Blogs > Cliopatria > Good Bets, Conversations, and Queries

Apr 15, 2006

Good Bets, Conversations, and Queries




Carnivals: History Carnival #29 is up at Rebecca Goetz's (a)musings of a grad student. Thanks, Rebecca! Carnivale goes up tomorrow at Earmarks of Early Modern Culture. You can still send nominations for the latter, if you do it now.

Conversations: Tim Burke, Alan Jacobs and others at Easily Distracted are having an excellent discussion about"moral panic."
I like to think that my colleague, Rob MacDougall, is not delusional, but he keeps assuring me that *alot* of my student's *societal* references will evanesce if I simply walk them through to clarity of argument before they compose their papers.

Queries: Mark Grimsley asks about the early military use of telescopes and their effect on warfare.
Jonathan Wilson wonders about the credits to Edward Said in the film version of Vanity Fair. Richard von Busack at MetroActive says:

Nair dedicates her film to the historian Edward Said. In Said's honor, it seems, Nair has taken Thackeray's satire as the revenge of the colonized on the colonials. Yet Thackeray considers colonies the worst backwaters of them all, and he shares in the main characters' mockery of a mulatto heiress. Nair's choice to pick India as an offscreen land of sensuality and happy endings seems another strangely politically correct choice.

Yes, it seems odd, somehow. Manan? pdcs? Anyone?

Finally, the New York TimesThought for Today: ''Political history is far too criminal and pathological to be a fit subject of study for the young. Children should acquire their heroes and villains from fiction.'' -- W.H. Auden, British poet (1907-1973). Sorry, KC, but that one was just too good to pass up.



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Jonathan Dresner - 4/16/2006

And it's lovely work! Go read it!


Rebecca Anne Goetz - 4/15/2006

The Carnival is now up!


Robert KC Johnson - 4/15/2006

Yes, but we know that Auden is a bit vulgar. Students have to sue just to be able to recite his poetry :)

http://www.startribune.com/484/story/370790.html


Manan Ahmed - 4/15/2006

Edward Said was a colleague of Mahmood Mamdani, Mira Nair's husband, at Columbia. And I also think they were neighbors.

I took the dedication to be for a friend remembered.