Recent reading + some RL stuff
May. 22nd, 2022 09:46 pmI am at the family summer place, graaaading student papers. I am grateful to have a job that sometimes allows me to do this. We have planted the potatoes, onions, and Jerusalem artichokes, done most of the weeding, partly sawed up a fallen tree for wood, got the water pump working, etc. There's more sowing to be done. Today Mom and I picked nettles and made soup from them, and some day soon I'll make rhubarb cordial (yum!).
Yet again I feel like I haven't got much time for reading? Only two books since May 7th, ah well.
Going Postal by Terry Pratchett (2005)
For book club. I have read Pratchett before, but it was ages ago? One of the book club members recommended the audiobook read by Stephen Briggs, which turned out to be a good choice for dramatizing the humor. I did enjoy this, but I don't think I am likely to turn into a huge Pratchett fan.
Jacobitism and the English People, 1688-1788 by Paul Kléber Monod (1989)
This is often quoted in other books, and my university library had it, so...there's some stuff about material culture that was interesting, and also about Jacobite riots and in what contexts they occurred and who were the people who did it (mostly skilled craft workers, apparently). Some good stuff about what makes the movement so difficult to grasp from a modern perspective, because the political categories just aren't the same. Quote: It helped to create a framework for extra-parliamentary radicalism, even as it nurtured forms of elite sociability that would later become bulwarks of conservatism.
Also, check out this excellent revolutionary slogan from 1719! Would work for basically any movement!
How long will you be
ignorant of your strength?
Count your numbers.
Sure you ought to fight with more resolution for liberty than your oppressors for dominion.
Count your numbers.
Yet again I feel like I haven't got much time for reading? Only two books since May 7th, ah well.
Going Postal by Terry Pratchett (2005)
For book club. I have read Pratchett before, but it was ages ago? One of the book club members recommended the audiobook read by Stephen Briggs, which turned out to be a good choice for dramatizing the humor. I did enjoy this, but I don't think I am likely to turn into a huge Pratchett fan.
Jacobitism and the English People, 1688-1788 by Paul Kléber Monod (1989)
This is often quoted in other books, and my university library had it, so...there's some stuff about material culture that was interesting, and also about Jacobite riots and in what contexts they occurred and who were the people who did it (mostly skilled craft workers, apparently). Some good stuff about what makes the movement so difficult to grasp from a modern perspective, because the political categories just aren't the same. Quote: It helped to create a framework for extra-parliamentary radicalism, even as it nurtured forms of elite sociability that would later become bulwarks of conservatism.
Also, check out this excellent revolutionary slogan from 1719! Would work for basically any movement!
How long will you be
ignorant of your strength?
Count your numbers.
Sure you ought to fight with more resolution for liberty than your oppressors for dominion.
Count your numbers.
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Date: 2022-05-22 08:34 pm (UTC)(no subject)
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Date: 2022-05-23 03:07 pm (UTC)Sounds like you have been extremely busy between grading and farming; I hope you're getting some relaxing time somewhere in there. (If you can make rhubarb cordial, can you make rhubarb crumble? Do you have rhubarb crumble there? One of my favorite baked desserts.)
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Date: 2022-05-23 04:03 pm (UTC)I've just been reading the Jacobite chapters in The Road Not Taken by Frank McLynn, which also discusses the popular and revolutionary aspects of Jacobitism—and I agree it is strange and fascinating how different the political categories are to modern ones.
And all that gardening sounds lovely. I hope the rhubarb cordial goes well!
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Date: 2022-05-23 05:42 pm (UTC)(no subject)
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Date: 2022-05-23 05:52 pm (UTC)Yes, I do sometimes make rhubarb crumble, with homemade vanilla custard! It's delicious.
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Date: 2022-05-23 06:41 pm (UTC)I haven't made the rhubarb cordial yet--I should get around to it tomorrow.
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Date: 2022-05-23 06:52 pm (UTC)