I love that you looked this up. The sound is so stable it may be a stationary horn. but nonetheless. had me feeling like a part of a community. a part of the world.
@cdc29
Religious History | Public History | Digital History | Also Birds Assistant Professor of History | Loyola University Chicago https://www.luc.edu/history/people/facultyandstaffdirectory/profiles/cantwellchristopher.shtml
I love that you looked this up. The sound is so stable it may be a stationary horn. but nonetheless. had me feeling like a part of a community. a part of the world.
Also, it's probably because I just got tenure...
Sitting in my house on Milwaukee's upper east side reading, & I can hear the foghorn of container ships coming into the bay. A low groan some six miles form my house I can still hear clearly. The sound makes me feel incredibly fortunate for some reason. Lucky to live here. Lucky to be here.
Chicago City Clerk releases recordings of iconic city council meetings going back decades.
www.wbez.org/city-hall/20...
Watching breaking bad for the fourth, fifth? time and just realized that the outfit Walter wears in the last episode of season 2 is the same color of the teddy bear that falls from the sky. As if they are both damaged in a crash.
A photo of a snowy owl on the snowy ground against some reeds.
Saw my first snowy owl yesterday.
who will rid me of this troublesome learning management system.
Anyone else watching Pluribus? I feel like I need a discussion group about the show.
An error in my page proofs Iβm glad I just caught.
βHe believed the end was neigh.β
Truly brilliant @rns.org team reporting here from @ulaakuzi.bsky.social, @fiona-ndre.bsky.social and @richakarma.bsky.social:
Inside Zohran Mamdani's bid to win over religious New Yorkers β> religionnews.com/2025/11/04/i...
Yes! Thank you! Thelen, Rosenzweig, and Kelland is like the public history trinity here. So, thank you! I am now ready to fight with the typesetter!
Also, hi!
Thank you! Did not think to look as NCPH. I feel like I learned this from @laraly.bsky.social. So would appreciate here insight too.
ποΈ Hoping for some help with a page proof question. We public historians are ok with using "historymaking" as something of a portmanteau, yes? The typesetter insisted on separating this into "history making," but I feel I've read it combine in other books on memory and #publichistory. Thoughts?
What a line. Aldo Leopold, βA Sand County Almanacβ (1949)
βTo plant a pineβ¦one need be neither god nor poet; one need only own a shovel. By virtue of this loophole in the rules, any clodhopper may say: Let there be a treeβand there will be one.β
- Aldo Leopold, βSand County Almanacβ (1949)
In the (e)mail today.
βIt is fortunate, perhaps, that no matter how intently one studies the hundred little dramas of the woods and meadows, one can never learn all of the salient facts about any one of them.β
Aldo Leopold, Sand County Almanac (1949)
First thing I immediately thought of after reading the story was this:
Paging @mjcressler.bsky.social β¦
βIf loons invented the music of being alone, cranes invented the music of being together.β
- Kim Heacox
Thanks! And yeah. And what concerns me is the pressure to adopt AI renders anything other than its use a maker of some kind of Luddite mentality. WHICH IS NOT TRUE! Iβve always used blue books in intro classes. No I worry about their reception.
My god. What a potent (and environmentally appropriate) metaphor. And I think it echoes earlier DH conversations about infrastructure building as scholarship which now feel all the more relevant.
I want to be clear that this is in no way meant to dispel the very real concerns about the intellectual, political, & environmental impacts of AI. But I think "rejecting AI" or "abolishing AI" as some has said is not the answer. But that's a subject for a different thread. Finis. /11
Again I really have no answers here. But I've begun to think about reframing my DH class. To recalculate my own sense of possibility to account for the very real & very legitimate fears my students seem to have. To see DH as a defense of the humanities rather than a digital capitulation /10
But I also can't help but feel that folks are unnecessarily associating the general precarities of our moment with the tech that has come to define it. The two certainly do have a relationship. But I worry that the politicization of AI will only serve to further isolate the humanities. /9
This seems to track the story told about the rightward trend of tech more generally as the scrappy startups that fueled Obama's campaigns became the authoritarian storytellers of the Trump regime post-covid. /8
My sense is that these sentiments emerge from two sources. First, is the fact that we are genuinely being force fed AI by the tech oligarchs who have ensconced themselves within our politics. In contrast to that earlier moment, the rise of AI is neither democratic nor subversive. /7
I have no real insights into this change other than to document, and I generally refuse to air my students' experiences online. But it feels real. The overwhelmingly negative reception AI generally receives within the humanities seems to be coloring the understanding some have of DH. /6
The advent of AI and the rise of LLMs, however, has seemed to shift completely the tone & vibe around DH. At least in my limited experience. DH now seems like one more digital burden for students and educators alike. Just another way in which the tech world bears down upon us. /5
Of course DH had its critics, & some of us were certainly naive in our fervor. Yet the spirit of the times was vibrant and the moment felt full of opportunity. It was the one bright academic spot as the academy began the contraction that coninies through today. /4