Isn’t that what ‘people-centred research environment’ is supposed to be all about?
@robertfoley
Reader in Defence Studies, King's College London, at the Joint Services Command & Staff College. Sometime writer on warfare and strategic thought, particularly Germany in the First World War. Occasional runner of longish distances. Views my own.
Isn’t that what ‘people-centred research environment’ is supposed to be all about?
Yes! Like all good academic texts, it is also useful for propping up wobbly tables or keeping doors open.
Just this morning I cited this on Rupprecht’s flight from Belgium!
Wrote up some thoughts on the current war with Iran. You can't have a strategy if you don't even have a policy.
open.substack.com/pub/bafriedm...
Great to speak to the World War I podcast about Framing the FWW, check it out here: podcasts.apple.com/gb/podcast/f... @draefox.bsky.social @mpmfinch.bsky.social @univpressofkansas.bsky.social
I tell all my students that writing is about making choices. The act of writing forces you to understand and acknowledge those choices.
Funnily, in American English the term is ‘rappelling,’ borrowed from French.
My review of Odd Arne Westad’s The Coming Storm, out in @thespectator1828.bsky.social today:
spectator.com/article/lear...
I’d be tempted to go with Sanborn’s spelling unless you hear from someone with more detailed knowledge.
I’ve always just used ‘Radko Dmitriev’ but I’m a German historian. Having just looked at one of Josh Sanborn’s (a Russian historian) books, he uses R. Radko Dmitriev.
He was the commander of the Russian 3rd Army in 1915 that was destroyed in the Gorlice-Tarnow campaign. I believe he was originally from Bulgaria. I’ve seen his name spelled both ways.
Book#5. Insightful work on the origins and execution of Verdun. A mix of intellectual history and military history, this is probably the best work available on why the Germans fought the Battle of Verdun. Highly recommend for anyone with a deep interest in the campaign. @robertfoley.bsky.social
Thank you! I’m pleased that you enjoyed it.
Of course! At least you didn’t see the elephant! I’m still going to tell everyone that ‘saw a hedgehog at noon’ means a really bad tutorial if you hear it at Oxford.
Is ‘saw the hedgehog at noon’ Oxford slang for some particularly taxing academic task?🤣
Unlike most apps these days, Scrivener (@scrivenerapp.bsky.social) does not use AI in any way.
I've been a happy user of Scrivener for 15+ years. And boy, am I happy about that! Thank you, Scrivener!
tinyurl.com/2mh99w3y
I m advertising a PhD position as part of our ERC project BLOCKADE. The PhD cand. should focus on myth/narratives of the hunger blockade in Germany, Austria in the era of the World Wars. 4 years of funding, wonderful team, amazing city (evidence attached)! Pls share! www.hsozkult.de/opportunity/...
Tim Cook CM
1971 – 2025
A great loss to the military history community worldwide. Thoughts and aroha with his family in Canada. www.thestar.com/news/canada/...
Wow. Harvard nuking its PhD programs
- Science PhD admissions reduced by more than 75%
- Arts & Humanities reduced by about 60%
- Social Sciences by 50–70%
- History by 60%
- Biology by 75%
- The German department will lose all PhD seats
- Sociology from six PhD students to zero
This is the way.
"Students, and increasingly all of us, risk becoming editors of what has already been said, where the future is built only from recycled fragments of yesterday’s data."
theconversation.com/how-generati...
“This morning, Germany is one nation again.”
This is how BBC Breakfast News reported on German reunification, 35 years ago today.
We are thrilled to announce that our NEW Large Language Model will be released on 11.18.25.
Great news!
JSTOR now have a free account with an Independent Researcher category. You can access 100 documents per month
www.jstor.org/action/showL...
Academics are under unrelenting pressure to accept the narrative of the inevitability of #generativeAI & to embrace it in teaching & learning. We resist - because it is ecologically destructive, ethically corrupt, & because it undermines the thinking abilities that make us both human & intelligent.
This anon piece is as good as people are saying, but I'll summarise here for those of you interested in Higher Education but with no time:
*Universities are not in the public sector
*Govts are a minority funder, and matter less and less. (1/4)
profserious.substack.com/p/understand...
Decades of mechanistic talk about university degrees as if they were bundles of 'skills' and 'prep' are about to be proved completely wrong (obviously). Want to get a real boost? Do History or English.
‘It was the best of times, it was the worst of times, it was the age of wisdom, it was the age of foolishness…’ (Couldn’t resist! 😉)
Sorry to hear that Gary. I haven’t seen it but he deserved a proper obituary.
Indeed. Unfortunately, we can say that about so many topics these days!