Former lecturer Jonathan Keeperman, known as 'Lomez' online, discusses his experience transitioning from anonymous to public persona. He navigates the challenges of maintaining separate identities, revealing his political views, and the complexities of online discourse. Keeperman delves into his intellectual journey, the influence of politics on art, and the importance of open discussions on feminism and free speech.
Navigating online personas and real identities impacts personal relationships.
Strategic SEO practices shape digital narrative to manage online reputation.
Perceptions of conservative intellectuals challenge stereotypes in cultural spheres.
Deep dives
Impact of Online Persona on Real Life Relationships
The podcast discusses how individuals like Lomez, known online, navigate the revelation of their real identities and how it affects their personal relationships. Lomez's experience highlights the challenges of managing the online persona's impact on real-life interactions, especially regarding reconciling differing perceptions and behaviors across contexts.
Navigating Reputation Through SEO and Online Representation
The episode delves into the importance of managing online reputation and presence through strategic SEO practices. It emphasizes the need to actively shape one's digital narrative to counteract potentially damaging narratives and inaccurate portrayals, showcasing the power of personal control in molding one's online image.
Evolution of Ideological Stereotypes in Intellectual Circles
The podcast touches on the evolving perceptions of intellectual figures and how stereotypes affect public reception, focusing on the disconnect between conservative intellectuals and artistic appreciation. It sheds light on the complexities of ideological labels and challenges the common misconceptions surrounding political affiliations in cultural and literary spheres.
Cultural Environment and Ideological Influence in the Arts
The podcast addresses the cultural environment and ideological influence in the arts industry, highlighting a perceived left-leaning skew towards promoting a leftist political agenda in art and literature. The speaker observes a shift towards a progressive ideological agenda from the mid-2010s, impacting artists' identity and creative freedom. This trend is exemplified in the creation of a literary contest and a publishing company aimed at challenging the dominance of leftist ideas in the cultural sphere.
Importance of Free Speech and Tolerance in Discourse
The conversation delves into the importance of free speech and tolerance in public discourse, emphasizing the need for open conversations on contentious topics. The speakers advocate for unrestricted dialogue, even on controversial views, highlighting the value of confronting opposing ideas and defending free speech rights. They criticize the restriction of debates and the societal shift towards limiting discussions, emphasizing the significance of challenging beliefs and fostering a culture that welcomes diverse perspectives.
On this episode of Unsupervised Learning Razib talks to Jonathan Keeperman, an former lecturer in writing at UC Irvine and proprietor of Passage Press. Keeperman also posts on the internet under what was until recently an anonymous pseudonym, Lomez. Unlike many anonymous accounts on X, “Lomez” developed a decade-long identity, to the point where Keeperman wrote articles under that name for publications like First Things, The Federalist and The American Mind.
Razib and Keeperman talk about what it is like to go from someone with distinct and separate identities, a well-developed online life as well as a fairly conventional offline world, and how to reconcile them when they collide. Keeperman talks about the peculiar and often offensive scripts and modalities of the world of anonymous commentators, whose goals seem to be to have hidden discussions in plain sight, hiding their discourse through shock and obfuscation, and how difficult it can be to communicate this reality to people with more conventional outlooks.
Keeperman admits that he understood that at some point his anonymity would be stripped away from him, but admits that it is still a difficult path to negotiate. The Lomez identity was unabashedly on the political Right, but as an academic and writing lecturer he was much more discreet about his views, and many of his friends and acquaintances were shocked as to his true politics. Keeperman’s father was a liberal and a Jewish American, so many of his relatives would no doubt have been surprised by his political commitments.
Razib also asks Keeperman what exactly an MFA means as a credential, and what it teaches you. Though he does not think much of the credential itself, Keeperman explains that the MFA is a terminal degree for many interested in writing and literature, two loves that pulled him away from a life in the corporate world. He explains that one of his goals in entering the writing profession was to bring a masculine sensibility that he feels has been marginalized in the world of creative writing, which is today dominated by women. Razib and Keeperman talk about the marginalization of certain masculine values of vigorous competition and biting debate in many parts of the culture-producing industries, and how Passage Press is an attempt to cultivate voices that otherwise might not find a platform. In this vein, Keeperman ends by asserting the importance of free speech for all views, from the most offensive to the most anodyne, as an essential part of American culture and the life of the mind. If you have a sibling with autism, your future child’s risk for an autism diagnosis is increased by a factor of 2 to 3.5×. Orchid’s whole genome embryo reports can help mitigate your child’s risk by screening for over 200 genetic variants definitively linked to autism and other neurodevelopmental disorders. Discuss your situation with a genetics expert.
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