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This is a truly interesting meme I found on the web via Found History, but originating from West Coast Grrlie Blather

Here’s the meme: If you could go back to any time in history (for a visit, or you can stay if you really want to), what time would you go back to?

Make a list of four. Name the place, year(s), and event and/or person you’d like to see first hand. In the fifth item (optional) you can put your four honorable mentions. Then tag four people, and send them an e-mail to let them know you’ve tagged them. That’s it!

Ok, so here’s my list - and I make no apologies for it being a little Russo-centric

1. Petrograd, October 1917

I’d really loved to have been there when the Russian Revolution happened, and experienced it first hand. Of course, it doesn’t mean that I’d be any more authoratative on the subject…

2. Moscow, August 1991

I actually remember the coup (there was no kids TV on that morning, and the trickiness of memory had led me to think it happened on a different day of the week until I learnt otherwise), and my father trying to explain what was happening.

3. Spain, 1936-1939

I’d like to think that I’d have gone and done my bit in the fight against fascism.

4. The Soviet Union, 1917-1939

I would have liked to have seen it first hand, despite the horrors of Stalinism. It’s what I work on and I’m passionate about it. I also love the aesthetic of the ’20s and ’30s (not just in Russia, but in a broader context)

Honourable mentions:

I’m going to twist this slightly and make the honourable mentions four people from the past I would like to have met - apologies to the originator of the meme

1. Maxim Litvinov (1876-1951) - Soviet Foreign Minister in the 1930s

2. Georgi Dimitrov (1882-1949) - Bulgarian Communist and leader of the Comintern

3. Alexander Berkman (1870-1936) - anarchist. Author of What is Anarchism and lover of Emma Goldman

4. Alexandra Kollontai (1872-1952) - Heroine of the women’s movement and Soviet diplomat

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Russia in 2053?!?

Or at least one novelist’s vision of it….

via Strangemaps

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As the debate over the usefulness of Wikipedia to students continues to rage, a project has come somewya to the rescue. This is going to be useful with students, and getting them to think about how reliable Wikipedia is as a source.

Another post on this at http://jilltxt.net/?p=2089

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Found this on Torill’s blog. These sound great, and might have to go with my mince pies that I posted about a week or so back.

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D-List Blogger

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Online here

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DEVONthink seems interesting, and could be an interseting way to cross reference one’s one work, and deal with the problem of information overload.

You can download the trial from here

Thanks to Jill

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I made this using a Web 2.0 logo creator

Generated Image

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I am about to go to Moscow for the summer
I want a job for September
I wish we were in a position to start having children
I hate rude people, fascists
I love my wife, my job
I (will) miss my students, my friends and my boat when I move
I fear that society is in terminal decay
I hear urban background noise and my wife typing
I wonder when the revolution’s coming
I regret little
I am not a pushover, despite my mild-mannered British exterior
I dance like a frog in a blender (apparently)
I sing quite a bit, although I don’t always get the words right
I cry rarely
I am not always punctual
I make with my hands cakes and bread
I write fast, but sometimes pretentiously
I confuse myself frequently
I need to write a few articles
I should do that
I start my day early
I finish my day late
I tag people and things that appeal to me

found at terminaldegree

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Ali

Ali is Senior Lecturer in History at the University of the West of England.
He works on Russian and Soviet foreign affairs. His current research is into the Comintern and its agents.
He's also rowing (but not as much as he used to), spending most of his time on the water in his single scull, Пошёл ты.


Art of Urban Warfare.
© Denis Sizikov




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