Mantras

  • Freedom is what you do with what's been done to you.
    -- Jean-Paul Sartre
  • I'm Nobody! Who are you?
    Are you—Nobody—Too?
    Then there's a pair of us!
    Don't tell! they'd advertise—you know!

    How dreary—to be—Somebody!
    How public—like a Frog—
    To tell one's name—the livelong June—
    To an admiring Bog!
    --Emily Dickinson

Twitterings

    follow me on Twitter

    Be Nice to Others

    So it appears I think sometimes

    Sunday, August 24, 2008

    A food bleg

    Not to spammify the internets this morning with a gazillion posts, but: I am looking for advice. What are your favorite things to pack in a bag lunch? (or box lunch, or however you carry it.) I'm particularly looking for things that are yummy, easy to make, and easily carried to and from school. I am determined not to throw money down the drain at the law school cafeteria, so I've resolved to pack lunches this year, but whenever I think about what to bring, my brain immediately goes blank (it's kind of like how NLLDH and I can sit at home and say, "I'd like to see this movie, this movie, this movie, and this movie," but if we ever make it to a video store, we can't remember any of them). So I thought I'd see what kinds of ideas you, my brilliant readers, might have.

    (I'd also love suggestions for a good container for schlepping said lunches. I've been pondering this, or a more traditional bento, but it did dawn on me that I might want something insulated. My priorities here are to find something light [because I have HUGE books to haul as it is, which sort of rules out the Mr. Bento], and something that makes carrying lunch feel like fun, not an economy.)

    Someone hold me

    I dreamed last night that in fact, I hadn't finished my Ph.D. - I still had just a few more revisions to make on the dissertation.

    Damn, was I glad to wake up from that one.

    (I also dreamed that I left my schoolbag full of all my books, my laptop, and my wallet on the bus so I could get off and go running, barefoot, throughout the town. [Like I can run!] Then when I tried to call home to get NLLDH to help me, I could hear him on the phone talking to his parents, but he couldn't hear me. Not one of my better nights.)

    Saturday, August 23, 2008

    Do-re-meme

    1. My uncle once told me that I should be an English major because it would be great preparation for getting a job as a secretary.

    2. Never in my life have I wanted to run for political office.

    3. When I was five my teacher sent me off to read a story to the first-graders. Come on, who thought THAT was going to be good for my social life?

    4. High school was a time full of good times, but which I'm really really REALLY glad is in the past.

    5. I will never forget sitting in the shadow of a chateau, eating pizza with NLLDH and trying to convince a snooty little French dog to come over and say hello.

    6. Once I met someone who didn't like chocolate. I know, I was horrified, too.

    7. There’s this boy I know who's way cooler than he thinks he is.

    8. Once, at a bar, I saw a classmate break the bartender's nose.

    9. By noon, I’m usually lucky to be showered and dressed. Well, if I don't have to be somewhere.

    10. Last night Eldest Cat woke me up AGAIN whining for food.

    11. If only I had more willpower.

    12. Next time I go to church is not likely to be for a long time.

    13. What worries me most is whether or not I'll get a job I like once I finish law school. (Maybe I should begin by worrying about doing well IN law school.)

    14. When I turn my head left I see a black wire shelving unit crammed full of stuff I have to organize.

    15. When I turn my head right I see NLLDH.

    16. You know I’m lying when I say I'd love the middle seat on the plane.

    17. What I miss most about the Eighties is big hair.

    18. If I were a character in Shakespeare I’d be Polonius, I fear.

    19. By this time next year I will ideally have a summer's worth of work in a legal field under my belt.

    20. A better name for me would be "OCD about everything but dirt."

    21. I have a hard time understanding why people use Windows.

    22. If I ever go back to school, I’ll have class at 9 am this Monday.

    23. You know I like you if I look you in the eye right away.

    24. If I ever won an award, the first person I would thank would be whoever first taught me whatever it was the award was for.

    25. Take my advice, never complain about the way people do things in other countries and why can't they do it just like the U.S. does??

    26. My ideal breakfast is very ordinary: fresh-squeezed orange juice, scrambled eggs, toast, bacon, and a cinnamon roll.

    27. A song I love but do not have is Rick Springfield, Jessie's Girl. What? I love that song!

    28. If you visit my hometown, I suggest you go in the fall, and have a high tolerance for WASPs and U.S. colonial history.

    29. Why won’t people pay attention to where they're standing in the grocery-store aisle?

    30. If you spend a night at my house you will have to sleep on the loveseat and you will be visited by two curious cats during the night (the third will hide from you).

    31. I’d stop my wedding for a lot of things (I got married in a judge's office and it took three minutes, so it's not like a delay would screw things up much).

    32. The world could do without entitlement.

    33. I’d rather lick the belly of a cockroach than listen to Rush Limbaugh.

    34. My favorite blondie is my sister.

    35. Paper clips are more useful than my students' attempts to hold their papers together by folding/twisting/ripping the corners of the pages.

    36. If I do anything well it’s procrastinating.

    37. I can’t help but eat the last cookie in the box.

    38. I usually cry at "heart-warming" commercials. I'm so easily manipulated.

    39. My advice to my nephew/niece is to take grandma with a grain of salt.

    40. And by the way, congratulations to NLLDH, who celebrates seven years of sobriety today!

    Sunday, August 17, 2008

    Blog statistics are weird

    Which would doubtless be of greater concern to me if this were a commercial blog and I were trying to make money from blogging - which I'm not. This isn't at all a "Oh noes! how can I get my blog traffic up???" post - my blog is what it is, it has the readers it has, and that's cool.

    But I do occasionally look at Statcounter to get a sense of how many people are coming over here and when (I look at Technorati, to find out who's linking to my posts, much more often, which is just how my vanity goes - numbers are vaguely interesting, but if someone's talking specifically about me, I WANT TO KNOW - what I said in my last-post-but-one notwithstanding). According to Statcounter, for instance, my numbers have declined steadily though not greatly since 2006 (of course, 2008 isn't over with yet, so it may change that trend). I suspect what this really shows is how many more people read blogs through a reader like Google Reader or Bloglines. I use Google Reader myself, and I don't comment as much as I used to - moreover, there are a ton of blogs I skim but on which I never comment - so I know that something like Statcounter isn't going to record my blogging footprint accurately. Still, the numbers are good for a little mental fodder.

    I was amused to check Statcounter today for the first time in yonks and to find a significant spike in my readers on Friday. Usually, such a spike means I've been linked to by someone with a big readership - usually Inside Higher Ed, but maybe Cliopatria or the like. But I checked my "where people are coming from" info and found no such link, nor did Technorati reveal one. (Admittedly, I'm too cheap to pay money for the expanded version of Statcounter, so by now the info about where people came from on Friday is mostly gone.)

    So I took a look at my Friday post, and realized that in it I talked about weighing the two outlining programs Notebook and OmniOutliner Pro. And I also remembered that in the past when I've talked about Mac applications or other computing issues, I've tended to attract commenters out of the ether, people I don't know and haven't heard from before. Not vast numbers of such commenters, but they've been there.

    Conclusion: there are a lot of people out there searching for info about Mac computers and software, such that they'll even swing by here to see what I have to say! This shouldn't be as surprising to me as it is. But it just made me kind of laugh. Apparently the key to upping my visitor numbers is to throw in lots of Mac computer and software terms. If I ever put ads on this blog, I will have to keep that in mind!

    What about you, those of you who track numbers on your blogs? What kinds of posts drive your visitor counts up?

    Thursday, August 14, 2008

    Just when I think I have a handle on the whole "blogging" thing, I run across completely different blog cultures

    I knew, consciously, that I tend to hang out in a relatively homogenous corner of the blogosphere, in which many of us share similar expectations about the norms of blogging. But subconsciously, I think I still assumed that "my" blogosphere is "the" blogosphere - that the culture of blogging I've come to understand is pretty typical. Oh, sure, it's probably not typical of some of the really big shot, sort of "universal" blogs - how can it be when you're attracting thousands of comments? - but at individual faculty/student blogs? Sure.

    So it's been interesting, reading law blogs (often dubbed "blawgs"), and discovering small but significant differences in that culture.

    First (and I realize that MA/doctoral students may well disagree with my take on this one), I've seen a much bigger gulf between law student blogs and law professor blogs than between MA/PhD student blogs and faculty blogs. That's not because there's no status/social/power differential between MA/PhD students and professors (I still think blogging helps to break down those barriers, but I know not everyone has experienced that, and my attitude may also arise from having mostly senior, fairly hierarchical professors in grad school, so what seems to me like the egalitarianism of the blogosphere may simply be a more egalitarian atmosphere than my own grad experience, not true egalitarianism) (could that sentence be longer?). It's because MA/PhD students are usually studying to do pretty much what their faculty do, so unsurprisingly the two groups share a lot of interests. Law students, in contrast, are usually studying to do something many of their professors have either never done, done only briefly, or are no longer doing - that is, practice law. Law schools (unless you're at Yale, maybe) are not designed to turn out law profs. So there seems a much bigger gulf in outlook between law student bloggers and law prof bloggers than in the MA/PhD world (the exceptions I've seen, unsurprisingly, are SJD students - people with JDs who are doing the equivalent of a PhD in law and, presumably, going to become law profs themselves). In fact, some law student bloggers seem to regard law profs in the same light that undergrads regard their profs - a real "us" and "them" attitude. (I'm not saying that us-and-them-ism doesn't apply to MA/PhD students as well as to law students, but it seems fundamentally different.) (And this is not at ALL a criticism of JD students! It's not good or bad - it's just different from how things work in the corner of the blogosphere I know best.)

    Another thing that's struck me is that in law profs' blawgging, there's less tolerance of anonymity than in my own academic blogosphere. I know there are plenty of individual non-law academics who disapprove of anonymity. But most of the "big" academic blogs I can think of (e.g. Crooked Timber) allow pseudonymous (or anonymous) comments as long as they're appropriate (i.e., on-topic, thoughtful, not gratuitously insulting/racist/otherwise bigoted - you get the idea) and not used for sockpuppetry. They all reserve the right to determine what's appropriate and to delete anything they deem falls outside those parameters, but pseudonymous/nymous isn't a big deal. HNN's Cliopatria originally banned anonymous comments, but revised their policy to allow people to comment under consistent pseudonyms as long as they registered and didn't comment under both the pseudonym and their real name.

    More law prof blawgs, however, seem to discourage anonymous comments - though this may just reflect an unrepresentative skew in my sample. On his Legal Philosophy Blog, Brian Leiter frequently disallows comments, and when he opens them, he states, "Non-anonymous comments strongly preferred; post only once; comments are reviewed for relevance." (Emphasis in the original.) The policy at Prawfs Blawg is that "In general, if we can't determine who you are, there is a strong risk that your comment will be deleted. If comments are civil and substantive, we may overlook the anonymity of the rebellious commenter. We own our words. You should too." Perhaps because of this policy, I've seen quite a few snarky responses from nymous commenters dismissing anonymous commenter's comments at least in part because they are anonymous - along the lines of, "I post under my own name and I'm not going to answer someone who doesn't." (Now, some of those anonymous comments aren't remotely helpful, but in that case it seems easy enough to dismiss the comment because it's unproductive, or rude, or stupid, or whatever, without saying it's unproductive/rude/stupid/whatever because it's anonymous.) Many blawgs by law profs have no problem with anonymous comments, of course, but I seem to have come across more that do, than I have among non-law profs.

    (Conversely, almost all the law student blawgs I read are pseudonymous, even if some of those pseudonyms are very thin. Almost all the law student blawgs I read are written by women. Anyway, we don't need to get into that debate again - it's just interesting.)

    What prompted these observations was reading something by Belle Lettre (posted at Scatterplot rather than her own blog). In brief, Ann Bartow of Feminist Law Profs made a comment at PrawfsBlawg stating that, "Posting somebody's personally identifiable comment from another blog without giving them notice and opportunity to respond is viewed by me and many acquaintances as a form of bullying." 

    Now, responses to Belle's post and at PrawfsBlawg itself suggest this may not be a norm accepted throughout the blawgosphere. But reading this was another moment of thinking, "Wow, the blawgosphere has some different norms than what I'm used to." And Belle's post at Scatterplot asked for comments about norms in the blogosphere. The following thoughts began as a comment at Scatterplot, but I've never posted there before and decided if was going to drone on about my own thoughts, this was the place to do it.

    First, I disagree that quoting someone's comment without giving them notice that you're doing so is "bullying." I see publishing in the blogosphere as analogous to publishing in print in this respect - if, in their own writing, someone quotes something that I've published elsewhere, are they obligated to tell me about it, whether they agree or disagree with me? Of course not. So why should they be obligated to do so in the blogosphere? (Belle points this out in her post.)

    Second, Bartow implies that discussing someone's comment is basically talking "behind their back," because she seems to believe that if the person posting about the comment doesn't tell the author of the comment, that author will never know they're being talked about. Belle also points out my own objection to this, which is that Google alerts allow bloggers to know when/where their comments (if linked to their names) are being referenced in the same way that Technorati and the like allow them to know when/where their posts are being referenced. (Somewhere I picked up the idea that if you refer to a blogger it's polite to link to their blog, even if you're not referring to a specific post - which allows the blogger to see who's talking about them. Hence my link to Feminist Law Profs above, even though I can't link to Bartow's comment directly - although at many blogs you can.)

    I understand that it can be distressing to stumble across conversations in which you feel like your comments are being mischaracterized/abused (and this probably happens to Ann Bartow more than it does to me, due to the difference in our blogs!), which is what Bartow's stance seems to be addressing. But I think in the blogosphere, as in print literature, once your words are out there, you have to - in most circumstances - let them go.

    This is for two reasons. First, you just can't control how people respond to what you write. Say I wrote a book, and it was widely read - a blockbuster best-seller (I should be so lucky!). People are going to talk amongst themselves about it, and some of them are going to get it "wrong," which in some cases means they will fundamentally misread it, and in other cases just means that they will take from it what's relevant to them, and in so doing skew what I consider to be the central message (because that message isn't as relevant to them as to me). I can't be present at all those conversations to say, "No, that's not what I meant at all!!" And I have to live with that. Even published, official critical reactions - if it's a really widely read book, how will I have time to respond to what everyone thinks? I have to get over it. (I guess I am not one of those people who, upon seeing a negative review of my book in a journal, would write one of those furious "reviewer X has COMPLETELY mischaracterized my book!!" letters to the editor. Life's too short! Do you think J.K. Rowling wastes her time writing letters to the editors of publications that publish negative reviews of her works??)

    The second reason why I don't agree with the "must tell someone before you talk about what they've written" is I think that unduly restricts what people can talk about. Nor do I think it's my responsibility to inform someone I'm talking about their work; rather, it's their responsibility to track down what people say, if it's important to them.

    I'm having a hard time connecting these points logically, so bear with me, but: relevant to this is the way that I view the blogosphere as made up of a whole slew of different communities. Just because you can contribute to all of them, doesn't necessarily mean that you should, even if they're talking about you (or a comment you made). Rather, people should understand the norms that govern a particular community - or its culture - before they participate in that community. If I write a comment somewhere, and one of my regular readers/readees picks up on it and comments on it, I feel comfortable responding, because I regularly participate in conversations with that person and I have a relationship with them (however slight). But occasionally something I've written has been picked up by Inside Higher Ed (for example), and gets read and possibly commented on by a lot of people outside my usual blog community, people I've never read and who've otherwise never read me. While my kneejerk reaction is to leap into those bloggers' comments and dispute what they're saying (and I have done so), I feel like the further away from my usual community a blogger is, the ruder it is to jump into their comments complaining about what they're saying about me. (I realize this is referencing posts rather than comments, but I don't see a real distinction between the two.) That is, if I haven't been part of the conversation in that blog community prior to a discussion of my comments, it's a little rude to blunder into the conversation just because I'm annoyed with what they say about me. I have the right to do so; I just think it's a little awkward. 

    It's like there's a group of strangers are next to me in a coffeeshop talking about something I completely oppose, and I decide I'm going to tell them how much I disagree with them, even though I've never met any of them and they're not really talking to me. They're talking around me, in public where I can hear them, and in that sense their speech is public; therefore I have the right to respond, but social norms suggest it's a little weird to butt in and bust on them. Conversely, if I go to that coffeeshop regularly, and I always see the same group there discussing stuff I have strong opinions about, there are polite ways in which I can join the conversation. I could approach one of the group on hir own, say "I couldn't help but overheard you talking about subject X - did you see the NYT article about X last Thursday?", ease my way in, that kind of thing. Then, when I've become part of the conversation, I'm in a position appropriately to denounce things I disagree with. If nothing else, if I don't know how that group's conversations work, I might completely misunderstand what I hear, and my indignation might be inappropriate and wasted.

    The idea that blogging about someone else's comment without telling them directly is "bullying" seems to me analogous to saying that not inviting that stranger sitting near your group in the coffeeshop to participate in your group conversation is bullying. Why is it that community's obligation to make their conversation even broader than it already is? Why do you have to tell a scholar if you're responding to some kind of idea they've expressed? We're not talking about personal attacks (at least, not necessarily - in some specific instances, that might be the case, which could well merit a different response) - we're talking about a response to someone's ideas. Moreover, what about a positive response to someone's comment? How is that bullying? Finally, there's an implication also that if someone pulls out a comment to disagree with it, that's inherently oppressive, which I find disconcerting. Disagreement with someone's stated ideas is not an attack on their intelligence, legitimacy, or a criticism of their very status as a scholar (well, not necessarily - it can be, of course, if done badly!). 

    None of these are absolutes - I can easily envision situations in which yes, it is worth busting in on that group in the coffeeshop, even if it's socially awkward and maybe even rude. Some things are important enough to override those niceties. But I also think there are some conversations in which it's just not worth participating.

    But what we might have here is simply different norms for blogging. I see the blogosphere more as salons made accessible than an extension of print journalism/scholarship - and this may be less the case in other corners of the interwebs. And, I'm sure, some people would argue that my attitude is different because I'm not writing under my real name.

    So, yeah. Lots of different blogging cultures. I can't assume I have it all figured out.

    Thursday, August 07, 2008

    Yet another update/apology

    Blogging may be light in the next few days, because I'm off to visit my mom for a long weekend (not that I've been blogging consistently recently, but I feel compelled to tell you that now there's actually a REASON I may be absent for the next few days). Staying with my mom is very mellow and it's not like I wouldn't have time to blog, but I haven't had as much luck poaching wireless on the Cape (where my mom is in the summer) as in Florida. I sort of figure that if I announce my absence, there's bound to be a strong wi-fi signal out there this time and instead of being absent, I'll pop up annoyingly frequently in the next few days, just because.

    Also: I know I owe many book people estimates for shipping etc! I ran out of boxes and have lacked all initiative to get organized in the last week or so. I will be in touch with those of you I still need to contact by the middle of next week - Tuesday or Wednesday. Thanks for your patience!

    Finally: I am starting to get e-mails about classes/schedules/etc.! And I bought some of my books yesterday (which was painful! I've so forgotten what it's like to buy a semester's worth of books. Of course, the last time I did so was during the first Bush administration, when things were a little cheaper)! I guess I really am going to law school!


    ETA: Well, HOPEFULLY I'm getting to my mom's today - my flight out is delayed because NYC (where my connection is) is busy. (I guess that's not a huge shock.) We're supposed to board imminently; my connection in NYC is a little longer than you usually get, so cross your fingers that I make it!

    Monday, August 04, 2008

    That's a first

    If I took a picture of the lovely view outside my windows now, the mountains would be obscured by a long plume of white smoke.

    There was a lightning strike earlier this afternoon that sparked a grassfire on one of the mountains to the west of me. Given that we're low on rain and Friday or Saturday we broke the record for number of days in a row with temps above 90˚F, it's not all that surprising. Right now it looks like the fire is both moving away from houses in the vicinity, and dying down, so it's more intriguing than unnerving (though it had died down, then it flared back up again, so who knows if it's fully dead yet).

    I've never lived anywhere before where wildfires were a realistic possibility. I was going to say that I think it's because I've always lived in pretty humid climates until this one, but then I remembered how Florida gets wildfires, and I think it's safe to call Florida humid, so scratch that idea. Maybe it's that in both the great white north and the northeast, there are too many lakes, rivers, streams, ponds, puddles, and so on for wildfires really to grab hold, though I'm sure such fires can pop up almost anywhere once in a while. In fact, I'm not even sure that where I live now is prone to wildfires in quite the same way that, say, southern California is prone to wildfires, but for some reason, seeing the smoke spiral up to the sky, while unfamiliar, wasn't at all shocking. Maybe it's just something one associates with the west, without even realizing it - especially when you're a northern/eastern girl like me, who grew up picturing cowboys and Indians, cattle drives, and endless prairies whenever anyone talked about The West.

    Westward movements in American history haven't always had the greatest consequences. But the mystique that one can move west and reinvent oneself still lingers, at least for me.

    Sunday, August 03, 2008

    Worth a thousand... oh, you know

    Because I don't feel like, oh, working this morning, I thought I'd show you some views from our windows.

    I don't remember why I was up at the buttcrack of dawn, but I was, so here are a few very early morning pics (they're pretty crappy because I'm no good at landscapes, but the clouds were so dramatic, I couldn't resist):

    Dark1Dark2Dark4 Dark5 

    And then here are a few I just took half an hour ago:Sunny2 Sunny1 Sunny7 Sunny3 

    That last one is a view of our actual neighborhood.

    And finally, a gratuitous cat picture:Pig1

    Friday, August 01, 2008

    Random comments on the past few days

    For the gazillionth time, will someone tell me NOT to get into arguments with strangers on the internet? Sometimes I'm such an idiot. I need to put a copy of this over my computer or something.

    * * * * *

    I sat in the coffeeshop a couple of days ago and read a 264 page book in three hours.

    Okay, well, it was 264 pages of word documents that, put together, will be a book, so not REALLY 264 pages.

    And it was a collection of essays, so it wasn't like I had to muster the energy to read a book-length exposition on something; I had to read ten essay-length pieces, each of which requires much less energy to figure out.

    And the reason I had to read them was to see what connections I could make to my own essay for the collection, so it wasn't like I had to read very closely - once I figured out there were no real connections, I skimmed like a madwoman.

    So, really, it wasn't that much of an accomplishment. But I still FEEL accomplished, darn it.

    * * * * *

    Why is it that the one essay with which my own had the greatest connections had to be the stinker in the collection? Seriously, in its current state it was both slender and incoherent. It has the potential to be interesting, and there's still time for revisions, of course, but I really didn't understand what its argument was - it read like one of those "let me throw out random observations and hope they stick together" kinds of essays. (It's possible that I'm misunderstanding disciplinary conventions/differences and such an essay is perfectly okay in the author's discipline, but I don't think so.) I should probably read it again.

    One author was fond of doing what my students often did, linking two independent clauses with ", however."

    One essay fell into the "one damn fact after another" trap. In some ways, I think I was poorly suited to be a historian, because I have very little patience with narrative - and that's what this essay was: narrative. This happened, then that happened, then this happened, then that happened. Such writing bores me to tears. But the problem was that the essay said very little about the significance of what happened. That is, it stated that the events/actions showed us how [theme of the collection] played out in [historical context], but just stated that in the introduction and the conclusion, and didn't say anything along the way about what was interesting about this particular expression of [theme of the collection]. And there was no attention to what these specific events had to say about [theme of the collection] more broadly. That is, it's kind of like saying, "Trees are important to a community. Community X has oak trees, elm trees, aspen trees, cottonwood trees, and the occasional maple tree. Trees are important to a community." Okay, but what do Community X's different kinds of trees tell us about how tree are important to a community? It's almost like the author took [theme of the collection] as a given and said, "here's an example of it." But s/he didn't use hir evidence to illuminate [theme of the collection]; it was more like the theme of the collection gave her an excuse to talk about stuff s/he wanted to talk about anyway.

    (I don't really think it's just my problem with narrative, because there was another, very similar kind of essay in the collection, but that author did a good job of making clear hir argument about how the specific events s/he described illuminated something specific about [theme of the collection].)

    The one thing to be said about the narrative essay is that I think it's easier to punch up the significance and broader implications in what was otherwise a perfectly solid essay, than to render coherent the incoherent.

    * * * * *

    Some of you will be wholly unsurprised to find that once I'd read the whole, it was clear to me that my essay connected most strongly with the essays by literature scholars, rather than those by historians. 

    * * * * *

    It was kind of weird to sit down and do something scholarly for the first time in about six weeks - and especially to think about medieval history again, rather than trying to imagine what law school will be like.

    It was nice to discover that my brain still works, though.

    * * * * *

    And after I did all that scholarly stuff, I drove to a ritzy mall and drooled over a whole bunch of things at Sephora and JJill. The biggest downside to returning to school? NO. MONEY.

    * * * * *

    The high is supposed to be 101˚ today. Wheeee! I'd better head to the grocery store now, while the temperature is still something less than molten lava.

    Monday, July 28, 2008

    Book update

    Okay, so I found a couple boxes I forgot I had... oops! So I've added some new stuff to my give-away list. For simplicity's sake, I'm listing them here so you don't have to try to figure out which ones they are on LibraryThing.

    Diane Bornstein, The Lady in the Tower: Medieval Courtesy Literature for Women
    Mary Theresa Brentano, Relationship of the Latin facetus literature to the medieval English courtesy poems (Bulletin of University of Kansas).
    Christopher Dyer, An Age of Transition?: Economy and Society in England in the Later Middle Ages (Ford Lectures)
    Gerhard Endress, An Introduction to Islam
    Geoffroy de la Tour Landry, The Book of the Knight of La Tour Landry (this is the EETS edition of the mid-fifteenth century manuscript edition, different from Caxton's late fifteenth-century printing)
    Frances Gies, The Knight in History
    John Hatcher, Plague, Population, and the English Economy, 1348-1530
    C. Dallett Hemphill, Bowing to Necessities: A History of Manners in America, 1620-1860
    Johan Huizinga, The Autumn of the Middle Ages
    Ruth Kelso, Doctrine for the Lady of the Renaissance Denis Stuart, Latin for Local and Family Historians: A Beginner's Guide
    Marjorie McIntosh, Working Women in English Society, 1300-1620 (second copy)
    Jonathan Nicholls, The Matter of Courtesy: A Study of Medieval Courtesy Books and the Gawain-Poet
    Helen Nicholson, Palgrave Advances in the Crusades
    Jonathan Riley-Smith, The Crusades: A Short History
    Barbara Rosenwein, A Short History of the Middle Ages, 2nd ed.
    John Schofield, Medieval London Houses
    Michael Theall, Motivation from Within: Approaches for Encouraging Faculty and Students to Excel
    Frederic M. Wheelock, Wheelock's Latin: The Classic Introductory Latin Course (this is a newer edition than the other Wheelock listed, and is also a clean copy)

    I haven't packed anything yet (as you know, since I have to get back to everyone with specific numbers), so feel free to add to a previous request).

    Also, a change in policy: grad student dibs will end at 6 pm EST on Tuesday, not midnight (I don't know why I picked midnight!). (I thought this might be a little easier!)

    Disclaimer

    • This space represents my personal opinions and does not in any way reflect the opinions or policies of my place of employment. Moreover, I do not blog during work time, or use any of my employer's resources for blogging.

    Other Overeducated and Interesting People

    Blog powered by TypePad