Monthly Archives: January 2007

Theatre Women's history

Sarah Kane, a great

I’ve been contemplating the tragically short career of the playwright Sarah Kane, which I’ve just reviewed over on My London Your London. A great talent cut short.

Politics

Enjoy…

John Pilger gets stuck into John Howard.

…the regression of this social democracy into a state of fabricated fear and xenophobia is an object lesson for all societies claiming to be free. In power for more than a decade, the Liberal prime minister, John Howard, comes from the outer reaches of Australia’s “neocons”….Howard rejoices in his promotion of “Australian values” – a very Australian sycophancy to the sugared “values” of foreign power. The darling of a group of white supremacists who buzz around the Murdoch-dominated press and radio talk-back hosts, the prime minister has used acolytes to attack the “black armband view of history”, as if the mass killing and resistance of indigenous Australians did not happen.

Politics

Growing inequality

Anatole Kaletsky writes in The Times on how class makes a difference to your inflation rate:

Rich people spend much more on expensive services such as private education, entertainment and health than the poor, who spend most of their money on food, clothes and other essential goods. This means that inflation tends to be higher for the rich than it is for the poor. In other words being rich has never been so expensive. Conversely, it has been getting cheaper to be poor.

A measure, really of the growing inequality in British (and other) societies.

And the trend is even worse, in that inflation in essentials, as Kaletsky says, has started to rise, which is going to hit the poor hard.

History

Who’d have thought it?

Archaeologists getting along with metal detectorists – the new treasure law and the portable antiquities scheme, whose blog you’ll find among my regular reading, really have worked out. (As well to point out the success stories in the news occasionally…)

A beautiful little bronze dog, dating from the 4th century and still shiny from years of being stroked, was found by Alan Rowe, a children’s books illustrator, who relaxes by taking his metal detector out into the fields near his home on the Isle of Wight.
The dog is valued at about £500. But it tells Frank Basford, an archaeologist who records finds on the island, that a superstitious Roman – with good reason, as the empire started to crumble around him – crossed that field, carrying an amulet probably bought at a shrine to the god Nodens, where the faithful believed the lick of temple dogs would cure their ailments and protect them. The field was surveyed but no evidence was found of a shrine or building: the dog probably just fell out of a pocket with a hole.

Did Roman clothes really have pockets, BTW? I thought they didn’t – but I think we can attribute that one to the reporter.

Blogging/IT History

A Chinese blogger’s victory?

It might be a small thing really, but it is democracy in action: Starbucks is set to be banned from the Forbidden City after a huge web campaign.

The trigger was a blog entry posted on Monday by Rui Chenggang, a TV anchorman, who called for a web campaign against the outlet that, he wrote in his blog, “tramples over over Chinese culture”.
According to local media, half a million people have signed his online petition and dozens of newspapers have carried prominent stories about the controversy.

It has been there, utterly incongruous in the midst of an otherwise nearly perfectly preserved historic site, for 16 years – I remember doing a double-take when I saw it there in the early 1990s.

Women's history

Two great women’s history blogs

I haven’t previously felt there were enough specifically women’s history blogs around to make that a category in my blogroll, but I’m starting to think that it is time for a re-arrangement, having just found two new must-reads, both by women well known as writers.

Mary Beard, the Cambridge classicist and author of many books on Ancient Rome is blogging at The Times. Unlike so many people coming to blogging when already well known for other things, she really gets the medium and the message – there’s some great stuff there, everything from an assertion, based on some actual evidence (unlike so much written on this subject), that students a century go were not in fact any more skilled than those of today, to a very honest account of her “take”, not very large, from the public lending right.

Staying on the ancient side, the great queen Zenobia now has a blog, through the hand of Judith Weingarten, author of The Chronical of Zenobia, which I’ve reviewed. In progress now, a series of profiles of the “four Julias”, some of Rome’s most powerful women, and contemporaries of Zenobia.