Thursday Notes
*Update*: PhDinHistory has returned to the net at a new address and under his own name! Hurray!
"From Rags to Riches, or How Undergarments Improved Literacy," Media, University of Leeds, 9 July. The press release summarizes the revisionist argument of Marco Mostert, a historian at the Centre for Medieval Studies, Utrecht University, at this year's International Medieval Congress at the University of Leeds. He argues that the introduction of paper was more important in spreading literacy in late medieval Europe than the introduction of printing. Hat tip.
Scott Carney,"A Handwritten Daily Paper in India Faces the Digital Future," Wired, 6 July, should only be read in conjunction with Sepoy's"Calligraphers," Chapati Mystery, 9 July. But read both and the conversation in comments at CM.
Gary Krist,"Fire in the Hole," Washington Post, 8 July, reviews Joan Quigley's The Day the Earth Caved In: An American Mining Tragedy. Remember Centralia, PA? In 1981, we could have put the fire out for $30,000. Over 25 years later, Centralia's still burning.