Raiding the Times
Sometimes the New York Times is still worth reading, for an historian. Like today:
- The end of an era: Mongolia's coal-fired steam-powered train line is converting to diesel. My father's an old steam train buff and model railroader...
There's many, many little children who'll never thrill to the choo-choo sound,
If they don't put me back upon the railroad and let me keep on chugging around - We are subjects in an ongoing ergonomic experiment, and I want to switch to the control group
- E. H. Gombrich's"A Little History of the World" is now available in English, the 18th language that seventy-year old textbook has been translated into. It is both an historical source, as well, according to the reviewer, as a model of textbook writing largely lost in our focus-group, peer-review, market-test, committee-written world.
Speaking of which, I've voted! The e-vote system is pretty decent; no less accessible than the old pamphlet and bubble-sheet, anyway.
Finally, for your blogging pleasure, and in honor of Ralph's labors, a meme: name five historical sources you wish had survived. For me it's
- The Oshima emigration documents collected by Doi Yataro, and lost in a house fire a decade before I began my research
- More Greek Comedies
- An original copy of the Tale of Genji, and a few of the other romances from the period
- Anything by Confucius (the Analects is third-generation orally transmitted student notes)
- Something that would serve as a Rosetta Stone for Etruscan, Mayan or Incan texts.