The Museum of the Anthropocene is an outdoor, city-wide museum that explores the intersections of history, science, art, and the environment in the age of the Anthropocene.
Read MoreA Session of the AHA's Getting Started in Digital History Workshop Getting Started in Digital History Workshop Jason M. Kelly Date: Thursday, January 7, 2016 Time: 9:00 AM-1:00 PM Location: Salon B (Hilton Atlanta, Second Floor)
Read MoreDavid Hume was one of the most significant philosophers of the eighteenth century, and scores of book and articles have been written about him and his work. It is easy to get overwhelmed if you try to do some background research on him. So, here are a few sources that will help you situate David Hume in context as well as help you understand what he was trying to do in his Dialogues Concerning Natural Religion.
Read More100 years ago, the guns stopped. After months of bloodshed, soldiers on the Western Front had a moment of peace. They opened packages sent from home. Letters and sweets were passed back and forth.
Not only did hostilities cease, but along sections of the front lines, opposing forces emerged from the trenches to meet each other in no man’s land. Some groups sang carols and decorated trees. Others held religious services. Still others played football together. This was the famous Christmas Truce of 1914, the culmination of many weeks of unofficial ceasefires between opposing camps.
Read MoreBritish support for the Union was no guarantee when the U.S. Civil War broke out in 1861. In fact, British neutrality did little to hide the fact that large segments of the population favored an alliance with the Confederacy. The cotton manufacturers of Lancashire, for example, had strong ties to the southern plantocracy and the slave system it had established. After all, cheap American cotton fed their textile mills and made them rich. When the North blockaded southern ports, their cotton supplies were threatened. In turn, they invested in ships and crews to run the blockade….
Read MoreOver the past two days (22-23 November 2014), I attended the Early Modern Network Ontologies Workshop in Pittsburgh. The workshop, organized by Drew Armstrong, Alison Langmead, and Christopher Warren, focused on developing a prototype metadata structure for linked open data in projects involving historical research.
Read MoreThose who have been anxiously following the court case between the Warburg Library and University of London had some good news this week when the High Court ruled in favor of the library. The case is somewhat complex, but it is summarized here in the press release by the Warburg. The library is not out of the woods just yet however.
Read MorePrivatization, the public, and the commons in a small Midwest exurb.
Read MoreToday's episode is the second of a two-part series on correlation and causation. You can listen to them as standalone episodes, but I think that they do a good job at reinforcing each other.
Read MoreTrafalgar Park, once known as Standlynch Park (sometimes Standlinch or Standlinck), is a triumph of English Palladianism and neoclassicism. Just southeast of Salisbury on the east side of the Salisbury Avon, its prospect, overlooks both the river and the medieval city. Standlynch's first owner was Sir Peter Vandeput, Bt. (1688-1748), a London merchant of Netherlandish descent. He was a man of fashion and friends with Alexander Pope (1688-1744).
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