Acquisitions, Books

Acquisitions

R. J. B. Bosworth. Mussolini’s Italy: Life Under the Dictatorship, 1915-1945. London: Penguin, 2006. I have plenty of books on generic fascism, German fascism, British fascism … so one on the original fascism doesn’t seem excessive! Paul Kennedy. The Parliament of Man: The United Nations and the Quest for World Government. London: Allen Lane, 2006. […]

1940s, Australia, Books, Other, Pictures

Now pay attention

This sticker is in the back of a book published in 1940, originally part of the collection of the Public Lending Library of Victoria (itself a part of the Public Library of Victoria, as the SLV was then known). I was struck particularly by no. 4. Were books considered possible vectors for infectious disease —

1940s, Books

Pop quiz, rotter!

DO YOU KNOW — Whether you can be gassed by bombs dropped from airplanes? The real strength of Germany’s Air Force? What sort of an air force Mussolini has? Why bombers cannot win the present war? What the Suicide Club of the war will be in history? Why there will be few romantic Aces in

1920s, 1930s, 1940s, Air control

Me on Orac on Dawkins on Harris

I’ve been reading Respectful Insolence for quite a while now, but I somehow missed Orac’s post critiquing Richard Dawkins’ comments on Arthur Harris and the bombing of civilians in the Second World War, and how the development of precision-guided munitions (“smart bombs”) reflects a change in the moral zeitgeist since then. Fortunately, Jonathan Dresner pointed

Acquisitions, Books

Acquisitions

Scott W. Palmer. Dictatorship of the Air: Aviation Culture and the Fate of Modern Russia. Cambridge: Cambridge University Press, 2006. I followed Scott’s advice, but as I don’t have a car or an office, I ended up with only one copy :) It looks like a worthy companion to Corn and Fritzsche, and indeed, now

1930s, Pictures

The many mysteries of Sir Malcolm Campbell

Bluebird at Daytona Beach, 1935. Image source: Florida Photographic Collection. Well, the title of this post is a lie — there’s only two mysteries that concern me here, and one isn’t particularly mysterious … Sir Malcolm Campbell was a world-famous British speed maniac (there’s no other word for it), setting many records on land and

Games and simulations, Periodicals

Thanks for playing

[Cross-posted at Revise and Dissent.] Niall Ferguson has an article out in the New York Magazine, on the use of computer wargames in learning about history and strategy. (Via ClioWeb). It’s a frustrating piece. As a sometime wargamer myself, I do agree with him that they can have their uses. But I think he fundamentally,

Australia, Contemporary, Other

Battle of Brisbane

I’ve previously mentioned the Holden airship. At the moment it is at Brisbane, and there are concerns that it will be flown over the Gabba during the first Ashes test next month.1 The problem is that Holden isn’t paying Cricket Australia anything for the privilege of flying a billboard over the cricket ground, where it

1930s, After 1950, Cold War, Nuclear, biological, chemical

A world war in a day

Last month, I noted a parallel between certain pre- and post-Hiroshima nuclear warfare narratives. Here’s an even more common one, this time between the knock-out blow itself and nuclear warfare. Here’s the American astronomer Carl Sagan, from the final chapter (“Who speaks for Earth?”) of the 1980 companion book to his acclaimed television series, Cosmos:

Blogging, tweeting and podcasting

Investigations of a Dog

Strange name, good blog. Gavin Robinson is moving on from a PhD on horse supply in the English Civil War: This is mostly a history blog, but I’m aiming to be eclectic. I’m likely to be posting works in progress; reflections on things I’ve been reading; extracts from and criticism of my PhD thesis; and

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