Tuesday, October 2, 2007

The art of coherence

Paula B of the Writing Show, invited author Daniel Arenson to speak about writing fantasy. Arenson has written and published in several media and has recently brought out his first fantasy novel Firefly Island. It is the story of a land ruled by a king turned to stone and his nemesis, the minor girl, who just happens to posess the magic to challenge him. Arenson has adeptly taken on the genre and in the words of Paula, shown a very deep understanding of writing.

Arenson shows also a deep understanding of interview and under this shower of compliments and the ensuing large questions of writing, composition and publishing, he remains cool, calm and collected. What strikes me most is how he is very focussed and never during the interview strays even a millimeter from what he has to say. At times you even feel he might be in charge and he directs the transitions rather than Paula.

On his website, the first chapter of the novel can be read and here he shows a similar quality. He is very true and loyal to the fantasy genre, the tone of voice that fits to it and the choice of setting, character and use of language that naturally entails the field. Yes, indeed, this is sheer talent we see. If it is not entirely to my taste, it is maybe because I feel not enough challenged and feel that maybe Arenson hasn't challenged himself enough. Surely that should not bother him. He very coherently sticks to his tune and that is a craftsmanship that forms the major part of artistry. What frivolous, avant-garde, provocative side of artistry he is capable of, we must find out by closer inspection.

Monday, October 1, 2007

Where did Hannibal cross the Alps?

Stanford's history podcast (see Stanford on iTunes U) has a great lecture by Patrick Hunt about his quest for finding the exact route Hannibal took across the Alps. In 218 BCE Hannibal evaded a Roman force marching from the Mediterranean coast by turning inland up the valley of the Rhône. His exact route over the Alps has been the source of scholarly dispute ever since ancient times. Since 1994, the Stanford Alpine Archeology Project has explored, excavated and conducted first-hand archaeological research in the Alps.

By now, Patrick Hunt has a pretty good idea where the exact passage might have been. Such a large army passing will certainly have left their traces and he is intent, with the help of national Geographic, to try and prove his theories. The lecture is a very exciting account how he got to his conclusions. The only barriers between now and the moment of either corroboration or refutation are bureaucratic. An archaeologist can't take a grain of sand without permits. So far he has worked with survey permits, the next step is to be able to take samples and start digging.

46 podcasts reviewed

UPDATE: we now have 249 podcasts reviewed. (link)

In alphabetical order all podcasts I reviewed,last post date and relevant labels:
  1. 12 Byzantine Rulers, 30-09-07, history podcast
  2. Bike Radar, 16-07-07, tour
  3. Bio-ethics podcast, 24-09-07, science, law and society
  4. Biota Podcast, 24-06-07, science
  5. Bommel Hoorspel, 01-07-07, NL radio
  6. British History 101, 01-06-07, history podcast
  7. CFR Podcast, 03-08-07, law and society
  8. Dan Carlin's Hardcore History, 11-09-07, history podcast
  9. David Kalivas' World History, 24-05-07, history podcast
  10. From our own Correspondent, 24-07-07, BBC
  11. Haring Podcast, 31-05-07, NL radio
  12. History 167B, 03-Sep-07, Berkeley history podcast
  13. History 4A, 03-Sep-07, Berkeley history podcast
  14. History 5, 03-09-07, Berkeley history podcast
  15. History according to Bob, 25-06-07, history podcast
  16. History Network, 22-07-07, history podcast
  17. In Our Time, 30-09-07, In Our Time BBC (science) history podcast
  18. Interview Vrijdag, 12-07-07, NL radio
  19. ITV, 16-07-07, tour
  20. Jung Podcast, 27-06-07, psychology
  21. KMTT, 02-07-2007, יהדות
  22. Marathon Interview, 30-09-07, NL radio
  23. Matt's Today In History, 26-07-07, history podcast
  24. Military History Podcast, 27-06-07, history podcast
  25. National Archives Podcast, 29-05-07, history podcast
  26. Only in America, 24-05-07, history podcast יהדות
  27. OVT, 20-09-07, history podcast NL radio
  28. Oy Mendele!, 30-06-07, יהדות
  29. Physics for future Presidents (Descriptive Physics), 09-07-07, Berkeley science
  30. Philosophy 103, 28-06-07
  31. Prosperity show, 01-08-07
  32. Rav Dovid's, 02-07-07, יהדות
  33. rpgmp3, 21-06-07
  34. the Skeptics' Guide to the Universe, 06-09-07, SGU science
  35. Šimek 's Nachts, 12-09-07, simek NL radio
  36. Sonic Society, 23-09-07, creative writing
  37. Shrink Rap Radio, 25-09-07, shrinkrapradio psychology
  38. Stanford U, 20-09-07, history podcast
  39. TdF London, 27-06-07, tour
  40. The Word Nerds, 16-09-07, TWN language
  41. University Channel Podcast, 24-09-07, science
  42. Volkskrant Podcasts, 25-07-07, tour
  43. Wise Counsel, 20-09-07, Wise Counsel psychology
  44. the Writing Show, 23-09-07, Writing Show language
  45. Wynyfryd's meditation room, 24-07-07
  46. zencast, 02-07-07
If you know of interesting podcasts that you think should be reviewed, pleas let me know through the comments page.
Thanks in advance,
Anne Frid de Vries

Sunday, September 30, 2007

Marathon interview Albert Helman

Ik heb iets met interviews met mensen die een meervoudige nationale affiniteit hebben. Het is het antwoord op de vraag van Ronald van den Boogaard, waarom ik naar Simek en naar de marathon interviews luister. Hij vroeg met erover een gaststukje te schrijven op zijn blog. Albert Helman noem ik daar zijdelings.

De 85 jarige Helman wordt in 1989 door Djoeke Veninga geinterviewd. Hij heeft zo te merken meer dan een dubbele affiniteit. Zijn leven heeft hem behalve langs Suriname en Nederland gevoerd door Spanje, Tobago en Italie, om maar eens wat te noemen. Voeg daarbij zijn hoge leeftijd en ik meen daaruit te begrijpen de afstand die hij neemt tot alle wortels die hij heeft. Als hij nog ergens wat emotie laat voelen dan is het met betrekking tot zijn Indiaanse etniciteit. Nog altijd voelt hij zijn indiaanse grootmoeder snuffelen in zijn nek.

Als het over de Indianen gaat en de culturele clash tussen de natuurmens en de westerse, dan trilt het gesprek het meest. En Helman slaagt erin de kracht van zijn Indianen uit te vergroten zonder in een op Rousseau gelijkende romantiek te vervallen. Verder is hij veel afstandelijker. En de interviewster heeft misschien teveel eerbied, of maakt te weinig een persoonlijke connectie met hem, om het nadrukkelijk te prikkelen. Daardoor heeft het gesprek ook een paar momenten dat het zich wat moedeloos voortsleept, totdat Helman zelf weer wakker wordt en het vuurtje opstookt. Ik heb genoten, maar hield het toch na twee en een half van de vier uur voor gezien.

Socrates -- In Our Time is back

BBC's Radio Four program In Our Time has returned after a long summer break and opened the new season with a discussion about Socrates. We learn that Cicero said about him that he brought philosophy from the heavens to the earth.

Socrates is pictured to us as the first critical thinker. The first to fight esoteric, mythic, grand scale philosophy and bring it to the practical questions of the good life. Which, according to him, must equal the virtuous life. What strikes me is how we see in Socrates already the critical, the rational and the inquisitive mind that will mark Western thinking and science. I am also struck by the individualism. Knowledge is a personal thing, not dependent upon tradition or institution, which points forward to protestants such as Calvin.

What fun that In Our Time is back. What good initiative the BBC releases it as a podcast. One of the most worthwhile podcasts. But the eager listener must be alert. One week after publication, with the new edition coming out, the previous is removed from the feeds. It can be heard through the archive, but not downloaded. As all shows must be regarded as valuable at face value, my advice is to download and keep for the right moment for listening. Not to wait and turn dependent on time on line.

Byzantine podcast

Just when I thought the long history podcast about the Byzantine Empire had come to an end, there is going to be more. Lars Brownworth's 12 Byzantine Rulers has reached the last of the 12, Constantine XI. Constantine was the last emperor of Byzantium. He was the one to suffer the ultimate fall of Constantinople by the hands of the Ottomans in 1453. This marks the end of the 1200 year history of the (Eastern) Roman empire.

The podcast about Constantine XI, was to mark the end of years long running series carefully meting out Byzantine history. To my great and happy surprise though, Lars ended this expectedly and long awaited final edition with announcing that there is yet another issue to come. One about what Byzantine culture had meant and how it lived on from 1453 onwards.

From the point of view of history and historiography, this can only be right, but also from the point of view of history podcasting, this is especially laudable. Brownworth's series is one of the first history podcasts to have been around (if not the very first) and one of such high quality that it has set the standards for history podcasts to abide by. We can only hope, that whenever this particular series is to finish, Lars Brownworth will find a subject to dedicate his next series to.