Acquisitions, Books

Acquisitions

Jeremy Black. The Cold War: A Military History. London and New York: Bloomsbury Academic, 2015. I already have a book with this title (by David Miller) but that was published in 1999, and another half-generation’s distant might lend some valuable perspective. The indefatigable Black traces the Cold War all the way back to 1917, perhaps […]

Acquisitions, Books

Acquisitions

Peter J. Dean, ed. Australia 1944-45: Victory in the Pacific. Port Melbourne: Cambridge University Press, 2016. Having devoured Australia 1942 and Australia 1943, I was disappointed when Australia 1944 didn’t appear. This explains why! As with the previous volumes, this is an Australian perspective on the war, although there is a chapter on the Japanese

Acquisitions, Books

Acquisitions

Ian Castle. The First Blitz: Bombing London in the First World War. Oxford and New York: Osprey, 2015. As seen on the Internet! I already own the two books which this combines. But they were review copies so I didn’t pay for them; it seems fair enough to support the author more concretely this time.

1920s, 1930s, Music, Periodicals, Radio, Sounds

The oscillation of R33

The May 2015 issue of Fortean Times (a periodical I warmly recommend) has a fascinating article by Daniel Wilson about a type of radio interference known as oscillation, which afflicted radio broadcasting in the 1920s and 1930s, about which, I’m ashamed to say, I previously knew nothing at all.1 What’s fascinating about oscillation is not

Sputnik I
After 1950, Cold War, Conferences and talks, Nuclear, biological, chemical, Phantom airships, mystery aeroplanes, and other panics, Pictures, Radio, Sounds, Space, Turning points in history

Turning points: Sputnik

After taking some time to recover after the marathon Road to War, I’m taking part in a new series of talks with ABC New England North West‘s Kelly Fuller, along with fellow members of the UNE School of Humanities Nathan Wise (who came up with the concept), Sarah Lawrence and Richard Scully (and more, if

10 years, Books, Thesis

Airminded: the PhD thesis

So, after a month of reposts, my celebration of Airminded’s 10th anniversary is nearly over. All that remains is the surprise which I promised, which is (no surprise!) the PhD thesis I submitted way back in 2009, for which I was subsequently awarded my PhD — after all, Airminded began life as a PhD blog.

10 years

Repost: Secret Zeppelin bases in Britain — I

[Part of a celebration of Airminded’s 10th anniversary; originally posted on 6 September 2014. The start of my investigation into rumours of, well, secret Zeppelin bases in Britain in 1914, which continued here and here, and concluded here. And will eventually be published somewhere.] On ABC New England last week I briefly mentioned rumours of

10 years

Repost: The aerial theatre

[Part of a celebration of Airminded’s 10th anniversary; originally posted on 1 March 2014. This was an initial roughing out of an idea for my next big research project, which hasn’t quite happened because I’ve been distracted by other things and haven’t got any funding yet. But I still hope to pursue it in some

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