Author Archives: Natalie Bennett

The carnival moves on

The History Carnival No 31 is now up on Airminded. I was particularly taken by a novel, classy way to introduce the birth of a baby, an account of the evolution of a Wikipedia entry, and a novel use of Google Earth to map the lives of Henry VIII’s wives.
But do go and check out the whole thing.

Can women save Africa?

The Independent is today edited by Bono. On hearing the news I groaned, but having read it on the web, he’s got to get marks for producing a considerably more sober and serious newspaper than usual – even with a Damien Hirst front page.

The outstanding article to my mind is the piece about Ngozi Okonjo-Iweala, Nigeria’s finance minister, who is making a serious, and successful effort to tackle corruption.

Last year Nigeria was named as one of the 21 most improved countries in 2005. “Some very, very powerful people including the inspector general of police [Nigeria’s top cop] have been brought to book. He has been tried, and is now in jail on several counts,” the minister says with a grim smile. “Two judges have been suspended, two sacked outright, three ministers sacked, two rear-admirals, a state governor, top customs officials. Did we get all the people? Not yet – but we’ve got enough to send a powerful signal and [generate] a powerful fear. People in power now know they can’t act with impunity.” The tentacles of her anti-fraud operation have reached down to lower levels too. More than 500 people behind internet “advance fees” scams have been jailed for frauds estimated to have milked more than $100m a year out of gullible Americans alone.

This is the first I’ve read of this story, and it of course reminded me of Ellen Johnson Sirleaf, recently elected president of Liberia, which has just been named by the UN as one of the UN’s list of forgotten stories. Not quite sure that’s the case with that story – although the publicity was due to the fact a famous footballer was her opponent, and have read precious little since about Liberia’s progress.

There are many parallels between the two women – both formerly high-level UN bureaucrats. I’ve never met either of them, but in my UN days I met many high-powered UN women from Africa who were desperate to try to deal with these issues of corruption and underdevelopment.

Could they, as a class, be the saviours of Africa, given the chance to do so? It might be one of the continent’s best chances overall.

A drama of politics

Over on My London Your London, I’ve just put up a review of Speechless, now at the Etctera Theatre in Camden. It is an intensely topical, and intense play, which definitely has its moments.

And do please read it; this has been a jinxed review – various computers and sites managed to swallow it twice, so this is my third, reconstructed, version…

A scanning/OCR question

Dear Knowledgeable Reader,

Having got a new computer that will OCR a page without giving me time to make a cup of tea while it is doing it, I now of course want more …

So, does anyone know of an OCR or related programme that will scan text from a succession of pages into the one file, rather than creating one page per file that then needs to be pasted together?

After decades of killing far too many trees with photocopying, I’m now trying to go for genuinely paperless note-taking, which is now just about possible. (Well except in the British Library, which still bans scanners and cameras.) And with Google Desktop it has enormous possibilities for information access.

Well-spoken children and Latin-speaking nurses

From Sir Thomas Elyot’s, The Book Named Governor, 1531:

“…it shall be expedient that a nobleman’s son, in his infancy, have with him continually only such as may accustom him by little and little to speak pure and elegant Latin. Semblably the nurses and other women about him, if it be possible, to do the same; or at the leastways, that they speak none English but that which is clean, polite, perfectly and articulately pronounced, omitting no letter or syllable, as foolish women often times do of a wantonness, whereby divers noblemen and gentleman’s children (as I do at this day know) have attained corrupt and foul pronunciation.”

Some things about the English class system don’t seem to change…

Interesting, though,  that he’s expecting, or at least setting out as an ideal, that the female attendants in the nursery who are – except perhaps in the case of royalty – unlikely to be of high status or class, are being expected to know Latin, and indeed presumably know it quite well.
(Quote page 18, Everyman 1962 edition)

Tales of the exotic east

My 19th-century “blogger” Miss Frances Williams Wynn is today hearing stories from an eastern traveller, most notably about Lady Hester Stanhope, although sadly mainly in the days of her decline.

I haven’t been able to identify the “Mr Davidson” from whom she is hearing the tale – anyone know who he is?