Things Noted Here and There
told that they have to write a national history, to be given to people who are becoming citizens of that state, that will tell them everything they need to know, and be acceptable to all interested parties. Every day they submit a new draft; every day it is thrown back to them. They beg instead to be given the task of pushing a bloody great rock up a hill, only to see it roll down again, just to get something easier and less frustrating to do.Thanks to Jonathan Dresner for the tip.
The webpage for"Visualizing Cultures," a course jointly taught at MIT by linguist Shigeru Miyagawa and Pulitzer Prize winning historian John Dower, was taken down temporarily last week. Chinese students at MIT complained that the website displayed Japanese woodblock prints of beheadings in the Sino-Japanese War of 1894-95 without any explanation of the historical context. Dower and Miyagawa have issued an apology and discussions are underway about how propaganda can be displayed without implying any endorsement of its offensive sentiments. Thanks to Manan Ahmed for the tip.
Update: See also, Doug Lederman,"Not So OpenCourseWare," Inside Higher Ed, 1 May.
Ahistoricality says that Caleb McDaniel's"The Case for Abolishing Nuclear Weapons" at Mode for Caleb"deserves to be the most widely read post of the week."
Ahistoricality also sends along this note: Jon in Taiwan has just seen the film knock-off of the video game, Silent Hill. In it, there's a scene in which
the main character's husband (who's looking for her and their child) breaks into a small-town archives, finds the burnt boxes of the Silent Hill police records in plain sight, and discovers in seconds exactly the record that he seems to be looking for. (I say"seems" because I'm not even sure why he wanted to check out the police records in the first place.) As someone who has done research in several archives, I just have 5 words in response to the situation I've just described: Not. In. A. Million. Years.
John Kenneth Galbraith has died. New York Times obituary. See also: Brad DeLong, Henry Farrell, Greg Robinson, Margaret Soltan, and Mark Thoma.
Finally, farewell to Florence L. Mars of Philadelphia, Mississippi. There's a warm place in my heart for Southern white supporters of the civil rights movement, because – well – I was one of them. There wouldn't have been a more difficult place in the country for a white supporter of the movement than Philadelphia, Mississippi. David Chappell's Inside Agitators: White Southerners in the Civil Rights Movement disappointed me because it featured people who were already well known. Local people -- I suspect disproportionately women (I'm thinking of people like Miss Mars and Montgomery's Juliette Morgan) -- often paid a very heavy price and go largely unremembered. Fortunately, Florence Mars left her own story in Witness in Philadelphia. So hail and farewell, Miss Mars. And, thank you. Thanks also to Andrew Sullivan for the tip.