The blog Baudrillard’s Bastard features an amusing and probably instructive perspective on the activities of dogs in history.
I found this link via Walking the Berkshires’ early modern history carnival, Carnivalesque XXXVIII (Early Modern) Tabloid Edition by subscribing to Finding paths to digital history news feeds.
Posts Tagged ‘digital history’
Editorializing dogs
Posted in history, popular history, tagged American revolution, digital history, dogs, historical documents, history carnival, primary sources on April 21, 2008 | 3 Comments »
On Defining Scholarship
Posted in civic engagement, history, scholarship, tagged digital history, history education, public history, public scholarship, scholarship, the academy on January 29, 2008 | 1 Comment »
Academic historians too often seek to impose, in the name of standards, a narrow definition of scholarship. Valuable historical scholarship is only, I’ve been told, peer-reviewed print scholarship about a period of time or place in the past. While oral history makes its way into the definition, public history, history education, and public [...]