Way too much fun

1. TV Tropes. Smart, funny, and it’s a wiki so you can add your own examples (or disagreements). Should come with a warning: go in and you may never get out again. It seems to get bigger and bigger as you get further inside. (Hat tip.)

2. Throw a shoe at George Bush. (In Norwegian but fairly easy to work out the instructions, I think.) Hee hee. Although of course I don’t condone assaults on failed politicians blah blah blah. Really, you should only ever throw squishy things at them, for maximum humiliation without physical danger. Cream pies, rotten tomatoes, eggs, etc. Presumably hard to smuggle into press conferences though. (H-T.)

Update: and if you get bored with shoe throwing there, here’s another one (in English this time). How many different versions will there be eventually, I wonder?


Randomly noted around the web

A particularly arbitrary selection from what I’ve been reading online lately…

Telekinesiskitteh plyz wif teh fud
  hmm, not enough lolcats round here lately (swallow coffee before clicking on link)

Beetroot Curry recipe
  I really, really like this one…

The Madness of Spies
  John le Carre reminisces about spies unhinged (somewhere along the line, it's the Yanks' fault)

Hemp and Hops, Together at Last
  Mmm, drugs… from Got Medieval


A very, very belated post-election post

I heard this bewitching mix of Obama’s election speech on 6Music , by a band called Lunar Dunes (described as ‘psychedelic spacerock’). So I went looking for it on t’internet; they’d posted an mp3 of it on a forum a few days after the election, but that link had expired. So, I emailed and begged and they very kindly put it up again:

Loophole (Yes We Can remix) (download available for 14 days). Get it now.

And you can get their album From Above (including the original Obama-free mix of the track) from iTunes, Amazon and their rather beautiful website.


Recently noted around the web

What I’ve been reading online lately…

The Magnificent, the Merry and the Mundane: The Display Windows of the Eaton’s Department Store
  an online exhibit from Canada chronicling the impact of large display windows on shopping

Not a Cough in a Carload: Images from the Tobacco Industry Campaign to Hide the Hazards of Smoking
  not the Advertising Century's finest moments?

400 years of the telescope
  a website to commemorate the invention of the telescope

Ad Age Advertising Century
  100 years of American advertising

The British Cartoon Archive
  new website for British political and social cartoons from the University of Kent

Interactive – the influenza pandemic of 1918
  The unfolding pandemic in contemporary sources, from The Guardian


A short message for the day

Fucking hackers.


Recently noted around the web

Or, more accurately, “Noted ages ago (was it really less than 2 weeks?) after That Election and sadly neglected in my drafts folder”…

I Have Until January 20!
  Rob MacDougall rounds up some 'good crazy' responses to That One's election

Obama’s Disastrous Gaffe-Laden Press Conference
  Jon Swift is really, really, really enjoying himself this week

On centrism
  the 'centre' can shift: for real change, it has to…


Cliopatria Awards

Nominations for The Cliopatria Awards for the best history blogging are open until the end of November.

The award categories are: Best Group Blog, Best Individual Blog, Best New Blog, Best Post, Best Series of Posts, Best Writer.

Forgetful types may find the following resources useful for memory jogging:

Cliopatria’s History Blogroll
The History Carnival Archive

Final selections will be made by judging panels of history bloggers and announced at the American Historical Association Annual Meeting in early January.


Blogs: something for everyone…

Niche interest? Fetish? Perversion? Mustaches of the Nineteenth Century

Many of the following pages have graphic and clear images of the masculine mustache in all its forms, both sublime and grotesque. My intent is not to shock or titillate, but merely to inform on the subject. The Nineteenth Century gave us many things, but above all it was a hotbed of facial hair experimentation and this is but a poor sampling of those many lost forms.


Reasons to be cheerful hysterical

Stop Worrying About Obama Losing Already
  because he's going to win. *bites nails, sacrifices another chicken, does rain dance*

OMG!!! Exclusive!!!! Must Credit LGM!!!
  "If Obama were some sort of secret, DFH terrorist front candidate, who exactly would he be signaling with this logo? Is America filled with Weatherman sleeper cells, just waiting for a sign of the revolution?"

Philosophy in the news ….
  more on the Bill Ayers ghostwriting scandal! (not)

Malcom X II and the Fuschia Fascists
  is it satire? is it lunacy? who can tell any more?

More seriously: of course it’s not over until it’s over. But think about these polling numbers.

2 November 2004: RCP Electoral College Count: Bush 227 – Kerry 203 – toss-up 108. (270 EC votes needed to win: result on 4 November: Bush 286, Kerry 252.)

3 November 2008: RCP Electoral College Count: Obama 278 – McCain 132 – toss-up 128.

This is 1997, not 1992. (Except I don’t want to push the 1997 analogy because we all know how that turned out…)


Lost in translation

This story is going around, but I’ll repeat it just for the fun of it:

road sign

The Welsh actually means: “I am not in the office at the moment. Please send any work to be translated”.

Oops.


More election specials

Fortunately, the nurse has now taken out the staples* so laughing doesn’t hurt so much…

Election List VII: Bombshells the McCain Campaign Has Yet to Drop About Barack Obama
  but should we be giving them ideas?

The Nutty Conspiracy
  peanut butter and jelly sandwiches and the Plot to rool the world. With graphs

Thursday miscellany: Obama’s evil hypnosis trickery
  … did I mention I was enjoying this stuff?

O’Reilly’s Electoral Map
  different from everyone else's electoral map!

….

* Close-up, the effect is mildly Halloweenish. I considered showing you photos. Then I decided that was a bit sick.


Slightly downsized me this week

Well, it’s been a bit quiet here lately. Recently this has been mostly because I was spending a few days as a guest of the NHS to get rid of this little bugger. (Google tells me that Youtube has some video. Having already heard the surgeon’s detailed explanation of what he was going to do to me, I’m really not sure I want to look…) All gone well, and now I’m back at home, it’s not a bad time to be skiving off work for a couple of weeks and surfing blogs all day, now is it?

Whatever happens next Tuesday, there is something rather wonderful about observing the great wingnut-blogger meltdown. Although some of it is not really safe for reading when you’ve got holes in your tummy and the district nurse hasn’t been round to take out the little staples yet. Laugh-Sting-Ouch. So much to choose from, but Jon Swift’s Great Moments in Election-Year Blogging should be remembered as a true classic.

So much lunacy in one short season…


Splash!

A Modern Tale of a Binge Drinker, um, Pony.

A drunk pony was rescued from a swimming pool after gorging on fermented apples and falling into the water.

The pony, called Fat Boy, broke in to Sarah Penhaligon’s garden in Newquay, Cornwall, to get to the fruit, which had fallen from trees.

He ate so many apples that he became confused.

(Cricket fans may wonder: Drunk Fat Boy? Falling into water? Was a pedalo involved?)


Recently noted around the web

What I’ve been reading online lately…

the trolls, they are us
  sometimes, everyone is wrong on the internet

Yep, dis is definitivly
  … teh best place

Digital history and early modern studies
  Mercurius Politicus on how digital sources shape an audience’s experience of them and the implications for training graduate historians

‘Like history in the first person’
  In 1960s California, a teacher conducted a terrifying experiment in fascism

Airminded · The Sudeten crisis, 1938
  "a post every day showing how the crisis was unfolding in the press on the same date 70 years ago"


Winking hell

I had been steadfastly avoiding pictures of Sarah Palin’s VP debate performance. It sounded a bit nauseating.

Well, yeah. (What a thing to inflict on your unsuspecting bloggy readers on a Sunday. Evil man.)

Palin could never get away with that schtick over here. Everybody would laugh and point and spread rumours that she must be Anne Robinson’s unacknowledged love child. Wink, wink.


Start your predictions now

Holy crap, Mandelson’s back.

So, the obvious questions. Correct predictions will definitely win a prize of some kind. (Signed photos?)

1. What scandal will get him chucked out this time?

2. How long will it take?

3. Or will he survive until the Tories get in?

Derek Draper, a former adviser to Mandelson who has recently returned to work for the Labour party, said: “I think Peter will prove to be a pretty formidable secretary of state, a really brilliant contributor to the strategy of the government and the presentation of the government and people will look at Peter and think: ‘You know what, we misjudge Peter Mandelson sometimes,’ and actually the strengths of Peter and the good side of Peter will come through now.

Um, yeah, of course.


Silly name, fab album

My copy of Vampire Weekend arrived this morning.

Love it to bits.

If, like me, you’ve missed out up till now because you were put off by the name, you can download a couple of tracks to try out here. (‘A-Punk’ is so cute it could make kittens cry.)


T’internets in 2001 – get a blast from the past!

Take a look at Google, January 2001. (H-T)

I was still a PhD student. I had a website, but it wasn’t at this domain and it was a bit rubbish. (All static HTML and barely a drop of CSS in sight! Here’s the granddaddy of today’s site, believe it or not; it looks even worse than it did then. For whatever reason the archive version isn’t loading the background image and so it’s showing the background color, which is clashing nastily with the header. Why I thought that bgcolor was a good idea is anybody’s guess.)

And I didn’t have an internet connection at home. (My grey brick of a laptop didn’t even have a modem.) Fortunately, the university facilities were pretty good. But how did I cope?

A search for early modern resources. Interesting to see what’s still going (although it might be at a different address these days) and what’s defunct or disappeared altogether.

(Which sorta reminds me of the really important piece of news this week: BÉRUBÉ’S BACK!!!)


Ubuntu bleg

Vista. God, it sucks. And it’s installed on my second laptop.

I heart my Macbook dearly, but if it dies within the next year or so I’m not sure I can really afford to replace it straight away (this is not that improbable a scenario, sadly, even though it’s only 2 years old: in the last 6 months I’ve had to replace first the battery and then the hard drive, and now the screen has started to flicker periodically. Great OS, maybe not such great hardware).

So I’ve installed Linux Ubuntu on the other machine, so that in the event of the Macbook meltdown, I’ll have a machine that won’t entirely destroy my will to live. (At the very least, the desktop wallpaper image is fecking gorgeous.)

But of course this means a lot to learn (starting with getting wifi to work, dammit). So are there any beginners’ Ubuntu tutorials and resources that people can recommend from personal experience?


IHR postgrad seminars and History Lab

Ed has asked me to give the IHR Postgraduate Seminars (in London) and History Lab a bit of a plug. Ed is hoping to use the History Lab blog in association with the Seminars this year, to post reports and hold discussions of each paper. This sounds like a Good Thing to me.

I hadn’t really heard of the History Lab before, but it’s intended as a ‘network for postgraduate students and new researchers in history and related disciplines’, with membership free to any postgraduate student enrolled on an MA, MRes, MPhil or PhD.

The autumn programme for the seminars is below.

16 October Brian Casey (National University of Ireland, Maynooth)
Matt Harris: a forgotten Irish revolutionary

30 October Rob Dale (QMUL)
‘Rats’: Bureaucracy and corruption in post-war Leningrad through the eyes of demobilised soldiers (1944-1950)

13 November Oren Margolis (Jesus College, Oxford)
King René, Janus Pannonius, and the politics of cultural transmission in Renaissance Italy

27 November Iain Sharpe (IHR)
An Edwardian party funding scandal? Cecil Rhodes and the Liberal party

11 December Rosie Macarthur (Northampton)
Unnecessary wants? Luxury goods and the Hanbury family of Kelmarsh, 1720-1845

All seminars start at 5.30pm and take place in the Low Countries Room of the IHR (Senate House), 3rd Floor. (They finish, naturally, in a nearby pub at some subsequent point in time.)


My kind of letter writer

The Department of Puritans Health has just come up with its official nine types of heavy drinker, blah blah blah.

From the Graun letters page today, spotting the remarkable similarities between their document and Richard Allestree’s 1659 The Whole Duty of Man, which identified the motives of “the multitudes of drunkards we have in the world”:

2008: “‘Border dependents’ regard the pub as a home from home”. 1659: Too obvious a point to need mentioning, since “an alehouse” was often a room in a neighbour’s home. 2008: “‘Community drinkers’ are motivated by the need to belong”. 1659: “Good-fellowship: one man drinks to keep another company at it”. 2008: “‘Re-bonding drinkers’ are driven by a need to keep in touch with people who are close to them”. 1659: “A second end of drinking is said to be the maintaining of friendship and kindness amongst men”. 2008: “‘Hedonistic drinkers’ crave stimulation and want to abandon control”. 1659: “A third end of drinking is said to be the chearing their spirits, making them merry and jolly”.

2008: “‘De-stress drinkers’ use alcohol to regain control of life and calm down”; “‘Depressed drinkers’ crave comfort, safety and security”. 1659: “A fourth end is said to be the putting away of cares”. 2008: “‘Boredom drinkers’ consume alcohol to pass the time”. 1659: “A fifth end is said to be the passing away of time”. 2008: “‘Conformist drinkers’ are driven by the need to belong”. 1659: “A sixth end is said to be the preventing of that reproach … cast on those that will in this be stricter than their neighbours”.

In 1659 Allestree has no direct parallel with today’s final category, “Macho drinkers”, but in 1660 the Royalists would be back, bringing libertines with them …

A toast or three is due to Kate Loveman, the author of the letter, methinks (ah hah: the culprit, if I’m not much mistaken).


Some links for Sunday

One day I will write one of them proper post thingies…

Hubris and Hermeneutics
  Janice Liedl muses on the problems of ‘seeing the past on its own terms’

Interchange: The Promise of Digital History
  a recent conversation in JAH between historians considering the progress and future of digital history (seems to be open access… or perhaps not)

Bad Science: Don’t let facts spoil a good story
  Ben Goldacre on the misrepresentation of academic research by journalists. sometimes you just think, we're doomed…

Misery Loves Democrats
  pigs 'n' lipstick 'n' stuff

The Wonderbra ad and strict new advertising guidelines
  Charlie Brooker: "Only one thing for it: we're all going to have masturbate our way back to sanity together. Right, readers? Three … two … one … go!"


A few calls

1. CFP: Reading Conference in Early Modern Studies 2009

The next annual meeting of the Reading conference on early modern studies will be held on 6-8 July 2009, with an informal theme of ‘Authority and Authorities’. “The Reading conferences are as broadly based as possible, reflecting the most interesting developments in current research. Accordingly we welcome proposals for either complete sessions or individual papers from scholars in any discipline or any area of early modern studies, including Atlantic, European and imperial perspectives…” (Full details at the link.)

2. Guest bloggers wanted

Brandon Watson is looking for guest bloggers at his early modern history of philosophy blog Houyhnhnm Land; not necessarily history of philosophy specialists – “the posts have to be on some facet of early modern thought (or approaches thereto), but just about anything falling under that label would work. I’d love, for instance, to get historians of all kinds, literary scholars, and the like adding their two cents; I’d also love specialists from outside the early modern period looking at how later periods viewed the early modern period or how earlier periods prepared for it; and so forth.”

3. Carnivalesque and History Carnival hosts needed

I really, urgently need History Carnival hosts for November and December (1st of the month). Please email me as soon as possible if you could do one of these: sharon {at} earlymodernweb.org(.)uk.

A host is also needed for the November ancient/medieval edition Carnivalesque (same email address will do, or carnivalesque {at} earlymodernweb.org(.)uk).

Both carnivals will also need hosts next year, so if you’re too busy in the immediate future but might like to take one on later, get in touch.


Quick ‘n’ dirty links (because there’s enough crap in my drafts folder as it is)

The scientist who started the MMR hoax faces the GMC – but who will hold the media to account? A fine piece by Ben Goldacre – “in MMR, journalists and editors have constructed their greatest hoax to date, and finally demonstrated that they can pose a serious risk to public health”

History is to blame – the life and times of Samuel Pepys


Digital Literary Studies: an update

A Companion to Digital Literary Studies is now online!


Recently noted around the web

What I’ve been reading online lately…

University student ‘escape goats’ get caught by academics
  i know, we shouldn't laugh at students really. Ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha

Comforting butternut squash and red lentil dal
  comfort food isn't supposed to be this healthy…

on bad citation « a historian’s craft
  the difference a full stop makes…

Behind the Curtain « The Edge of the American West
  The Wizard of Oz, history, audiences and politics

Photography as a Weapon – Errol Morris
  Photoshop, Iranian missiles and fakery

Doing Digital Scholarship: Presentation at Digital Humanities 2008
  Lisa Spiro's presentation on digital humanities


Focussed Obsessions

I have been known to say a few words about people who don’t really understand blogging presuming to hand down blogging commandments. (Let’s not even get started on the frauds popping up everywhere to tell us ‘How to Make Shitloads of Money from Blogging with My Ten Brilliant Commandments that No One Ever Thought of Before’.)

Thoughtful reflections coming out of long experience of reading blogs are another matter, so I like this list of What Makes for a Good Blog. Especially perhaps this one:

Good blogs reflect focused obsessions. People start real blogs because they think about something a lot. Maybe even five things. But, their brain so overflows with curiosity about a family of topics that they can’t stop reading and writing about it. They make and consume smart forebrain porn. So: where do this person’s obsessions take them?

(H-T.)


Carnivalesque 42

Welcome to the 42nd edition of Carnivalesque, a summer special for everything early modern. Many thanks for all your nominations!

Research (or, the Holy Grail)

Gavin Robinson has been investigating saddlers’ wills. You might at first think this a dry and narrow subject, but it got more nominations than any other post, and I recommend reading it to find out why. As Gavin notes, early modern wills can tell us a lot about people’s lives and family relationships, not just their property. William Deacon’s will provides us some insight into his marital relations, perhaps: he instructed his executors to make sure that his wife didn’t embezzle anything from his estate. Or there was William Chevall, who left his niece just one shilling because she had got married without his consent. (Bonus links: a few useful resources, 1, 2, 3.)

At Mercurius Politicus, Nick posts a series on The Pamphlet War Between John Taylor and Henry Walker (2, 3, 4, 5), based on a paper presented to the Birkbeck Early Modern Society in July. He examines in detail the two writers, the texts, the readers and the publishers, to illuminate the sophistication and complexity of the pamplet wars of the 1640s.

Politics, religion and war

Well, if it’s the seventeenth century, we’re never far from religion, politics and bloodshed. Executed Today visits Prague’s ‘Day of Blood’. On 21 June 1621 ‘the Habsburg crown took 27 nobles’ heads in Prague’s Old Town Square for attempting to lead Bohemia to independence’; merely the beginning of far more widespread death and destruction, the Bohemian Revolt sparked off what is commonly known as the Thirty Years’ War.

In ‘It is good for me that I have been afflicted’, Dave Noon discusses the assassination of Metacom, aka King Philip, on 12 August 1676 and the brutal war that bears his name. For the English colonists, the war was a test sent by God, and their eventual victory a sign of His blessing. (Bonus link: Mary Rowlandson’s Narrative.)

Gracchii explores and contextualises the Plot against Pepys, at Westminster Wisdom. Between 1679 and 1681 (and perhaps there has never been a more fertile moment in British history for plots and paranoia, accusations and counter-accusations), Samuel Pepys was accused of transmitting secret plans to France and threatened with execution; he survived because he was able to discredit his accuser. (Pepys the blogger.)

K at Musings and Imaginings has been pondering The Book of Martyrs. She notes that many of the authors on Jesuit missions to England in the 16th and early 17th centuries and the Gunpowder Plot are sympathetic towards the Jesuits and concludes that it’s largely to do with the widespread appeal of martyrdom and self-sacrifice.

Debunkers and awkward buggers

David Rundle asks When was the Renaissance? He uses a visit to a recent exhibition on the art of ‘the renaissance’ as a springboard for a thoughtful discussion of the artificial and not entirely helpful academic divide between ‘medieval’ and ‘early modern’, and the need to be aware that ‘Renaissance’ is an invented concept that can obscure as much as it illuminates. ‘In short, it is tidier to have a Renaissance confined to the sixteenth century and certainly less complicated to imagine it was a single phenomenon which manifested itself across Europe. But, in this case, I am on the side of messiness.’

Bill Poser at Language Log argues that it’s wrong to view Sir William Jones (wikipedia entry, if you’ve never heard of him) ‘the discoverer of the Indo-European language family and founder of modern historical linguistics’ for two reasons: he wasn’t the first to recognise a relationship between the languages, and he didn’t use the comparative method. An interesting discussion ensues.

Recreations

John Fea (Religion in American History) is impressed by the integration of religion into the presentation of the living history musem, Colonial Williamsburg. (The museum site.)

At Philobiblon Natalie Bennett posts some reflections on Marlowe, Shakespeare and imagination, after reading History Play: The Lives and Afterlife of Christopher Marlowe, by Rodney Bolt. This sounds entertaining: of all those daft-as-a-brush Shakespeare-wasn’t-really-Shakespeare conspiracy theories, one of my personal favourites is the Marlowe-didn’t-really-die scenario. (To be continued)

Writers and Readers

At Serendipities, Kristine Steenbergh reviews Katherine Craik’s Reading sensations in early modern England (2007), in which the history of reading and the history of the body are sensuously combined. The book argues that ‘reading in early modern England was a bodily, material experience. In its pages, readers can be found licking the sweet juice of stinking books, being tickled with sugared rhetoric, softened or sharpened by words, pricked or pierced by sermons, or stirred and inflamed by poetry’. It was believed that love poetry was effeminising, while warlike words could stir manly courage.

Sarah Werner (Wynken de Worde) compares modern and early modern information overload. The printing press seemed to contemporaries to unleash an overabundance of books in which useful knowledge would be lost; readers responded by developing reading and note-taking strategies to cope with the flood of information.

Roy Booth is investigating an early modern plagiary. A 1652 pamphlet on the ‘Black Monday’ eclipse, attributed to Isabel Yeamans, turns out to be plagiarized from a treatise by Nicholas Culpepper. Moreover, ‘Isabel Yeamans’ didn’t exist until Isabel Fell got married in 1664.

Michael Sisk looks at the fall and rise of metaphysical poetry at Campus Mentis.

Returning to the Shakespeare authorship ‘controversy’, Bardiac discussed this issue in a series of posts: 1, 2, 3 and 4. (Please note: You are very welcome to comment and tell me that I should take your particular Shakespeare pet conspiracy theory seriously. But if you do I will take the piss out of you. Don’t say you weren’t warned.)

Brief notices

Fun and Games! Never mind the Olympics, Bardolph brings us news of the Cotswold Games and ‘the lost sport of erecting castles on little plinthes’. And Edward Vallance reports on the Age of Intrigue, an online RPG based in the Restoration period.

Archaeologists may have found the remains of Shakespeare’s original playhouse in Shoreditch

Tilman Riemenschneider (1460-1531) was a specialist in limewood sculpture, including exquisitely carved altars.

Erly Mdn Txtspk. No, rly.

Bad news for Shakespeare readers: the Arden Shakespeare Controversy.

Well, that will do for today, because I haven’t had lunch yet and I’m hungry. I hope you enjoyed it and that you found something here that you haven’t already seen… And if I missed anything you think I should have included, you know where the comment section is, right?

The next early modern edition will be in October and as ever, we need hosts!


Digital Literary Studies

Kristine has posted some notes on a new Blackwell Companion to Digital Literary Studies, in which this blog gets an honourable mention, along with Blogging the Renaissance and Renaissance Lit Blog, as early modern pioneers. Cool!

I’m certainly not going to nitpick that I’m an historian, not a literary scholar. It’s not as though we history bloggers ever have any problems co-opting folk from the Literature department as members of our little empire, is it now? One of the many good things about blogging is that boundaries are fuzzy, and long may that continue.

But it does seem a bit of a shame that the book, unlike recent guides to Digital History and Digital Humanities*, isn’t available as an online resource.

There’s something not quite right about a guide to digital studies only being available in a paper version. Can you have a completely meaningful discussion of digital artefacts that is paper-bound and hyperlink-less?

Oh yeah, and it’ll set you back the guts of £100/$200. I’ll bet that somewhere in its pages there’s something completely unironic about crisis in academic publishing and the prices of academic books…

………

*A quick Wayback check suggests that Blackwell made that Companion (pub. 2004) freely available online in 2006. So perhaps they’ll do the same with this one sometime next year.


Our Friends in the Civil War

Ooh, a new English Civil War drama. (After all, it’s been a long, long time since By The Sword Divided.)

And Peter Capaldi as Charles I?!


Early Modern Carnivalesque

I shall be hosting the next edition of Carnivalesque for all things early modern at this ‘ere blog, on or about 17 August.

Email your nominations to sharon {at} earlymodernweb.org(.)uk or use the sparkly new nomination form.


Recently noted around the web

What I’ve been reading online lately…

Nazis do The Lambeth Walk
  

Back to the Futura
  the Obama poster and German modernist art

Why science writing is hard — Andrew Sullivan (and surrogates) illustrate
  "Just because a press release or a paper says something doesn’t mean you can suspend your bull-shit sensor."

Stranger Fruit: The Value of History of Science to Science Education
  how historians can contribute to better understanding of science

How to get a grant from NEH
  good advice on grant proposals (not just to NEH)

“I do not think about things I don’t think about.” « The Edge of the American West
  the 'Monkey' trial

Peter Burke, “Context in Context” « The Long Eighteenth
  On contextualising the idea of 'context'


On blogs and comments

There seem to be two distinct kinds of blogs with highly active comment threads.

type 1: people write comments
type 2: people read other people’s comments and then write comments

You know the first type: full of people who clearly haven’t bothered to read what anyone else said before they rush to the comment box, because they repeat exactly the same moronic/inaccurate assertion that has been made, and answered/corrected, several dozen times already.

Hmm. We need technology that would recognise the duplicated comments and give the offenders an electric shock through their computer. That’d learn ‘em.


Recently noted around the web

What I’ve been reading online lately…

A Don’s Life – Hadrian — some myths busted
  Mary Beard has some more reflections on Hadrian

A very modern emperor
  Mary Beard on Hadrian

The Declaration of Sentiments at 160
  Hugo Schwyzer on a key moment in feminist history

invisibl olimpiks
  10/10

The Green Aesthetic
  communicating 'greenness' to consumers

(Sorry about the lack of posting lately. Events beyond my control getting in the way.)


Raw Carnival News

For fans of the History Carnival and Del.icio.us:

You can now nominate posts for the carnival by simply bookmarking and tagging them with historycarnival. They’ll appear on a special Carnival Uncooked page, to be reviewed by the upcoming host.

(This is thanks to an idea suggested to me a very long time ago by, I think, Alun Salt (apparently not) or maybe Jeremy Boggs??? – with apologies for taking so long to take it up that I can’t be sure who it was now. If you were that person, let me know…)


Recently noted around the web

What I’ve been reading online lately…

Flowchart of the week
  what to do with that idea

2b or not 2b?
  david crystal on txtg


Fun was had by all

It was a splendid conference, although I think I’m too brainfried to do any serious reporting. Good to meet up with several bloggers and commenters for the first time: Bill Turkel, John Wood and Gill Spraggs, and Lou. If I’ve forgotten anyone, oops and sorry. I really am a bit knackered.


Interactive digital history

Well, I’m off to a conference today, in case you’d all forgotten. (I appear not to have plugged it much lately. Very remiss of me.) Below is the abstract for my paper and a few (!) links I’ve put together, some of which may be used to string together my “ideas”, and some of which are just things I happened upon while reading. Comments welcome, especially if they prove the thesis that interactivity is the coolest thing on the planet.

Abstract

Digital History 2.0? Collaboration, community and interactivity in the digitisation of history

One of the loudest buzzwords of the last few years has been “Web 2.0″. There’s much debate over exactly what this means, but at the core of the concept is the ideal of dynamic content, interactivity and participation by web audiences. Wikipedia is perhaps the most (in)famous example so far, while newspapers are falling over themselves to allow readers of their websites to have their say. But does all this offer anything useful for historians? It has been suggested that ‘interactive’ digital history might transform historical practice, creating ‘new forms of collaboration, new modes of debate, and new modes of collecting evidence about the past’. The National Archives has set up a community wiki to draw on the experience of researchers in order to extend and expand on its online catalogue and digital content; there are growing numbers of online archives, such as the new Great War Archive, built entirely or substantially on public contributions of written texts, images, oral histories, and so on. The Old Bailey Proceedings Online has attracted a wide range of researchers – academics and non-academics alike – since its inception, many of whom have accumulated specialised knowledge that could enrich the site as a resource. This paper explores the potential benefits – and possible pitfalls – of opening up digital history resources to user-generated content and metadata.

Web 2.0

What is Web 2.0? (Tim O’Reilly)

Blogger
WordPress.com
Facebook
MySpace
Del.icio.us
Flickr
Wikipedia

Examples

Diary of Samuel Pepys

eComma

Your Archives
*Crime and Punishment category
*Transportation of Mary Wade aged 10

Library of Congress Photos on Flickr

Also Picture Australia

The Great War Archive
*Blog

The September 11 Archive

Hurrican Digital Memory Bank

Moving Here

Rosie the Riveter/WWII Home Front

CiteULike

Library Thing

reCaptcha

AHA Archives Wiki

Links

Digital History (Dan Cohen and Roy Rosenzweig)

The Pirate Problem (Dan Cohen)

Digitisation and its discontents (Antony Grafton)

Everyone’s a Historian Now

The changing role of intellectual authority (Peter Nicholson)

The bottom is not enough

Semantic Networks and Historical Knowledge Management

The rise of crowdsourcing

Digital Research Tools (DiRT)

Using Wiki in Education

Ontology is overrated (Clay Shirky)

Broad and narrow folksonomies (Thomas Vander Wal)

Folksonomy explanations

Folksonomy (Shirky)

Folksonomy: social classification (Gene Smith)

Folksonomies/metadata ecologies (Louis Rosenfeld)

Folksonomic solution to record linkage

Tags Help Make Libraries Del.icio.us

Metadata for the masses

Taxonomies and Trees

Overview of Social Bookmarking Tools

Social tools, components for success

Why some social networks work and others don’t

The Cornucopia of the Commons

Visualisation

Wordle

Prefuse

Graphviz

Timeline

Collaborative Transcription and Annotation

Archival transcriptions: for the public, by the public

Crowdsourced Transcription and Collaborative Annotation

Crowdsourcing transcriptions

Collaborative Manuscript Transcription


The correct response

To an unreasonable request.


Recently noted around the web

What I’ve been reading online lately…

Mmm… Marginalia: The Games Medievals Play ~ Got Medieval
  more medieval marginalia

Poor decision on an epic scale in
  …

Ooops — Missed Anniversary: Darwin/Wallace edition
  Thomas Levenson on the 150th anniversary

History Carnival 66
  join the debates!

Mind the gap: did Darwin avoid publishing his theory for many years?
  … short answer: no

ExpoMuseum
  history of world fairs and exhibitions since 1850


Four Years is a long time in Blogland

I forgot about my fourth blogiversary in June. My fourth anniversary at this location (and using WordPress) comes up at the end of July.

Some things hardly seem to have changed at all. There were presidential elections that year too. We’ll have to hope for a better result this time around.

Other things have changed a lot. So many blogs I loved in 2004 that no longer exist or are quite different now.

And there were a lot of history blogs that started up around the same time as me: happy 4th birthday to all of you who’re still plugging away!

So, is there anyone still reading who’s been here right from the beginning? (Can’t say I would blame you if you’d got bored by now…)


Time for a good demolition job

This list of The Top 100 Liberal Arts Professor Blogs has been getting linked around.

I’m not sure why. It is a pile of stinking poo.

1. Basic errors. It lists ‘Another Damned Medievalist’ as an ‘English’ blog. I think ADM will be surprised to discover that she’s been relocated to the English department when she gets back from her London research trip. She would probably also want to point out that her blog is in fact called Blogenspiel (ADM is her handle).

2. A number of the blogs listed are inactive. Miriam Jones’s original scribblingwoman blog has been defunct for some time; Miriam now has a newer blog elsewhere. The English Eclectic hasn’t been updated since December 2007 (and was never very prolific, that I can recall; and, although it was quite a nice little blog, there are more than 100 blogs that are better). These are just ones I know about. The most recent post at a blog is at the very top of the front page, for god’s sake; it takes a split second to discover that no one’s been at home for months.

3. Crappy conceptualisation. 30 of the blogs are under the heading ‘English’. That appears to mean ‘in an English department’ (except when they’re not: see 1 above). This is in contrast to otherwise mostly specific discipline headings such as ‘sociology’, ‘history’, ‘philosophy’, etc. ‘English’ is not terribly helpful or meaningful, given the breadth of interests you can find in English departments. They also seem to have failed to grasp the concept of a group blog populated by members of different disciplines: Crooked Timber is listed under Philosophy. Which isn’t entirely wrong but doesn’t do CT’s range of interests any justice.

4. ‘Professor’ blogs? Some of the best ‘liberal arts’ blogs I know are not written by academic staff, but by postgrad students. There is something just not right about a list of academic blogs that (by definition) excludes blogs like Acephalous and Airminded. (I won’t pick on the UScentricness of the terminology since the site is primarily aimed at that market. Non-US readers should be aware, though, that ‘Liberal Arts’ has a particular meaning, which isn’t the same as ‘Arts’; and ‘professor’ in US universities refers to any member of faculty, not just the most senior people.)

5. I don’t want to get too much into inevitably subjective judgments about the quality of the blogs listed and what should be in and what should be out, but it is being presented as a serious ‘reviews and ratings’ site, not just personal opinions, so I will say: anyone who thinks those 10 history blogs are the top 10 in the blogosphere, even if you only include ‘professors’, is an ignoramus.*

6. And a final thing: the list in fact contains 101 entries, not 100. (There are two blogs listed under 73.) So they can’t count or correctly format an ordered list either.

I’m not fond of lists like this at the best of times, but I think this has to be the most incompetently conceived, sloppily executed, downright utterly worthless effort I have seen in four years of blogging. Now will people stop linking to it as though it might be a useful resource, please?**

***

*I’ve just realised that could be ambiguous. I don’t mean that all of the 10 are unworthy of being in such a list. A few definitely should be in anybody’s top 10. Several, however, are simply not in that sort of league.

**And before you say anything, I’ve added rel=nofollow to the link at the top. They ain’t gettin’ no pagerank from me.


Recently noted around the web

What I’ve been reading online lately…

The Web Time Forgot
  Paul Otlet's Mundaneum

Critics choose their most-loathed books
  writers find the words to completely and utterly trash books they hate

How Darwin won the evolution race
  Darwin and Wallace and the Origin of Species

Pharyngula gets email
  from an utter fundie loony. freaking hilarious


Blog Bloat

Moan for the Day: I really am increasingly irritated by all the widgets and multimedia and embedded video and crap that gets added to blogs, which all tend in one direction: the blog takes longer and longer to load and hogs more and more CPU (and battery) once it’s loaded. It is not, to my mind, a good sign when a blog sends my laptop fan into overdrive dealing with a load of stuff loading in the sidebars that I have no interest in reading and youtube videos I can’t be arsed to watch. Just because you can add all that stuff doesn’t necessarily mean you should.

(It was much better in the good old days when blogs were all lean and light and it was about the fighting writing. Obviously.)

Update: I’ve upgraded to the new Lean Mean Firefox 3 Machine, which should by all accounts solve a lot of these problems. But that isn’t meant to encourage you widgety buggers, OK?


We have something in common with Firefox!

Remember OBP’s server overload blues?

It can happen to the best of ‘em.


Reposted: Women’s history/gender history: what and why?

NB: I posted this way back in 2005, and haven’t checked that all the links still work. It doesn’t hurt to dust these things off from time to time. Do I have any more specific reason than that? Hmmm.

Some women have never lacked historians: usually unusual women of high social status (who had some influence on the ‘male’ political world): queens, mistresses of kings, that kind of thing: what Gerda Lerner called ‘compensatory history’. The goal of women’s history as practised today, however, is to attend to and assert the validity of the experiences and roles of many kinds of women; to challenge perceptions that these were somehow a) ahistorical (biologically determined, therefore unchanging) and b) unimportant, not Real History.

Still, it should be remembered that women’s history is not something invented in the 1970s. (At Oxford University around 1960, a young early modernist, Keith Thomas, offered a series of undergraduate lectures on the history of women. His colleagues found the idea bizarre; the students stayed away in droves. Yet it must have seemed practicable to him – and he was prepared to try.)

To stick with research since the 19th-century emergence of the academic discipline of history, the ‘first wave’ of western feminism was accompanied by important work on the history of women in the early 20th century: in Britain alone, for example, work by Eileen Power (medieval history), Alice Clark and Ivy Pinchbeck (women’s work), Ray Strachey and Sylvia Pankhurst (the women’s suffrage movement). Yet much of this was neglected for decades until the take-off of women’s history associated with the ‘second wave’ of feminism and, more broadly, with the expanding horizons of history writing from the 1960s. That brought research on an unprecedented scale, and with larger ambitions to achieve a fundamental rewriting of all History.

There have been a wide variety of approaches to the history of women, and nearly all have had to grapple with particularly acute problems of evidence and interpretation: discovering new or neglected sources, approaching old ones in new ways, often borrowing methods and techniques from other disciplines. The growth of social history, another challenge to the primacy of political history narrowly defined (states, rulers, governments) cannot be disentangled from this; it offered new methods and perspectives, and often emphasised subjects of key importance to women’s history. (This was true in the early 20th century as well as the 1960s and 70s, although what we’d now think of as social history was then usually called economic history; this was long before the statisticians got in on the act.)

Some key ‘second wave’ pioneers of women’s history, like Sheila Rowbotham, were socialists as much as feminists. But the relationship was not always an easy one; social history could all too easily continue to marginalise women. Labour history, for example, could be overwhelmingly masculine, narrowly focused on institutions; defining ‘work’ and ‘labour’ in particular ways, this kind of labour history tended to overlook the vital contributions of female labour, the variety and significance of the paid work that women have always done, and to entirely exclude any consideration of their unpaid work. And the relationship between Marxism and feminism was strikingly summed up as an unhappy marriage.

An important strand in women’s history has documented their struggles to win admittance to the ‘public sphere’ and to be placed on equal terms with men when it came to legal status, work opportunities, voting rights. This is a key constituent of what was dubbed ‘herstory’: retelling history from women’s perspectives, aiming to recover women’s experiences, ‘women’s cultures’, to document a distinctive female past. Women had been, in Rowbotham’s words, Hidden from History, and it was time to put that right. It’s still going strong too! And it was, and still is, also often about personal reclamations of history far beyond the academy.

Still, while it went far beyond the biographical ‘women worthies‘ or ‘compensatory history’ type of approach, herstory still tended to focus on histories of exceptional women, forms of rebellion against patriarchal norms, whether ‘public’ political activism or ‘private’ feminine desires and friendships. And how were ‘women’s worlds’ to be related to the world of mainstream history? It was not so clear how this approach could (on its own) ever be more than a supplement to Real History, all too easily ignored or, at best, accorded a token presence around the margins.

There was another problem. Who were these ‘women’ in ‘women’s history’? White, middle-class women? Women are not all alike (and no woman is only a woman). What of the influence of class, race, religion, nationality, sexuality, other social/cultural group identities, on women’s historical experiences?

The identification of these issues fostered the rise of ‘gender history’. Gender, it needs to be noted, is a concept that can be used in more than one way. Sometimes, it can simply refer to studying the relationships between women and men, and the ways in which ‘gender roles’ are socially conditioned. But there is a more theoretical/intellectual history approach, associated with ‘poststructuralism’, and perhaps most famously formulated by Joan W Scott, who argued that gender was a key ‘category of historical analysis’, and that it was vital to study how ‘femininity’ and ‘masculinity’ were culturally constructed in relation to each other in different societies. The category ‘women’ itself had to be deconstructed (as did that of ‘experience‘).

The enquiry was no longer so much ‘What did women experience, and what did women, do in xth century in y culture?’ but rather ‘How (and by what processes) in xth century in y culture did gender help construct distinct masculine and feminine meanings and identities?’ [link may be dead: try archive version if it doesn't work]

This was both stimulating and controversial, for much the same reasons that poststructuralist or postmodernist theories applied to history have been stimulating/controversial more generally. But it was, perhaps, felt to be particularly threatening to a field of history that was relatively new and politically engaged:

The deconstruction of the term ‘women’ and the emphasis on the differences between women at the expense of what they have in common, denies the existence of women as a political category and as a subordinate class.

Other concerns about gender history focused on the decentering of women as its subject. The history of masculinities is a fast-rising field; some (like Joan Hoff) worried that this lets men take over centre-stage again and that women’s history will get lost in the process. (I personally think that Hoff did not help her cause by calling male feminists ‘Tootsie men’.) Others disagree with those fears (I agree with them). The new histories of men are not like the old history of men; histories of women continue to be written; the boundary between ‘women’s history’ and ‘gender history’ is not a clearly-defined one, and nor (as this blogger would attest) do these varying approaches exclude each other.

It is impossible to summarise what’s going on in women’s history or gender history right now; it’s just too vast and diverse. Just take a look at the TOCs of some main journals and you’ll soon see what I mean. I think that in my area, early modern social history, there is currently a particular interest in ‘agency’ – exploring the ways in which ordinary women lived their lives within the constraints placed upon them, survived, negotiated with the system for a better deal without rebelling against it – and how ‘practice’ related to ‘prescriptions’. We ask about both ‘experiences’ and ‘meanings’. There have been some marvellous recent studies of early modern English masculinities; of crime and gender; splendid surveys unashamedly about women; and textbooks that make no mention of women or gender in the title at all – but they’re in there.

I’ll leave you some links to explore, anyway.

And feel free to contribute in comments (or indeed to blog about this yourself?)…

… What’s the current state of affairs in your own subject areas? (Period, place etc)
… Thoughts on your own research/teaching practice
… What are your favourite books? Which do you think are the most important, must-read works for people interested in learning more about women in the past and/or about the development of women’s history? I may well put together a bibliography of some kind.
… Favourite online resources and blog posts

………

Gateways and general stuff

BBC Women’s history
SOSIG: Women’s history
History in Focus: Gender
About Women’s history
Women’s history teaching resources

Essays, debates, etc

Myth and memory: old passions, new visions
History, she wrote
The challenge of opinionative assurance
Raising Clio’s consciousness: the writing of women’s history in the US
Integrating men’s history into women’s history: a proposition
Leeds gender studies e-papers
A group of one’s own: filling the gaps in women’s history
To feel a part of history: rethinking the US history survey
Women’s History Review (all issues more than 2 years old are free to access)
Gender as a postmodern category of paralysis (by Joan Hoff)
Unravelling postmodern paralysis
Mistrials and diatribulations: a reply to Joan Hoff
A reply to my critics (Joan Hoff)
Women’s history and poststructuralism
Women’s history: continuity, change or standing still?
History, feminism and gender studies [try archive version if that link doesn't work]
How did Women’s History Month come about?

Intersections: gender, history and culture in the Asian context
Recovery and revision: women’s history and west Virginia
Gendering modern German history: rewritings of the mainstream
Feminist knowledge (African women’s history)
Feminist history in Japan

Bibliographies, reading lists

Short bibliography
ViVa bibliography of women’s history
Feminist history bibliography
Annotated bibliography of feminist historical theory
Women’s history bibliography

Book reviews

Writing women’s history since the Renaissance
Gender in history
Worlds between: historical perspectives on gender and class

Courses, syllabi

MA in women’s history (Liverpool)
MA in Women’s history (Royal Holloway)
Women’s history, feminist history and gender history (course unit)

… And bloggers!

Women’s History of Philosophy (Siris)
The search for agency (East Asian history) (Muninn)
This one’s for Dr Crazy (student whines spark great discussion), (New Kid on the Hallway)
Women, studying of (The Little Professor)

[Also, don't forget EMN's Women/Gender category archive and EMR's Gender category.]


Recently noted around the web

What I’ve been reading online lately…

Carnivalesque XL
  the 40th Carnivalesque (early modern edition) at jliedl.ca

The Tudor delusion
  names and anachronisms

Kunstpedia
  "the knowledgebase on fine- and decorative arts" (bilingual English and Dutch)

Everyone’s a historian now
  digital archives and 'crowdsourcing' are changing historical research

Thnkx, kid
  but not right now…


The names of things: ‘Tudors’?

CSL Davies has an article in the TLS on ‘The Tudor delusion’. The argument is that ‘the Tudors’ and the people they governed did not themselves use the expression ‘the Tudors’ to describe the dynasty, let alone their society as a whole, and therefore: “We must learn to do without the Tudors”.*

Elsewhere in the article (ie, when he’s not going for a final-sentence rhetorical flourish) he seems to be arguing only the need to use the term with care, because you just can’t do history if you limit yourself to using the language of the people you study.

It is impossible to discuss, say, economic development meaningfully while only using language comprehensible to Shakespeare. But contemporary vocabulary imposed limitations on sixteenth-century people attempting to discuss economic affairs; their efforts to formulate even the straightforward connection between the quantity of money in circulation and price levels, for instance, were painfully slow. “Tudor” is a term too deeply entrenched to be banished from our vocabulary, but we should be aware that it, too, is an anachronism, creating a similar barrier to our understanding of contemporary thought.

Anachronisms are dangerous. But they’re often necessary and useful. The article is well worth reading.

* Well, in fact, as he notes further on in the article, some of the Tudors’ subjects did call them the Tudors. But they were the Welsh ones, so obviously they don’t count. /snark


Toys and distractions

Sorry for the recent lack of posting. My Macbook’s hard drive died. Replacing it was easy (… once I found the right screwdriver). Ten minute job. Replacing all my favourite stuff on the hard drive? A bloody great time-sucking pain in the arse.

But at least it’s an opportunity to dump all the crap I never bothered to use, and get new stuff (OK, probably won’t use most of those either, but it’s fun). And upgrade to Leopard. (Shiny.) And it’s a much bigger drive.

PS: completely unrelated, but it keeps making me laugh hysterically, so I just have to share: The Twat-o-Tron.


Recently noted around the web

What I’ve been reading online lately…

Hearty mushroom soup recipe
  liked this one

Lentils with chorizo & red wine recipe
  mmmmmmmmmm….

Medieval Parking Fines
  a not entirely idiotic analogous use of 'medieval' in the news? Got Medieval is stunned.

The Ebb and Flow of Movies: Box Office Receipts 1986 — 2008
  a brilliant way to visualise changing box office patterns


Old Bailey update: in the blogosphere

The trickle of new posts appearing in my feeds seems to have pretty much dried up now, so this is probably the final final update of links. (But if you’ve seen anything interesting by bloggers that I’ve missed, leave a comment.)

Blogs (* indicates personal favourites):

*African history in the Old Bailey? (History of Africa)

*Suffragettes and Postboxes (Transpontine)

Lags and legacies (JISC digitisation blog)

Friday hoydens: suffragettes in court (Hoyden About Town)

Old Bailey Online (geoffreyrockwell.com)

What happened at the Old Bailey? (Research Buzz)

Old Bailey records online (Slaw.ca)

Just as well they didn’t have t’internet back then (Banditry)

Tales from the Hanging Court (Metafilter)

Sarah Ellen Procter, Charged with the Murder of Charlotte Whale, 5/28/1888 (True Crime Weblog)

*Old Bailey 1674-1913 (Lawyers, Guns and Money) They like the Ordinary’s Accounts too

New Online Old Bailey (The Corridor) Cricket in the Proceedings

Old Bailey Online (The Cat’s Meat Shop)

*Old Bailey online (Vince Smith) A comparison with the Biodiversity Heritage Library

Light absorbing ovines (Ben’s Blog) People just can’t resist looking for those black sheep in the family…

Old-fashioned trademark infringements (IPblog)

Getting big publicity (Available Online)

*In the Dock (The Bioscope) Early cinemas in the proceedings

with a modest generosity (Catholic World News) When it was high treason to be a Catholic priest

XML in the service of crime (Blockhead Blog)

Not related to the launch – the research was completed using the original version of the site – but of interest anyway: ‘Deaf by God’ tried in Old Bailey records. This reports a recent article in Sign Language Studies on the appearances of deaf interpreters in the 18th-century proceedings. Abstract/Muse access.

And some picks from news sites:

Old Bailey opens its unseen files (Observer)

Rush to search Old Bailey records of criminal trials (Times Online)

Global witness: Grim classics of Old Bailey go on internet (Yorkshire Post)

When hanging was too good for some (BBC magazine)

Booze, betrayal and death: tales from NZ’s past (NZ Herald)

Criminal historians crash London web site archive (Bloomberg)

In praise of… The Old Bailey (Guardian editorial)

London’s Old Bailey criminal court puts archive online (AP)

In the dock, and on the web (The Economist)

The dead shouldn’t have the last word (Independent)


No more whigs?

New frocks for judges. The update’s only taken 3 centuries!

(Whatever would Bloody Jeffreys say?)

Update: mind you, as The Little Professor has just reminded us, academics are in no position to laugh at judges for wearing silly outfits that haven’t been in fashion for several centuries.


It was all going so well

And then the BBC went and did a piece on their website with the title ‘Great-Granddad was a killer’. Oh, and there was a rave review on Radio 4 at the weekend (on Saturday Review; it’s on Listen Again).*

clunk… grind… thud…

Tuesday update

It turns out that yesterday we got over 3 million hits, and as far as we can tell, nearly all of that was the direct result of just the one BBC piece; nothing else was coming up in Google News (though there was some extra traffic on Sunday after the radio feature). It was genuinely popular, judging by its appearance in ‘top viewed’ and ‘top emailed’ lists on the BBC site.

By way of comparison, last week when we’d hit the publicity machine really hard and got pieces into all sorts of newspapers and media sites, we got a little over 2 million hits on our busiest day.

Last week’s publicity was largely an ‘official’ line: we supplied a press release, a few interesting cases and quotes from people who’d used the site, and journalists used that information to compile mostly pretty generic reports, often focussed on the famous cases – Wilde, Crippen, the Pankhursts. The message: here is a historical website with lots of stuff about notorious criminals and horrible punishments in the past. (Oh, and your ancestors might be mentioned in it.)

Yesterday’s piece was framed very differently. It tapped straight into the huge popularity of family history (which the BBC has done a lot for in recent years, after all): the personal and family angle, the potential for notoriety and scandal, or simply pathos and tragedy, much closer to home. The ‘Who Do You Think You Are?’ approach. Publicity gold.

Result for us, unfortunately: website falling over again. But the simple lesson is that just one story that presses the right buttons with readers, that they can respond to personally and emotionally, can do more (for good or bad) than a massive publicity machine churning out stories-by-numbers and formulaic soundbites.

***

*I’ve finally got around to listening to it. Rave is an understatement. It gave me a nice warm fuzzy glow anyway.


New resources for making digital history

Bill Turkel (who I get to meet in July!), has published The Programming Historian as an open access e-book. (Gavin Robinson, who actually is a programming historian, recommends it.)

And another resource you’ll want to have close at hand if you’re planning any kind of digital history project (large or small) is Jeremy Boggs’ new series on Digital Humanities design and development process:
Introduction
Part 1: figure out what you’re building
Part 2: information architecture and organization

The important thing I want to highlight about both of these resources is that they’re about making digital history, not just using the resources and tools that someone else already made. A lot of discussion of digital resources focuses on the finished products and what they can do for your research as an end-user (eg, this recent post). But if you can get involved in the creation of digital resources, you have the opportunity to influence what actually gets digitised, to get the resources you want.

Similarly, I’ve been coming to the view that it’s just not enough to champion blogging or writing on wikis, even though these activities are useful and stimulating in their own right (and people who dismiss them as worthless are big fat idiots who need a good slap). What you really need to be doing is learning how blogs/wikis work: how to install and maintain blog or wiki software and then tailor it to fit your own needs – and what it’s possible to do with these tools once you have them. The skills you learn in the process, to use the educationalists’ occasionally useful jargon, are highly transferable.

And there are going to be real job opportunities for those who take the initiative now and acquire the practical skills and understanding of what creating digital history needs. The generation of historians (and humanities academics more generally) in charge of hiring mostly doesn’t care about (or for) blogging. Wikipedia brings it out in a collective rash. But it’s well aware that there is quite a lot of grant money becoming available for digital history/humanities. And that’s something it does care about.

The technical skills needed aren’t taught in more than a handful of history departments (I don’t know of any in the UK): students and junior academics who want to exploit these new opportunities are largely going to have to teach themselves, with the help of resources like The Programming Historian. Get in ahead of the crowd now. Your career might depend on it.


Appalling, awful, terrible news

No, not Mayor Boris. That’s just absurd.

No, this is the shocker I discovered yesterday: Mel Gibson is to star in a movie remake of Edge of Darkness.


Recently noted around the web

What I’ve been reading online lately…

Charles Tilly, May 20, 1929 – April 29, 2008
  personal memories of Charles Tilly

Old Bailey opens its unseen files
  nice feature on the project in The Observer

Observer Food Monthly April 2008
  a special anniversary edtion: loadsa Nigel Slater recipes

the moment cat lost…
  uh-oh

Hitler diaries scandal: ‘We’d printed the scoop of the century, then it turned to dust’
  on the 25th anniversary of the Hitler Diaries, the inside story

The Pirate Problem
  dan cohen on historians' reactions to digital history


Law and Disorder in Early Modern Wales

I haz a shiny book!

book cover

Publisher’s catalogue. (Amazon UK; Amazon US)

There’s summat curious going on here – the publisher’s told me that the price is £45 (which is probably what I’d expect – the Amazon UK price is £46.99), but their online catalogue says £35. So if you want a cheap copy, you’d better jump in there and order it quickly before they notice. Just sayin’.

It feels so good to have it out. I NEVER EVER have to touch this thing again!


Oscar Wilde and the publicity machine

Yes, we have the Oscar Wilde trials. Exciting, huh?

Yes, that’s all we’ve got. No, we didn’t censor anything. The “details of the case are unfit for publication” bit? That was the original publishers. They did that all the time with sex cases. Bloody Victorians, spoiling our fun.

Should I blame our publicity people for including the case in the press release? I’d have left it out altogether, myself. It’s not like we don’t have plenty of sexy alternatives, what with Crippen and suffragettes and Irish terrorists (all of which were also in the press release). Or perhaps blame the journalists for bigging it up? (But it’s a notorious sex scandal! And it’s Oscar Wilde! What else are they going to do?)

What we said, buried in the middle of the press release, was:

Some of the most sensational cases ever to be tried at the Old Bailey are also now available for people to view, including the trials in which Oscar Wilde was convicted of indecency and the infamous Dr Hawley Harvey Crippen, who killed his wife, was bought to justice.

And somehow you end up with Reuters (and hence newspapers round the entire fucking globe) heading up their report with:

The transcript from Oscar Wilde’s trial for gross indecency at London’s Old Bailey Court went online for the first time on Monday alongside a raft of murder, robbery and abduction cases.

(And what that means is that I get a bunch of emails asking where’s the transcript and have we censored the material?)

Bah. I blame everybody.


A screen without a mouse is broken

Another perspective on Wikipedia (and check out the gin analogy…):

I was being interviewed by a TV producer to see whether I should be on their show, and she asked me, “What are you seeing out there that’s interesting?”

I started telling her about the Wikipedia article on Pluto. You may remember that Pluto got kicked out of the planet club a couple of years ago, so all of a sudden there was all of this activity on Wikipedia. The talk pages light up, people are editing the article like mad, and the whole community is in an ruckus… She heard this story and she shook her head and said, “Where do people find the time?” That was her question. And I just kind of snapped. And I said, “No one who works in TV gets to ask that question. You know where the time comes from. It comes from the cognitive surplus you’ve been masking for 50 years.” [H-T]

And:

Here’s something four-year-olds know: A screen that ships without a mouse ships broken. … Media that’s targeted at you but doesn’t include you may not be worth sitting still for.

I’m watching a fraction of the TV I did about five years ago (there is only one programme I regard as a must-watch right at the moment). Instead, I read and write. I visit blogs and leave grumpy comments when they annoy me. I write amused, ranty, serious, light, posts on this blog about whatever catches my attention. I play with wikis and other software when no one’s looking.

I still like TV; I don’t buy the view that it’s all just passive mindless consumption. But the kind of activity you can do is sort of detached from it; conversations with friends (and on blogs now too!). Which is different from the direct participation of blogs and wikis. Don’t like it? Don’t get it? Change it. Add a comment. Jump right in there.

On the other hand…

humorous pictures


An Old Bailey evening update

Of today’s server-grinding-to-a-halt issues, the question has been asked – couldn’t this be anticipated?

To which the answer is: it was.

We knew that the publicity and the appeal of the subject would bring the site temporarily to its knees. But anticipation is one thing; being able to do something to stop it happening is another. Regardless of what you do to tweak the software, the database, and so on for more efficient performance – and the new site is much better than the old one – any site is ultimately limited by the capacities of the hardware on which it’s hosted. (In fact, the site coped pretty well on Sunday, and we had about four times the normal traffic. Update – Monday’s stats are in! We had about twenty times the normal volume of traffic [memorably described by one journalist as 'crammed with digital tourists']. Freakin’ ‘ell.)

But hardware is expensive (even though it has been getting cheaper in recent years); don’t forget this is a small-scale academic institution reliant on public funding. We can’t justify buying what would have been needed for today, even if we could have predicted how much that would actually be, and then have it sitting around doing bugger all for the next five years. That would simply be a waste of limited resources.

And speaking of which, there is one new addition to the site that I haven’t talked about so far, because I hate it like poison: advertising. Unfortunately, it’s the only real way for us to ensure long-term income to maintain (and develop) the site properly. (The structuring of academic funding for this kind of digital project doesn’t really take ongoing maintenance costs into account, beyond basic hosting costs.) It’s text ads only – and if you use Firefox and Adblock Plus (like me), you probably haven’t even seen them, so count yourself lucky. To everyone else: I’m really sorry. Please don’t hate us.


Old Bailey Online: now from 1674 to 1913 (check it out before it collapses)

Well, I was a little cryptic the other week, but tomorrow it all goes public (and we kind of expect it to crash at some point – I’ll be almost disappointed if it doesn’t…),* and today there is a pretty nice feature in the Observer.

[Monday update... creak... groan... thud... Sorry, folks. It should get back to normal in a day or two...]

So here it is: the Proceedings of the Old Bailey Online 1674-1834 is now the Proceedings of the Old Bailey and Central Criminal Court 1674-1913.

This doesn’t only mean that you can now search for 200,000 trials held at the Old Bailey over a period of 2 and a half centuries. The other new set of goodies is the full text of (almost) every Ordinary of Newgate’s Account between 1690 and 1772 (in the next few months this should expand to a full archive of every known surviving Account from c.1674 onwards).

I’ve written here before about these grimly fascinating pamphlets. They’ve been used by a number of historians, including Andrea Mackenzie and Peter Linebaugh, but the surviving pamphlets have been scattered across a number of different libraries and archives. From now on they’ll be together in one fully searchable digital archive. Plus, I’m in the process of completing a database that links every convict mentioned in the Accounts to their trial, providing it has a surviving report (perhaps 3/4 of the links have already been made).

This should make for some interesting research possibilities. For example, historians often argue that women who successfully ‘pleaded their bellies’, ie had their death sentence postponed on grounds of being pregnant, usually escaped hanging. In fact, we say that in our own background section. But I’m not so sure. Through the process of cross-referencing trials and Ordinary’s Accounts, I’ve already discovered several women whose sentences were respited for pregnancy but subsequently carried out (eg in September 1695. So what I’ll be asking (once I’ve finished making the damned links) is: how many were executed and how many were permanently reprieved? Have we historians been getting it wrong? Answering those questions wasn’t impossible before now, but it would have been extremely difficult. And there will, no doubt, be many more possibilities like this.

***

The other news, because I haven’t been plugging it enough and you’ve probably all forgotten, is that we’re holding a conference in July to celebrate the relaunch: The Metropolis on Trial, in the throbbing metropolis of… Milton Keynes. If you’d like to attend, registration is open and you can download a booking form at the website. If you want to book the accommodation we’ve arranged at discount rates, you need to send the form in by the end of May at the latest and preferably as soon as possible. There is a 2 person room sharing option which is really good value (if you’re skint and looking for someone to share with maybe we can put people in touch here – leave a note in comments).

***

Linkage…

(Note that old links will continue to work for a few months, and we may well set up proper redirection at some point.)

Old stuff on OBP at this blog: Old Bailey category and the Old Bailey Symposium.

Old Bailey Files at The Head Heeb.

*Already this morning some searches have been very slow, which is not a good sign.


Recently noted around the web

What I’ve been reading online lately…

A rogue copy editor’s manifesto
  because language belongs to the people who use it. amen.

The 50 Greatest Crime Writers
  according to The Times, anyway… at least, some of the articles are worth reading

Successful Test cricketers live for longer
  according to the latest research…

Play It Again, Sam (Re-enactments, Part Two) – Errol Morris
  what we see and don’t see


When swearing goes bad

There is this unintentionally (I think) hilarious article in the Times Online about swearing. One of my favourite topics!

What makes it funny, first off? All of the swearwords have been asterisked out.

And then, I always have to giggle at people whose line is ‘no, really, I’m not one of those old fogeys who’s offended by swearing. But…’ And the ‘but’ is the old chestnut that swearing is just fine as long as it’s creative and clever and discriminating and suitably restrained and blah blah blah. (Talk about missing the fucking point.)

[I should add at this point that I don't have problems with people who are genuinely offended by swearing. It's supposed to be offensive. But if you don't like swearing, then just be honest about it. This self-righteous 'yesbuttery' just gets on my tits.]

And personally I don’t think that someone who came up with the following sentence is all that well placed to lecture anyone else about good language use:

Morrissey, however, is someone who manages to be a lyrical genius without practically ever resorting to swearing.

‘Without practically ever’? Dearie me.

(Did you see how restrained I was there? Do I get points?)


Momentous Changes

And so I’ve been in my job for long enough (it doesn’t feel like it) for Something Very Major to be happening. You may find out for yourself tomorrow, if you happen to be visiting the right corner of the internet (I shan’t be more explicit since the ‘real’ launch, with press releases and all that stuff, doesn’t happen for a couple of weeks yet).

People don’t like change. Or, certainly, they don’t like badly managed change. Or change that seems to be purely change for change’s sake; ‘rebranding’, when everyone liked the old brand perfectly well. And they really don’t like change that takes away their favourite stuff and fills up the screen with stuff they don’t recognise in its place.

Fingers crossed that we haven’t committed too many of these sins.

Oh well. The next few weeks should be interesting, at any rate.


Recently noted around the web

What I’ve been reading online lately…

omg a capshun!
  bonus meta lolcats!

Play It Again, Sam (Re-enactments, Part One) – Errol Morris
  illusions and deceptions in documentary reconstructions

Rise of the Digital NEH
  overview of the current state of digital humanities


Don’t assume that digital history is 24/7

Here is a cautionary tale for students using online sources to do important assignments.

Last Thursday afternoon the Old Bailey Proceedings Online (along with other resources hosted in the building) broke in a fairly major way. Our tech staff couldn’t fix it and had to pass the problem up the line to the university computing services; it took all day Friday to get it working again. In fact, at about 4.30 on Friday afternoon, emergency notices were being prepared for the weekend.

By then, I’d already had a number of panicky emails from students who were trying to use OBP to write essays. (Monday deadlines?)

The OBP has gone down at night or, worse, over a weekend before. It’s database driven, and one downside of databases compared to static web pages is that there’s more to go wrong, especially with a big database. We’re not in a position to provide technical support outside office hours, and I’m sure this is true of many free online resources provided by academic institutions: if it falls over at 6 o’clock on a Friday evening, it won’t be getting back up before Monday.

Just because those online sources seem to be open all hours, students shouldn’t assume that they will always just be there.


Hmm, I get the impression the NY Times isn’t really very fond of blogs

There are millions of people blogging. The NY Times appears to be surprised to discover that some of them take it to extremes. Or the NY Times thinks it can get a cheap story out of some of them taking it to extremes. You choose.

In Web World of 24/7 Stress, Writers Blog Till They Drop.

Two weeks ago in North Lauderdale, Fla., funeral services were held for Russell Shaw, a prolific blogger on technology subjects who died at 60 of a heart attack. In December, another tech blogger, Marc Orchant, died at 50 of a massive coronary. A third, Om Malik, 41, survived a heart attack in December.

Other bloggers complain of weight loss or gain, sleep disorders, exhaustion and other maladies born of the nonstop strain of producing for a news and information cycle that is as always-on as the Internet.

To be sure, there is no official diagnosis of death by blogging, and the premature demise of two people obviously does not qualify as an epidemic. There is also no certainty that the stress of the work contributed to their deaths. But friends and family of the deceased, and fellow information workers, say those deaths have them thinking about the dangers of their work style.

‘The premature demise of two people does not qualify as an epidemic’? This is a serious newspaper? ‘Death by blogging’, that’s a good one too.

This response seems appropriately respectful.


Recently noted around the web

What I’ve been reading online lately…

Day 43. Still no signs of rescue.
  lolcat of the week. iz funny.

A Viper Created With Recycled Keyboards
  an awesome sculpture

Deliberate Distortion
  from the Daily Mail? Shurely not!

Outwith
  Language Log on a rather wonderful word my Scottish friends taught me…

Yahoo! Movies Presents: The 10 Most Historically Inaccurate Movies
  the ones that make your history teachers cry (or cackle hysterically)


Spring is here and vegetables are pretty

After snow last weekend and pissing rain yesterday, today is a glorious spring day, perfect for a trip to the farmers’ market. Where they have the best purple sprouting broccoli I’ve seen this year. I love this stuff; it’s far, far superior to the more common green version.

purple sprouting broccoli

Recipe ideas:

P.S.B. with rice noodles
Ideas for tender spring veg
Linguine with p.s.b., sesame and chilli

Mind you, some of these recipes tell you to cook it in boiling water. I think that’s nonsense. Steaming or stir-frying is all it needs.


Disciplinary pissing contests

A mildly diverting post at Crooked Timber today, on William Dalrymple’s The Last Mughal, noting

the introduction where he extols the merits of archival research, as against the kind of “subaltern history” that pads out existing secondary sources with large dollops of theory…

Now, it’s not my field (and I recognise the rhetorical get-out-of-jail-free card in the words ‘the kind of’), but this resembles a not uncommon move amongst archive-based historians: what you might call the ‘my sources were harder than your sources’ gambit. (Think of Monty Python’s four Yorkshiremen sketch, but with historians.)

Points are awarded according to a number of factors, in particular:

a) the difficulties involved in getting to the archive;

b) the obstacles to getting into the archive;

c) the physical condition and accessibility of the documents;

d) the obscurity of the language or script of the documents;

e) the illegibility of the handwriting;

f) the monstrousness of the archivists;*

g) the discomfort levels of the environment, including the chairs, room temperature, lighting, etc;

h) the awfulness of the canteen food.

The higher your Archival Endurance Points score, the more rights you acquire to condescend to your printed-sources brethren, and to disdain Theory.

What are the equivalents in other disciplines? They must have their own pissing contests, surely?

*NB that I’m not suggesting archivists generally are monsters. But you don’t get AEPs for the nice ones.


Further email trouble

So, I found I couldn’t send emails from my earlymodernweb accounts via my btinternet outgoing mail server. Next step: change the settings to use the earlymodernweb server instead. Irritating, but seems straightforward enough. Except that that gives me another set of error messages, “sorry, that domain isn’t in my list of allowed rcpthosts; no valid cert for gatewaying (#5.7.1). Please check the message recipients and try again”. What on earth does that mean?

For fuck’s sake.

(Final update: finally fixed, fingers crossed, with the help of Google. But why do error messages have to be so incomprehensible?)


Just wait till Be Broadband gets to my local exchange

For the last dunno how many years, I’ve been sending emails from my various personal and domain email addresses using my BTYahoo account as my outgoing server. In the last week or so, I’ve started having difficulty doing this, and getting an error message (not all the time, oddly enough) when I try to send out mail.

It turns out that BT has (without telling anybody) changed the account settings so that you have to verify each individual mail address you want to send mail from. Which is irritating enough, but the fucking verification process doesn’t work properly. With one address it didn’t even send the verification email; with another it sent it and I clicked on the link etc, but still get the message. I’m not the only person having problems.

Grrr.

(Update: it seems possible that the verification thing works, but only to let you send mail from the webmail interface, not from an external mail client. Which is even more fucking GRRR.)


Recently noted around the web

No, I haven’t been drunk all week. Just a bit busy to post.

12th Military History Carnival
  Rounding up recent military history blogging.

Welcome, BoingBoingers. Here, have a monkey! (Take two, they’re small.)
  Medieval monkeys at Got Medieval

50 Miles Per Burrito: Is the Body the Most Efficient Vehicle?
  Not really into burritos, but it's nice to know that my bike ride to work is burning plenty of calories…

Non-European PhDs In Germany Find Use Of ‘Doktor’ Verboten
  Americans with PhDs beware…


Shout it now!

GRAND SLAM!!!

We did it! We did it!

(I’m going to get plastered now.)


Six Nations update

England won. But possibly the best bit was just afterwards, when they were interviewing the new wunderkind Danny and in his excitement he said a very rude word. On the Beeb! On a Saturday afternoon! Tee hee!

Today I am 8 and a half.


Recently noted around the web

What I’ve been reading online lately: fakes, race, cats and typewriters…

I’m Shocked, Shocked To Find that Some Memoirs Are Fake
  Tim Burke wonders "why it is that socially privileged, basically comfortable, largely white readers have such an avid taste for tedious stories of suffering and loss whose only value is their naive claim to be literally true"

Echoes of Enoch Powell
  On the BBC's documentary about Powell's 'Rivers of Blood' speech: "a disgracefully misleading, cowardly, manipulative and politically irresponsible programme"

I is cuter…
  lolcat for the week

Typology: a phenomenology of early typewriters
  


Pissing off brats. Ha.

Two and a half years, I wrote a quick post pointing to a debate somewhere else on the web about the ‘long’ 18th century: How long is a century?

Now, from time to time this draws stroppy comments from (I presume) kids who have, apparently seriously, asked Google the same question. I usually keep them in the moderation folder for a while for some private entertainment. But let’s share.

this is no help I need to know if a centuary is 100 or 10 years long!!!!!!!!!!! Tell me the answer on this website!!!!!

THis suck’s I can’t find how long a century is!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!
Sencerly (I hate you) [name]

It really does piss ‘em off that I didn’t do their homework for them, doesn’t it?


Now, just maybe, the G- S- is on

Ireland 12-16 Wales. Oh my oh my.

At this moment, Scotland and England are playing in simultaneously pouring rain and brilliant sunshine. A mudbath beckons. Yuck. Pretty rainbow though…

Update: A Scotland win! Well well well. England were as abysmal as the weather and Scotland were real gutsy scrapping buggers.


Noted today around the web

What I’ve been reading online lately: history, culture, news, cats…

Dunno what happnd
  never touched it!

Lying feminist ideologues wreck English, says idiot Yale prof
  Glorious rant from Language Log

Whither the Chainmail Bikini?
  Were Viking women sexy?

The Charms of Wikipedia
  Cream rises or shit floats?


Recently noted around the web

What I’ve been reading online lately: history, news, food, fun…

Head over heels
  A look at screwball comedy and women, to mark the BFI’s new season

The root master
  Yummy root veg recipe ideas from Nigel Slater

History Carnival 62
  And the latest History Carnival is up!


Great Stuff

But those two other words beginning with G and S? Must not think about them.


Too true

(the source)


Calling all PhDs: get your dancing shoes on

And dance your dissertation!

By far the highest score, though, went to student category winner Brian Stewart, an anthropologist. Dressed only in a loincloth, he ritualistically pursued a graceful antelope (portrayed by Giulia Saltini-Semerari). This pure showmanship was bound to get the popular vote, but personally I’d have gone for Ruth Gruetzbach’s tango interpretation of a small galaxy (Gruetzbach) orbiting a big galaxy (Jesus Varela) until she is eventually subsumed by his supermassive gravity.

There will be another competition in 2009. There must be some twinkle-toed historians out there, surely?


Play.com just got better

For CDs and DVDs, play.com is already my favourite online store (I prefer not to work out just how much money I’ve spent there in the last couple of years), but now they’re also offering DRM-free music downloads to UK residents, from 65p a track.

Anybody got any fun recommendations? Is Adele worth a listen?


Wales still up for it

We didn’t screw up yet. Yay!

Next up, the might of Italy. So many opportunities for humiliation…


George’s choice: an 18th-century convict and a medical experiment

Last November, I dashed off a quick post about someone I’d encountered in an Ordinary’s Account: It’s Your Neck or Your Arm

On the evening before execution, a respite of 14 days was brought for George Chippendale, and to be continued, if within that time he shall submit to suffer the amputation of a limb, in order to try the efficacy of a new-invented styptic for stopping the blood-vessels, instead of the present more painful practice in such cases. For this indulgence, he, together with his brother and his uncle, had joined in a petition to his Majesty, and thankfully accepted it, appearing in good health and spirits, ready and chearful to undergo the experiment. (Ordinary’s Account, May 1763.)

Well, I got at least one important thing wrong, anyway. It wasn’t George’s arm that was, er, on the block. It was his leg.

How do I know this? Well, by sheer chance, a few weeks after I posted that, I got an email query at work, from a family historian who was searching for a George Clippingdale in the Old Bailey Proceedings. The problem was that the OBP reporters (unlike most other sources the researcher had consulted) spelt his surname Chippendale. (Spelling variations are not an uncommon problem in 18th-century sources, as I’ve mentioned here before.)

So, we got that sorted out, and that would normally have been the end of it. But then the researcher happened to mention that his George was reprieved from a death sentence because a surgeon wanted to use him in an experiment.

At which point, I thought ‘Hang on a minute… that sounds familiar’, and came over here and checked my earlier post. And it’s the same man!

Naturally, of course, I had to write back with a barrage of questions. And the researcher was kind and generous enough to send me his write-up of everything he’d found out about George – and to agree to let me tell you lot about it.

(But I warn you, there’s a sad ending.)

(more…)


Don’t laugh but

This morning I cut my finger on a piece of toast.

It still stings. It’s not funny.

[Update: it's stopped stinging today. You can laugh now. Because, really, injuring yourself with a bit of toast? How daft is that?!)]


How the f*** did that happen?!!

I haven’t posted much about Wales’ rugby team since March 2005. Seeing as they’ve been mostly crap and there hasn’t been much worth saying.

And for about 2/3 of today’s game against England, that didn’t seem to be about to change.

So, bloody hell.

(I’m sure we’ll be back to normal viewing within the next couple of weeks. Still.)


Rescue them from obscurity!

Ari asks: who’s the most important historical figure about whom most people know nothing? (Hat-tip: popping up all over the place, but as teofilo notes below, there’s a good discussion going on at Unfogged. Unless they’ve moved onto the cock jokes by now.)

The emphasis in blogs I’ve seen so far tends to be American and modern – what do the medievalists and early modernists think?

I think I’m going to be bloody-minded and nominate Edward Bushel.


The Programming Historian

This should be fantastic.


The THE

The Times they are a-changing!

At what used to be The Times Higher Education Supplement, anyway. Now it’s Times Higher Education, it’s no longer owned by Murdoch, and it’s got a shiny new website full of FREE content – past and present. Woo hoo!!

(The print version has also become much shinier, although apparently the ink still rubs off on your fingers.)

Thanks to Alun for the hat-tip.


Starting the year as we mean to go on

I have occasionally been worrying about my tendency to grumpiness in my blogging. But my New Year’s Resolution is this: I have realised that I am officially a Grumpy Old Bag now that I’m 40, so this is gonna be a Grumpy Old Blog whenever I feel like it.

Anyways… we have the latest Linguistic Luddites List* (H-T), or the ‘List of Words Banished from the Queen’s English for Misuse, Overuse and General Uselessness’ from some university you’ve never heard of (publicity stunt much?).

Now there are always many, many new coinages out there that I detest (usually the latest ugly offerings from bureaucrats and middle management), but you know, the thing about a language is that it continually evolves and grows in unpredictable and not necessarily pretty ways or it dies, and if you’re going to object to neologisms you’ve got to have a better reason than ‘Ugh! Don’t like!’ or ‘The kids/damned Yanks/common people use it!’ or ‘We’ve got a word for that already!’.

I am particularly taken by this one, for idiocy:

AUTHORED — “In one of former TV commentator Edwin Newman’s books, he wonders if it would be correct to say that someone ‘paintered’ a picture?”

Firstly, ‘author’ as a verb is hardly new. The OED has examples of author as a verb going back to the 16th century, which makes it a couple of centuries younger than the noun.

And then the logic that the nouns ‘author’ and ‘painter’ must follow exactly the same grammatical rules? Why? Just because words sound in part similar doesn’t mean they were originally formed in exactly the same way or that they have to develop in lockstep thereafter. We don’t spell it ‘auther’, do we?

(Updated to note: Among verbs formed from nouns, I have my own little pet hates, so I’m as guilty as anyone. But I’m not sure why back-formation of this kind tends to generate so much opprobrium.)

***

* I know, this is unfair on Luddites, but we all love a little alliteration, don’t we?


Spud heaven

Thanks to Tony, I now know that 2008 is the International Year of the Potato.

How splendid.

(PS: Happy New Year, everyone!)