Thanks for both tips!
Posts by Michael Hancher
Brown oak leaves, blue scilla blossoms still close to the ground.
Fall and Spring
In April 1991, Gopher system was created at the University of Minnesota as a text-based system that used the hierarchical menu structure for navigation.
In April 1991, Gopher system was created at the University of Minnesota as a text-based system that used the hierarchical menu structure for navigation.
#InternetHistory
Classics Illustrated Jane Eyre shows madwoman Bertha Mason Rochester, violently restrained as she attempts to disrupt a marriage ceremony.
Jane Eyre reimagined in Classics Illustrated #39 (1947), cover by Harley Griffiths. There's just something about these 1940s-50s pulp and comic-book remediations of 19th-c. texts...
Now officially published.
New book: Macaulay and English in India (Routledge). Details at z.umn.edu/MandEI. @routledgebooks.bsky.social
Look! It's finally happening, I'm so excited! Please share with your friends, people who assign books, and pets.
a.k.a. Serendipity?
Thanks! Looking forward to it.
How Macaulay contributed to three innovations: the construction of English as an academic discipline in Great Britain and India; the diffusion of English as a language of science and bureaucracy, especially in India; and the international advance of “meritocracy” in education and professional life.
To be published by Routledge this month: Macaulay and English in India. Details at www.routledge.com/Macaulay-and....
A close-up of a person wearing teal gloves holding a small metal type punch engraved with an ampersand symbol. In the background, part of the person’s face is softly out of focus.
A bearded man wearing teal gloves uses a green rubber air blower to clean a small metal type punch. He sits at a desk with an open wooden case filled with neatly arranged metal punches, while a computer monitor displaying a magnified image is visible in the background.
🔎 Rare 18th-century punches used to create the original Baskerville typeface have been digitised and released online.
Designers, historians and the wider public now have the opportunity to study the physical tools that shaped modern typography.
🔗https://loom.ly/1ulLaFI
The NYT has included True Color in their "books to read in March" round-up! Of course: True Color is out March 31, so you'll have to read it really, really fast to stay compliant with the NYT's demands. www.nytimes.com/2026/02/27/b...
Kristin Bluemel's book "Enchanted Wood: Engraving a Place for Women Artists in Rural Britain" focuses on artists Gwen Raverat, Agnes Miller Parker, Clare Leighton, and Joan Hassall.
And it is available in paperback!
www.upress.umn.edu/978151791477...
Is that what Grice meant by “meaning\NN”? <https://www.jstor.org/stable/2182440> Or do we now know what people would probably mean by the term “stochastic hamartia,” if they used it?
“In essence, **stochastic hamartia** is a tragic downfall caused by the fatal convergence of a minor human weakness and a random, chaotic, or unpredictable world.”
Full text and some ingredients at <https://z.umn.edu/stochastic_hamartia>. (No mention of archery.)
What does “stochastic hamartia” mean? Right now AI Overview explains the “concept” (evidently it's a concept as well as a term) in 290 words, ending with the following summary:
stochastic hamartia
I'm pretty sure that today I coined the term "stochastic hamartia." (Google Search reports zero instances of use.) I made it up because both of these important words are archery-related, and so they might belong together.
Much baggage on that horse, explained in Chapter 7 of ohiostatepress.org/books/titles....
Macaulay and English in India. Proofed and indexed. Due out next month. www.routledge.com/Macaulay-and...
Could be an excellent watercolor.
Could be an excellent watercolor
A good, old-fashioned (viz., New Historicist) take on Gatsby, re-imagining the idea of illustration, Grangerizing the book anew. new.artsmia.org/exhibition/g...
Small things add up.
Bronze owl in a door gate.
Owl carved into stone.
Owl carved into stone above a door in Walter Library.
Owl sculpted into a heating grate.
Four of the over 225 owls carved, chiseled, and sculpted into the walls, doors, columns, light fixtures, and grates of Walter Library at the University of Minnesota.
Portrait by Millais.
Excellent, many thanks. Good to see the asterisk at the very end.*
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* For the full story see "Arrays of Asterisks" in A History of Punctuation in English Literature, 3 vols. (Cambridge University Press, forthcoming January 2028).
Yes, Dalziel. I was wondering who designed the handsome cover -- apparently John Leighton. Details and citations at King, Edmund M. B. "Leighton, John [pseud. Luke Limner] (1822–1912), artist and book cover designer." Oxford Dictionary of National Biography.
Yes, not fancy, more utility. It looks to me like a rebinding in expectation of heavy use, as for a library -- and the binder thoughtfully preserved the handsome covers (though trimmed in the process, most obviously at the top). I still see starched cloth, which would have been sturdier than paper.
Paper? or cloth? (In the photos it looks like starched cloth.) And the same covers are repeated on the original binding? This was a trade binding? How are the edges treated? I have seen original covers preserved inside a fancy rebinding, but this is not that? Handsome design. Designer known?