Yet More Noted
Eugene McCarraher,"The Incoherence of Hannah Arendt," Books and Culture, March/April 2006, revisits Arendt on the centennial of her birth.
Kevin Woods, James Lacey, and Williamson Murray,"Saddam's Delusions: The View from the Inside," Foreign Affairs, May/June 2006, is a double-length article with important excerpts from a recently declassified book-length report by the Pentagon Joint Forces Command's Iraqi Perspectives Project. Thanks to Manan Ahmed for the tip.
Lest you go uninformed, George Mason University's men's basketball team is in the Final Four. More importantly, the University has the world's largest known community of history bloggers. They include: Jeremy Boggs, Sheila Brennan, Dan Cohen, Josh Greenburg, Meagan Hess, Stephanie Hurter, T. Mills Kelly, Sharon Leon, Paula Petrik, and Tom Scheinfeldt.
Yesterday, ClioWeb's Jeremy Boggs gave a presentation at GMU on the state of history blogging and edwired's Mills Kelly blogged the event. Here are Jeremy's presentation links. Rightly, I think, he gave Frog in a Well special praise for its design. Jeremy's favorite history blog? Rob MacDougall's Old is the New New,"one of the funniest, smartest, and most entertaining history blogs out there." Amen.
The New York Historical Society has named Doris Kearns Goodwin its American historian laureate and given her its inaugural $50,000 Book Prize for Team of Rivals: The Political Genius of Abraham Lincoln, a collective biography of the president and his cabinet.
At 93, his Imperial Highness Prince Osman Ertugrul, the heir to the throne of the Ottoman Empire, gets along without his 285-room Dolmabahce Palace in Istanbul. The tab for his rent-controlled two-bedroom flat over a restaurant on Lexington Avenue in New York is $350 a month.