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Wednesday, May 30, 2012

A Sense of the World - FREE! - ALL GONE!

ALL COPIES ARE GONE!
In several days I'll receive copies of A Sense of the World: How a Blind Man Became History's Greatest Traveler by Jason Roberts.  If you would like a free copy, send me an email.  I'll distribute the copies on a first come, first served basis. ONLY A FEW COPIES LEFT!



An EXCERPT from the Introduction to A SENSE OF THE WORLD, entitled “The World and Its Multiplying Delights”:


Until the invention of the internal combustion engine, the most prolific traveler in history was also the most unlikely. Born in 1786, James Holman was in many ways the quintessential world explorer: a dashing mix of discipline, recklessness, and accomplishment, a Knight of Windsor, Fellow of the Royal Society, and bestselling author. It was easy to forget that he was intermittently crippled, and permanently blind.

He journeyed alone. He entered each country not knowing a single word of the local language. He had only enough money to travel in native fashion, in public carriages and peasant carts, on horseback and on foot. Yet “he traversed the great globe itself more thoroughly than any other traveler that ever existed,” as one journalist of the time put it, “and surveyed its manifold parts as perfectly as, if not more than, the most intelligent and clear-sighted of his predecessors.”

In an era when the blind were routinely warehoused in asylums, Holman could be found studying medicine in Edinburgh, fighting the slave trade in Africa (where the Holman River was named in his honor), hunting rogue elephants in Ceylon, and surviving a frozen captivity in Siberia. He helped unlock the puzzle of Equatorial Guinea’s indigenous language, averting bloodshed in the process. In The Voyage of the Beagle, Charles Darwin cites him as an authority on the fauna of the Indian Ocean. In his commentary on the The Arabian Nights, Sir Richard Francis Burton (who spent years following in his footsteps) pays tribute to both the man and his fame by referring to him not by name, but simply as the Blind Traveller.

* * *

James Holman was justly hailed as “one of the greatest wonders of the world he so sagaciously explored.” But astounding as his exploits were, a further astonishment is how quickly he was forgotten. The public’s embrace, driven more by novelty than genuine respect, did not endure. Critics dismissed his literary and scientific ambitions as “something incongruous and approaching the absurd.” One bitter enemy, another professional adventurer whose expedition was eclipsed by Holman’s, leveled a charge that took root in public perception: his sightlessness made genuine insight impossible. He might have been in Zanzibar, but how could the Blind Traveler claim to know Zanzibar? He was rarely doubted—his firsthand facts were unassailably accurate—but he was increasingly ignored.

The fame diminished, and curdled into ridicule, but Holman didn’t slow down in the slightest. Impoverished, increasingly threadbare, and still in debilitating health, he kept to his solo travels, even as his works fell out of print and his new writings went unpublished. His few steadfast admirers lost track of him, presuming him dead in some distant corner of the globe. His true end came suddenly, in a scandalously unlikely corner of London, interrupting both his fervent work and plans for further voyages.

Holman dreamed that future generations might appreciate his life’s work, but they weren’t given the chance. His eclectic collection of artifacts was scattered and discarded, his manuscripts destroyed or lost. If he could be said to have a monument at it, it was a brief biographical sketch in the Encyclopedia Britannica, an entry that dwindled in subsequent enditions. By 1910, it was a single paragraph. By 1960, it had disappeared altogether.

(from A Sense of the World: How a Blind Man Became History’s Greatest Traveler, by Jason Roberts. all rights reserved) 


You can learn more about author Jason Roberts at his website.

At Amazon you can get an additional sample of the book at its Kindle page. When you get there, just  click and look inside.

Tuesday, May 1, 2012

TED Talk - Anna Deveare Smith



In English 1A today we talked about some good video resources that are available online. I have offered links to some of these resources here at English with McCabe; you'll find to the right such links to PBS television and Zocalo Public Square.  Another source mentioned (thank you Justin!): TED. What is TED?  It is, TED says, "a nonprofit devoted to Ideas Worth Spreading. It started out (in 1984) as a conference bringing together people from three worlds: Technology, Entertainment, Design."

You could do worse than spend an evening watching their many video lectures online. I haven't had a chance to watch the following, but I heard it is pretty good and might be worth showing to a class someday.  What do you think? Is Anna Deavere Smith: Four American Characters worth 23 minutes and 8 seconds of someone's time?

Do you have other favorites on TED?  Let us know.