On one of the best ways to learn new things in the 21st century.
Although it took me a good while to come around, I’m definitely a convert:
Twitter serves multiple purposes, including very quick and efficient
communication (even with folks we don’t know and who might well ignore or miss
an email) and following events or conversations we can’t otherwise watch or
attend. But it’s also exceptionally good at highlighting stories we might miss;
mostly contemporary ones, to be sure, but also and most compellingly scholarly,
cultural, and historical ones. To wit, here are three things I learned about from
just a few minutes reading my Twitter feed on this random day (which I won’t
divulge, so you don’t get too deep inside the belly of this blog-writing
beast):
1)
Pauli Murray was a civil rights
lawyer and the first African American female episcopal priest (thanks Shane Landrum!);
2)
These very interesting statistics
about gender and families in academia, and specifically among history
professors (thanks Vanessa Varin!);
3)
A nuanced and compelling take on disability and race
in the TV detective show Monk (thanks
Anne Jamison!).
It’s a brave new world out there—and for those of us still studying, which
is to say all of us, a very exciting one to boot. Crowd-sourced post this
weekend,
Ben
PS. So what are you still studying?
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