, Etc. and Richard has picked some fantastic winners for this week’s carnival.

Avian Skeptics

The 47th edition of the Skeptics’ Circle is up on Polite Company (OK, it is really here).
I and the Bird #36 is up on Words & Pictures.

Four Tangled Stones

Tangled Bank #66 is up on Easternblot.
The second edition of The Fourstone Hearth is up on Afarensis.

EduBlogging of the week

92nd edition of the Carnival of Education is up on NYC Educator
Carnival of Homeschooling – Library Edition is up on SpunkyHomeSchool.

MedBlogging of the Week

Grand Rounds 3.07 are now up on MSSPNexus Blog

Encephalon – last call for submissions

This is the last reminder to send me permalinks to your recent posts related to neurons, brains, behavior and cognition for the next edition of Encephalon, the neuroscience carnival. I need them by midnight today. I’ll post the carnival tomorrow morning.
Send the links to:
encephalon.host AT gmail DOT com
or
Coturnix AT gmail DOT com

NC Blogging of the week

Tar Heel Tavern #89 is up on Poetic Acceptance

History Blogging of the fortnight

The History Carnival XLII is up on Holocaust Controversies.

Invertebrate blogging of the month

Circus of the Spineless #14 is up on Neurophilosopher’s blog

Nursing blogging of the week

Change of Shift #10 is up on DisappearingJohn RN

EduBlogging of the week

The 91st Edition of the Carnival of Education is up on The Median Sib.
The 44th edition of Carnival of Homeschooling is up on Why Homeschool.

Halloween Grand Rounds

When doctors get scary, than it is really scary – go check it out on Doctor Hébert’s Medical Gumbo