Things Noted Here and There
At Disability Studies, Penny L. Richards points out San Francisco State University's Disability History Dateline, a chronology 5500 years of history focused on people with disabilities of various kinds. It is searchable and intended as a teaching resource. Thanks to Jonathan Dresner for the tip.
Timothy Garton Ash,"Stagger On, Weary Titan," The Guardian, 25 August, suggests that Iraq is the United States' Boer War.
Our colleague, KC Johnson, continues the discussion of intellectual diversity in academe in"Proving the Critics' Case," Inside Higher Ed, 26 August.
Three months ago, Tim Burke invited us to discuss the tropes considered in his"Image of Africa" course at Swarthmore. The rethinking that he was doing then takes form in the new syllabus that he's come up with for this term. ...
"Slavery in America: Black and White – and Red All Over," The Economist, 25 August, reviews Simon Schama's new book, Rough Crossings: Britain, the Slaves and the American Revolution. After King George promised freedom to slaves who joined the British forces in resisting American independence, the English took responsibility for those who responded by shipping a portion of them off to the newly founded colony, Sierra Leone. Schama has apparently done it again, with a brilliant account of a tragic story.
Finally, Pat Robertson's outburst about Venezuela's Hugo Chavez allowed many of us to register our sanity by rebuking him. Bill Maher's New Rules puts it this way:"Devout of His Mind: New Rule, Pat Robertson is insane. Just because he smiles and wears a nice suit doesn't mean he's any less of a whack job than all those wild-eyed, urine-stained nut bags who babble on street corners about Jesus through a bull horn...." But our colleague, Caleb McDaniel, puts it differently: Is our repudiation of Robertson's madness an avoidance of our responsibility for the madness that official action does condone?