User Profile

Jim Brown

jamesjbrownjr@bookwyrm.social

Joined 4 years, 6 months ago

jamesjbrownjr.net English professor Teaches and studies rhetoric and digital studies Director of the Rutgers-Camden Digital Studies Center (DiSC): digitalstudies.camden.rutgers.edu

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Jim Brown's books

Currently Reading

2025 Reading Goal

98% complete! Jim Brown has read 51 of 52 books.

Tricia Bertram Gallant, David A. Rettinger: Opposite of Cheating (2025, Wiley & Sons, Limited, John)

meh

No rating

I read this as part of a reading group on campus - the group included faculty and staff interested in how to approach teaching and learning in the wake of LLMs. The book is essentially just a manual of how to teach, in general. The idea is that good teaching is the best way to combat "cheating." A return to things like writing in class, paper-based assignments, oral exams, etc. are some of what's offered.

But the book also uses GPT at points, I guess as a way to incorporate the tool into the authors' process and to perform a way of adopting the tech in some way.

The book also makes a strange argument that it is up to instructors to protect "assessment integrity" and thus the value of degrees and institutions. This is not how I think about the problem at all, but maybe I'm crazy? …

Ray Bradbury: Fahrenheit 451 (Paperback, 1988, Del Rey / Ballantine Books)

Guy Montag was a fireman whose job it was to start fires...

The system …

Another book chosen by a student in my class for their extra credit assignment. Somehow, I've never read this.

Becky Chambers: A Psalm for the Wild-Built (Hardcover, 2021, Tordotcom)

It's been centuries since the robots of Panga gained self-awareness and laid down their tools; …

The robots want to be free

No rating

I think fiction like this will probably become more important in the coming years, but I also think we have no idea what stories we should be telling about AI. These days, I'm much more interested in what artists and writers have to say about AI than what engineers have to say about it. This book eventually arrives at a discussion that feels like a debate between religion and secularism: a robot that insists that it contains multitudes in conversation with a human who insists that they are in search of their one "purpose." The human character feels, at times, flatter and more cliche than the robot, but I wonder if my reading of these characters is too shaped by my own resistance to the idea that one needs a single purpose in life.

Stephen King: The Dark Tower I: The Gunslinger (Paperback, 2017, Scribner)

OVER THREE DECADES AGO, Stephen King introduced readers to the extraordinarily compelling and mysterious Roland …

Cormac McCarthy writes fantasy

No rating

It was odd to read this book. It felt to me like Stephen King was impersonating Cormac McCarthy impersonating someone writing fantasy. Some interesting stuff in here, but I do think a good bit of it was lost on me because I have little fluency with the Bible.

Stephen King: The Dark Tower I: The Gunslinger (Paperback, 2017, Scribner)

OVER THREE DECADES AGO, Stephen King introduced readers to the extraordinarily compelling and mysterious Roland …

Here's another one I'm reading as part of the student extra credit assignment I offered. I haven't read a Stephen King book in a very long time. Here we go.