October 27, 2007

Drinking Has Always Been Fun

Cockspur Rum, Courtesy Churchill Cellars Courtesy of my sister, some fun facts (one assumes) about drinking in history. I knew that Manhattan came from the native word Manahatta, but I didn't know that came from the original Manahachtanienk -- literally, "The High Island," and that's not because of the elevation.

February 05, 2007

Social Science and the War on Terror

Very interesting article in The New Yorker on the (finally) increasing influence of non-traditional military methods in the non-traditional non-battlefield of the "war on terror." Looking at the social networks of people in the countries and places where terrorists are coming from is important to figuring out how to function there - militarily or otherwise - since we are often now not fighting these countries themselves but people hiding within them, so we have to work with and use the people there to get our goals accomplished.

October 13, 2005

Slavery in New York

I went to the New York Historical Society today to see their new grand exhibit - Slavery in New York. I enjoyed it, very informative, well laid out. My favorite parts were the four maps detailing New York City and the lives of its black inhabitants from the mid-1600s to the early 1800s (of course, I am a planner) and the modern television financial network like screen that displayed slave trade information as if it were stock and bond information ticking by. The latter was interesting for its mix of shameful historical data (the prices of human beings) with a modern presentation format - were its creators attempting to question modern capitalism or were they trying to place old data in a format to which new eyes have become accustomed? Possibly, or probably both?

One reason I went to day is that they have and original draft of the Emancipation Proclamation written in pencil by Abraham Lincoln on display for only a week and a half or so. The final copy of this speech was destroyed in a fire in Chicago, so I guess this is the only (or one of the very few) original versions of it. It is interesting to think what one might learn by looking at a piece of paper with writing on it, but I guess but everyone was standing in line for was a chance to somehow connect with its author, Abraham Lincoln. By peering at his relatively legible script, could I get a feeling for the real person behind all the adulation? Would that looking at the original give me more of a feeling of the text and the man who wrote that than just reading the words in a book?