Tag This
I have tagged all the entries for this edition of the carnival with the delicious tags “History” and “carnival”. You can see the entire collection below. If you are a delicious member (or have been thinking about becoming one) I would like to recommend that you tag them with whatever label you see fit. As tagging grows more popular, the uses for tagging increase as well. You can read more about it in education here.
S.J. Redman presents U-505 Featured on History Channel posted at Museum Madness, saying, “A brief article about the history of the U-505 and its new exhibit space at the Museum of Science and Industry in Chicago.”
Eugene Plawiuk presents Rebel Yell posted at Le Revue Gauche.
Sharon Howard presents Early modern elephants posted at Ramage.Ahistoricality presents Old Money posted at Done With Mirrors, saying, “The post is by Callimachus.”
Sharon Howard presents Shot out of the canon posted at The Little Professor.
Jonathan Dresner presents Didn’t you ever wonder about those tombstones shaped like trees? posted at 100 Word Minimum, saying, “100WordMinimum finds the oddest things around Richmond….”
Sergey Romanov presents Mass Graves in the Polesie posted at Holocaust Controversies.
Sergey Romanov presents Jürgen Graf is a Liar posted at Holocaust Controversies.
Sergey Romanov presents He sure is. posted at Holocaust Controversies.
Sharon Howard presents The colored expatriates of the American Revolution posted at Mode for Caleb.
Sharon Howard presents Theatrum Mortis posted at Giornale Nuovo.
Alan Baumler presents more on MIT and visualizing cultures posted at Frog in a Well, saying, “We have actually had a number of posts on the MIT controversy of late. This is the most recent”
Sharon Howard presents Subsidising Public/State Education posted at crooked timber.
Sharon Howard presents Hacking the Archive posted at The Rhine River.
Brian Ulrich presents Jews and Muslims in the Middle East posted at Brian’s Study Breaks.
Jonathan Dresner presents Jews and Muslims in the Middle East posted at Brian’s Study Breaks.
LauraJames presents A Red-Handed Pair of Black-Hearted Deuces posted at CLEWS The Historic True Crime Blog, saying, “Hi Amy, thanks for hosting the carnival. I’m submitting a crime story from 1930 for your consideration. Thanks!”
Sharon Howard presents History: a very short introduction posted at History News Network.
alun presents Remembering Memorial Day posted at Revise & Dissent, saying, “Kevin Levin mentions how the first Memorial Day has been forgotten, even it Charleston where it originated.”
Sharon Howard presents The flower of an entire generation posted at Airminded.
Evan Roberts presents Amateur digitization for historians posted at Coffee Grounds.
Sergey Romanov presents Carlo Mattogno on Belzec Archaeological Research posted at Holocaust Controversies, saying, “This is the first posting in the ongoing series.”
myself presents The Abbot’s Chair posted at The ToolRest, saying, “Hi Amy - I’m not sure whether this post counts as history or not! I’ll let you be the judge of that. It certainly touches on the subject and poses a question that a historian may be able to help with. best regards, Derek”
Natalie Bennett presents Life lessons at Kalamazoo posted at Quod She.
Natalie Bennett presents The last will and testament of Dame Helen Branch (1593) posted at Natalie Bennet.
Natalie Bennett presents Early Modern Advertising Again (or how not to write a Girls’ School Prospectus) posted at Roy Booth.
Nouri Lumendifi presents El-Arz posted at The Moor Next Door.
Natalie Bennett presents No New Thing posted at CLEWS The Historic True Crime Blog.
Natalie Bennett presents London adventures posted at Memorabilia Antonina.
Natalie Bennett presents Ellen And Jim Have A Blog, Too: The politics of reading: intellectual property as propaganda posted at Ellen And Jim Have A Blog, Too.
Natalie Bennett presents diamond geezer posted at tube.
Natalie Bennett presents Evening VIII. On the Fallaciousness of History posted at Winter Evenings.
Otto presents Stalin’s Ethnic Cleansing of the Crimean Tatars: 18 May 1944 posted at Otto’s Random Thoughts.
Jonathan Wilson presents holyoffice: The Internet Theologian Explains The Da Vinci Code posted at The Medicine Box, saying, “Not that I like perpetuating the DVC’s grip on the airwaves, but this article might be good comic relief”
Jonathan Wilson presents Welcome to Catallarchy’s Mill-fest: the Bicentennial Edition posted at Catallarchy.
Jonathan Wilson presents The “Hindsight” Theory of the Japanese American Internment Takes (Yet) Another Hit. posted at Is That Legal?.
Brett Holman presents Blog: Air Raid Shelter Policy posted at The Blogger will always get through…, saying, “Good tips on being interviewed for a history documentary.”
Jonathan Wilson presents SWAPATORIUM: Floating on Air posted at SWAMPATORIUM.
Jonathan Wilson presents Book First in Shibuya posted at Muninn.
Penny L. Richards presents The hunchback boy in the Annual Report, 1912 posted at Disability Studies.
Miland Brown presents So Who Was Our First President? posted at American Presidents Blog, saying, “Was George Washington really the first president of the USA. An elementary school teacher and her class discuss this topic.”
Miland Brown presents World History Blog: Before the Dawn : Recovering the Lost History of Our Ancestors posted at World History Blog, saying, “Miland reviews the book Before the Dawn: Recovering the Lost History of Our Ancestors.”
Andrew Israel Ross presents Introducing, the Magasin pittoresque posted at air pollution.
Jonathan Wilson presents The colored expatriates of the American Revolution posted at Mode for Caleb.
jd chandler presents slabtown chronicle: Siskiyou Outrage posted at slabtown chronicle, saying, “my blog is on the history of crime in Oregon. This article is about what is considered to be the last Old West Train Robbery in America. it took place in 1923″
Sharon Howard presents Charlie’s Chaplain posted at Roy Booth.
That concludes this edition. Submit your blog article to the next edition of history carnival using our carnival submission form. Past posts and future hosts can be found on our blog carnival index page.
Technorati tags: history carnival, blog carnival.
[...] Ladies and Gentleman, citizens of the internet, I present to you, the 32nd edition of the History Carnival. Unlike past hosts, I am not currently a practicing historian, (although I am a published historian) but I am very much interested in academic technology. And so I approached this rather extensive list (you can see the full list of nominations here ) with an eye towards posts that demonstrate exceptional use of the medium. The nominations represent the widest possible reach of historical writings and to give them their proper due, I’ve divided them up into a two part carnival, today’s piece will feature few distinctly academic pieces, a nod to collaborative learning and finally, posts that contribute to a community of best practices. [...]
[...] And while there are many more nominations (see the whole list here) I will leave you with two posts on World War II era topics, Jonathan Wilson nominated The “Hindsight” Theory of the Japanese American Internment Takes (Yet) Another Hit. posted at Is That Legal? and Stalin’s Ethnic Cleansing of the Crimean Tatars: 18 May 1944 posted at Otto’s Random Thoughts. [...]