Things Noted Here and There
Jonathan Dresner,"Colonialogy," Frog in a Well, 7 February, argues for a new word, encompassing the study of imperialism, colonialism, and post-colonial discourses, pro and con.
Glenn and Helen Reynolds interview James L. Swanson, the author of Manhunt: The Twelve Day Chase for Lincoln's Killer. I'm running past my technical expertise here, but Glenn says that you don't need iPod to listen to the interview. You can hear it directly or subscribe to it on iTunes.
Scott Jaschik,"Fiasco at AAUP," Inside Higher Ed, 9 February, reports on an AAUP embarrassment of its own making.
Apart from Anne Applebaum's"A Cartoon's Portrait of America," Washington Post, 8 February, the recent controversy about the Danish cartoons that have provoked riots and boycotts has produced too little thoughtful commentary. Beyond what appeared at Cliopatria, one might begin with Riots in France, SSRC essays by social scientists on last year's events. Scott Martens,"The Liberalism of Fools?" A Fistful of Euros, 8 February, links the French riots to recent events; Global Voices has extraordinary coverage of international blogs on the issue (just scroll down); Nathanael Robinson's"Iconoclasm without Idolatry?" at Rhine River is exceptionally thoughtful; and Brian Ulrich writes about the iconoclasm of Wahhabi Islam in Saudi Arabia. (Thanks to Brian and Nathanael for the tips.)
Unlike my friends on the Secular Left and the Randy Right, I don't think this is much ado about nothing, or, as Hitchens would have it, much due. In recent years, I've often thought that Christianity is the"odd man out" among the three great western religions, suspect by both Jews and Muslims of having gravely compromised the monotheistic assumptions the three religions share. There is a Christian iconoclasm, of course, more evident among Protestants than its other forms, but I wonder if Christianity's" compromise" inclined it, somehow, to a much greater willingness to represent the divine. And does Islam's inclination to refer to Mohammed as"holy" represent anything like such a compromise?"Holy Moses," after all, is no more than a rock band from hell.