Latest Posts


  • Boo

    Ihave an affinity for useless information. The less practical or applicable it is, the more it sticks in my brain. Can I remember almost every line from The Pirates of Penzance because I worked a show as lighting crew in seventh grade?… Continue reading

    Boo
  • Past, Perfect?

    In April, the New York Times ran an op-ed interviewing “8 conservative men” who (according to the Times’s social media) all came to the conclusion that “this is not the America I remember growing up in.” The so-called newspaper of record had, in other words,… Continue reading

    Past, Perfect?
  • Foucalt’s Pendulum and Other Prophetic Texts

    The [conspiracy theorist] is all idée fixe, and whatever he comes across confirms his [theory]. You can tell him by the liberties he takes with common sense, by his flashes of inspiration, and by the fact that, sooner or later, he… Continue reading

    Foucalt’s Pendulum and Other Prophetic Texts
  • Dirtbag Historicism

    The dean asks the professor of Old English how her curriculum can respond to the fact that soon less than half the college students on the West Coast will claim English as their native language. Can Old English rely any… Continue reading

    Dirtbag Historicism
  • Boring Is Good, Actually

    It’s been a heck of a winter, what with the advent of the Omicron variant, trucker convoys, and war in Europe. As I write this, I’ve just moved 400 miles and three cultural zones from Providence, Rhode Island, to Washington, DC.… Continue reading

    Boring Is Good, Actually
  • Corvus corona

    Plague—that’s something I know a bit about. I’ve studied the science of the human past under Michael McCormick, listened attentively to Monica H. Green’s lectures. I know that the Black Death gets all the attention but that the Plague of… Continue reading

    Corvus corona
  • Ringing the Changes

    Some number of summers ago, I traveled to the tiny French town of Laon on my very first research trip, bright eyed and fresh faced. I found the city perched on a crescent plateau that rose steeply from a surrounding… Continue reading

    Ringing the Changes