“A thousand skeptic hands won’t keep us from the things we plan,” Alcuin wrote to Theodulf of Orleans at the dawn of the ninth century, “unless we’re clinging to the things we prize.” Despite Alcuin’s optimism, a thorny new translation project has kept me from writing substantive blog posts, but I can share this enlightening array of mid-winter links.
What did a Tolkien expert think of the final Hobbit movie? Michael Drout weighs in.
Steven Muhlberger ponders what it means to be both a historian of the Middle Ages and a medieval reenactor.
Steve Donoghue appreciates Longfellow’s poetry: “the sheer unembarrassed power of it has undimmed power to work if readers drop their cynicism and let it.”
How is Michael Moorcock’s new fantasy novel? Steve Donoghue will tell you that, too.
At New York theaters, Paul Elie discovers Southern Gothic.
In France, Lucy sees smoke, and hears a bell tolling softly for another.
Dale Favier finds joy in the driveway of Copernicus.
Diane Seneschal concludes that in teaching, “the remedy is the poem itself.”
Chris at Hats and Rabbits sticks up for Rocky Balboa.
Flavia ponders Facebook taboos and “the pleasures of the private.”
Prof Mondo advises a student not to sweat those youthful fumbles.
Jake asks: What incentivizes professors to grade honestly?
It’s like the raft of the Medusa, only less cheerful: economists analyze the job market for English Ph.Ds.
Thanks for the link Jeff, and for your comment at mine; I enjoyed the last post too.
Good luck with thorny translations!
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Enjoy those thorns! Good list with lots of people I like (including Lucy, just above!)
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