Will Pooley

503 Followers
331 Following
10 Posts

do you like Tarot? do you like #openaccess history?

have i got the mildly interesting new research article for you!

https://academic.oup.com/fh/advance-article/doi/10.1093/fh/crad043/7310795

(image courtesy BNF https://gallica.bnf.fr/ark:/12148/btv1b53139578w)

Paper tools for broken hearts: fortune-telling with cards in France, c. 1803–1937

Abstract. Fortune-telling using cards became increasingly popular in France in the late eighteenth century. But the history of cards as tools for divination has

OUP Academic
joking
twitter is empty and all the bots are here!

How magicians' clients in 19th century France learned to be 'good victims' for fraud prosecutions.

https://williamgpooley.wordpress.com/2022/11/17/good-victims/

Because writing for the blog *always* feels easier than finishing the drafts I have overdue.

Good Victims

Will Pooley
Another design consideration re: Mastodon is that it works well for ephemeral asynchronous communications, but for many reasons should not be counted on as an archival resource. Media attachments are periodically purged and may not be available after a week, or a month, etc. While some servers may try to preserve content forever, this may be costly and unsustainable. Creators, researchers should treat this as an ephemeral resource and make provisions for self-archiving anything important.

#newbies like myself might find this Mastodon for beginners guide useful, from the people at #hcommons - I did, and am now wondering whether I should change servers. #histodons

https://hcommons.org/docs/mastodon-quick-start-guide-for-humanities-scholars/

Mastodon Quick Start Guide for Humanities Scholars – Humanities Commons

@daphnaorenm time to bring back the concept of ‘secondary orality’? (Shudder)
@natalie thanks! This is good to learn. I think this reply is unlisted rather than public, right?
@GuyLongworth and two years between instalments ???!
Anyway, if Twitter does really go extinct, we should all get together and have a PROPER wake, with eulogies that also reflect on what a terrible place it was as well as what a brilliant place.