More Noted Things
Scott McLemee's"Aggregate This!" Inside Higher Ed, 12 July, proposes a vehicle to aggregate the academic blogosphere and make it possible, for example, for university presses to find bloggers who would be interested in particular books. Having already taken the step of creating Cliopatria's History Blogroll, we're prepared to cooperate in the effort.
Peter Berkowitz,"Gentlemen Revolutionaries," RealClearPolitics, 9 July, reviews Gordon Wood, Revolutionary Characters: What Made the Founders Different.
Noemie Emery's"The Inconvenient Truth about Truman," Weekly Standard, 17 July, won cheers on the right, from John Podhoretz, Jonah Goldberg, and Alonzo Hamby, and will irritate historians on the left. But in"The Weekly Standard Mugs Truman," one conservative blogger found the article"appalling and intellectually dishonest." Thanks to Andrew Sullivan for the tip.
Dana Heller,"Desperately Seeking Susan," The Common Review, Winter, thoughtfully recalls Susan Sontag's visit to Norfolk's Old Dominion University in her last days. Thanks to Arts & Letters Daily for the tip.
In"The Language of Lynching," at Outside Report, my virtual son, Chris Richardson, objects to language used by defenders of Duke's lacrosse players. However wrongly zealous their prosecution may be, unlike the Scottsboro Boys, they have not endured years of imprisonment because of false accusations. However disrupted their lives, they have not been hung, burned, and their body parts publicly displayed as trophies. The lacrosse players' defenders should shun the language overload about"legal lynching" because it was one of Duke's paragons who fantasized of skinning a person alive, while climaxing in"my duke issue spandex." Meanwhile, another one of the paragons is convicted of misdemeanor assault in Georgetown and put on six months probation. Thanks to Margaret Soltan for the tip.