Monthly Archives: December 2025

Totalitarianism

“totalitarianism: A dictatorial form of centralized government that regulates every aspect of state and private behavior. Although the term was originally intended to designate fascist and communist regimes, totalitarianism is mainly associated with characterizations of the Soviet Union. Its proponents do not agree on when, if ever, the Soviet Union ceased to be totalitarian, but they tend to converge on the view that at some point the political leadership was all powerful and totally illegitimate. For many commentators, the Soviet Union entered a new phase after the abandonment of mass terror on Stalin’s death. However, others operating within the totalitarian paradigm point to institutional continuity, KGB harassment of dissidents, and the ever present possibilities of arbitrary state power until 1989. The total and sudden collapse of the Soviet Union since then casts doubt not only on this school, but perhaps on the whole concept of totalitarianism. In the 1970s, a new school of Sovietology emerged which pointed to evidence both for popular support for the regime and for widespread dispersion of power, at least in implementation of policy, among sectoral and regional authorities. For some of the ‘pluralists,’ this was evidence of the ability of the regime to adapt to include new demands. However, totalitarian theorists claimed that the failure of the system to survive showed not only its inability to adapt but the formality of supposed popular participation. See also Arendt.”

Excerpted from: McLean, Iain, and Alistair McMillan, editors. Oxford Concise Dictionary of Politics. New York: Oxford University Press, 2003.

Potboiler

“Potboiler: A work written merely to gain a livelihood. The term is at least as old as the 18th c. A classic example of the potboiler that transcends its immediate end is Johnson’s philosophical ‘novel’ or didactic ‘romance’ (qq.v.Rasselas (1759), which was written in the evenings of a week to defray the expenses of his mother’s funeral and to pay her debts. See KITSCH

Excerpted from: Cuddon, J.A. The Penguin Dictionary of Literary Terms and Literary Theory. New York: Penguin, 1998.

A Measurement Conversion Chart for Culinary Arts Classes

Every once in a while, I come across something that belongs on this blog, but is slightly out of step with the main thrust of the content presented here. Several years ago, I worked briefly in a school in Bennington, Vermont. Some of my students were interested in careers in the culinary arts, so I prepared this trove of documents for building vocabulary in the profession. On another occasion, this cooking conversion chart arrived with a wooden recipe box I bought.

Recently, I bought a set of loaf plans; this measurement conversion chart was in the box. It includes conversions from cups to teaspoons, measures and dry weights, and oven temperature conversions between Celsius and Farenheit.

I don’t know how useful it is–I do not and have never taught in the culinary arts. But there it is if you can use it.

Since this is a PDF of someone else’s work, if there are typos or solecisms in it, there isn’t much I can do to fix it. So, my usual caveat doesn’t apply to this post.