Wednesday, 11 November 2009

News in a political year

Today isn't the first time I have had the opportunity to go and visit NewsJunk, although it is the first time I was made aware that it wasn't just another errant weekend project of Dave Winer's, but instead something with apparent aspirations to supplant (or at least supplement) widely accepted political memetracker Memeorandum. But politics are in the air today, given that the Personal Democracy Forum is in town, and with that came the smell of opportunity for Dave's newest project. From his personal blog today:

I was tuned in to [Robert Scoble's] QikCast of his panel at PDF in NY, and heard him say that Memeorandum was the fastest way to get breaking political news just like Techmeme in the tech blogosphere. I posted a twit, disagreeing, I don't think Memeorandum is good at fast-breaking news, it has a 24-hour cycle, and top stories tend to stick there for the full cycle, keeping other less phenomenal stories that we see quickly in NewsJunk from showing up there at all.

Sometimes they show up 24 hours after they happen! That's just not good enough for news in a political year. That's why we started NewsJunk - to scratch the itch that Nicco and I (and many others) had. We tried to imagine the news system that Chuck Todd deserved, or Joe Trippi, David Axelrod, Josh Marshall or even Barack Obama himself. (McCain, only being "aware" of the Internet is not in a position to use it).

I can't fault him on that. He saw the opportunity, and he took it (even if writing about how he hoodwinked one of his buddies after the fact is a little bit … poor form?). I decided to give the site another look. The last time I took a look, it seemed to be completely dominated by nothing but left wing stories, with story descriptions that could only be described as narrowly opinionated. In my initial visit to the site, it was clear to me that Dave Winer's clear favoritism for Barack Obama and dislike for Hillary or anything representing an alternative viewpoint played heavy in the site's selection of news stories.

The role of the state in Rome's grain trade

L. Casson, The role of the state in Rome's grain trade p22. Musti, Il commercio degli schiavi e del grano: Il caso di Puteoli p204-205, N. Morley, Metropolis and Hinterland; The city of Rome and the Italian economy 200 B.C. - A.D. 200 p88. 35 N. Purcell, Wine and wealth in ancient Rome p5. 36 Jongman, consumption p605, N. Purcell, Wine and Wealth p14. 37 Cato, De Agricultura p167. 38 Jongman, Het Romeins imperialisme en de verstedelijking van Italië p51. 39 Jongman, Romeins imperialisme p51.

hectoliter per jaar werd gedronken.40 Met 2000 liter per hectare is dat 400.000 hectare ofwel 4000 km². Dat zou al vier procent van het hele areaal zijn in Italië. Loubère schrijft dat de oogst rond 1870 zo'n 2300 liter per hectare bedroeg. 41 De kwalitatief mindere wijnen bestonden slechts voor een kleiner gedeelte uit de daadwerkelijke druif. Volgens Cato gebruikte men (voor een veel voorkomende soort, dus niet elitaire wijn) 10 qaudrantali (260 liter) most, dit is het sap van de druiven vermengd met suiker. 2 quadrantali van sterke azijn, 2 gekookte wijn en 50 quadrantali water. Daaruit blijkt dat slechts 18% uit pure oogst bestond.42 In Campanië blijkt dat de akkers op de vlakte graan produceerden en in de heuvels wijn en olijven, het sterftecijfer op de vlakte lag hoger. Het sterftecijfer kan gezien worden als de graadmeter voor welvaart.

Ook bleken de wijnboeren veelal vrije boeren te zijn en hadden de graanboeren een feodaal karakter.43 Een reden hiervoor is dat het drie jaar duurt voordat een wijnrank druiven gaat geven. Een kleine boer heeft de middelen niet om drie jaar te wachten op zijn eerste productie. Degene die een wijngaard wilde beginnen moest dus al een bepaalde welvaart bezitten of andere middelen van inkomsten tijdens die eerste drie jaren. Ik ga mij in dit betoog verder niet bezig houden met de status van de boer. Want een vrije boer of een boer die pacht dient te betalen, of zelfs een slaaf, zij zullen gelijk produceren. Erdkamp merkt op dat het risico van de landeigenaar met wijnranken laag was. De landeigenaar verkocht de druiven als ze nog aan de rank zaten en degene die het gekocht had droeg zorg voor de oogst en verwerking. Hierdoor had de landeigenaar nog minder arbeidsuren nodig op zijn land, wat het aantrekkelijker maakte om over te stappen op druiven in plaats van graan.44 'by buying grapes on the vine the negotiatores45 gambled on the size and quality of the harvest, and on the state of the market when the wine was ready'.

Tuesday, 10 November 2009

The first novel I ever read

"Whose ponderous grate and massy bar Had oft rolled back the tide of war," just as, at Foulshiels, on Yarrow, we beheld the very roofless cottage whence Mungo Park went forth to trace the waters of the Niger, and at Oakwood the tower of the Wizard Michael Scott.

Probably the first I ever read was read at Elgin, and the story was Probably the first novel I ever read was read at Elgin, and the story was "Jane Eyre." This tale was a creepy one for a boy of nine, and Rochester was a mystery, St. John a bore. But the lonely little girl in her despair, when something came into the room, and her days of starvation at school, and the terrible first Mrs. Rochester, were not to be forgotten. They abide in one's recollection with a Red Indian's ghost, who carried a rusty ruined gun, and whose acquaintance was made at the same time.

I fancy I was rather an industrious little boy, and that I had minded my lessons, and satisfied my teachers--I know I was reading Pinnock's "History of Rome" for pleasure--till "the wicked day of destiny" came, and I felt a "call," and underwent a process which may be described as the opposite of "conversion." The "call" came from Dickens. "Pickwick" was brought into the house. From that hour it was all over, for five or six years, with anything like industry and lesson-books. I read "Pickwick" in convulsions of mirth. I dropped Pinnock's "Rome" for good. I neglected everything printed in Latin, in fact everything that one was understood to prepare for one's classes in the school whither I was now sent, in Edinburgh.

Wednesday, 4 November 2009

French Calion Bank Polemic

On the other hand, the Housing Minister denied any relation to the deal. He mentioned that the Transport Minister Mohammed Mansour approved the Calion deal before holding the Cabinet post. The Minister of Housing and Construction, Ahmad Al Magharbi declared that the measures taken in selling Alexandria shares in the Egyptian-American Bank agreed with the state system, as it came under the Central Bank supervision.

The Minister of Housing, in an interview with the parliamentary editors, yesterday, said that the Minister of Transport Mohammed Mansour and he were mistakenly included in this deal. The Minister, in response to a question raised by Al Ahram's correspondent, Mahmoud Al Minawi, said that Mansour was not yet a minister when he approved the French Calion Bank deal and that Al Mansour- Al Maghrabi company was formed in Dec. 28th last year. He believed that Al Maghrabi did not carry out any trade activity since he held the cabinet post; meaning that he did not violate article 155 in the constitution. He confirmed he still had a share of 5% in the above-mentioned company and that he would not sell it .

Some of the People's Assembly members including Mostafa Bakri and Jamal Zahran raised the topic saying that selling Alexandria Bank's share in the Egyptian American Bank was related to special interests of the two ministers; Ahmad Al Maghrabi and Mohammed Mansour who had 25% in Calion Bank. The central Bank governor, Farouk Al Okda, believed that much ado was raised over the deal amid a shortage of the full facts. He added that the selling operation was not carried out till now, it was just a promise. Mostafa Bakri said there was probably a constitutional violation concerning wasting the public money . He indicated that the value of one share in Alexandria Bank reached, before the Greater Barium 56 pounds, yet, it was agreed to be sold at 45 pounds only !!

Such a deal raised a polemic over the government's tendency to sell the successful private banks that achieved profits in addition to its shares in banks and joint vebtures amid its plan to reform the Banking System. Yet, it left the economically-weak banks that had its losses and were unable to either locally or internationally among the foreign and ign and the big private banks. Some feared that these measures were done for the interest of the foreign banks on the expense of the Egyptian ones.

Tuesday, 3 November 2009

Ethnographic analogy

Ethnographic analogy remains an important research tool because identifying the actual evidence of land use in archaeological record is a very difficult task considering the geomorphology of the Middle Nile Valley. Ancient fields, palm groves and animal pastures have never been successfuly identified by means of archaeological fieldwork and/or remote sensing. We only have the material remains such as the qaduz vessels, various agricultural tools and implements, as well as plant remains and animal bones, although in the Letti area we have found at least one emplacement of a medieval saqyia. Several Old Nubian texts from Qasr Ibrim specifically refer to the land deeds and sales of land and frequently mention the saqiyas (Brown 1991). Otherwise we have little knowledge about the land use in the period under consideration. Future archaeological investigations must clearly find a way to address these problems, perhaps by means of remote sensing, searching the archives (see e.g. Grzymski and Anderson 2001:5-6) and studying the early travellers reports.

Another interesting area of investigation would be the industrial landscape. In terms of technological studies only the Nubian pottery production and Meroitic iron making were adequately studied. An even more important issue, however, is not the technology per se, but how factors other than agricultural production, affected the rise and fall of certain sites and regions. The site catchment analysis is hardly adequate as an explanatory tool for the non-agricultural situation in the non-market economy of an early agrarian society. Despite the seeming corellation between the site distribution patterns and the soil one should seriously consider the possibility of non-agricultural origins of settlements and political centres in Nubia.

the saqiya problem

A good example would be the saqiya problem. It is universally agreed that the introduction of saqiya had tremendous impact on the agriculture of Nubia. Clearly, the expansion of arable land and the resulting increase of food production must have had a dramatic impact on the economic and social life. However, if the saqyia was introduced only at the very end of the Meroitic period as has been recently suggested by Edwards (1996:80-81), then we have a problem of perception versus reality. The Post-Meroitic period is usually considered to have been a period of social, cultural and economic decline, yet the spread of the saqiya would be expected to result in the increased prosperity.

Perhaps our perception is incorrect and it was indeed during the Post-Meroitic rather than Meroitc period that a truly prosperous agrarian (and pastoral?) society developed culminating later on in the Classic Christian period? Yet, intuitively, and despite the presence of rich royal burials in Ballana and Qustul, and the obtrusive remains of the millions of tumuli in Central Sudan (Lenoble 1992:90-91) we tend to see the Meroitic civilization as representing the peak of cultural and economic development in ancient Nubia. Indeed, Trigger stated so explicitly by suggesting the highest population numbers in Lower Nubia during that period (60,000 inhabitants in the Ptolemaic/Roman/Meroitic Nubia vs. 44,000 during the Post-Meroitic and 50, 000 during the Christian Period, Trigger 1965:160).

Monday, 2 November 2009

Singapore Cultural Industries

My second aim in this paper is to examine the reception of and attempts to negotiate (and at times, contest) these policies by "cultural practitioners" themselves. In so doing, I will illustrate how there is a severe disjuncture between the state's policies and the intents of practitioners, which may be appropriately cast as a conflict between social and cultural development priorities as envisaged by the practitioners as opposed to economic development priorities as embodied in the state's cultural economic policies.

My analyses in this paper are motivated as much by a perceived lacuna in the academic literature as a commitment to policy analysis. Much of the literature on cultural policies, particularly cultural economic policies and the regeneration of cities, has focused on Western countries, mainly in the U.S. and Europe, and more recently, the U.K. and Australia (Frith, 1991; Watson, 1991; Bassett, 1993; Bianchini, 1993a; Scott, 1997; Williams, 1997). Most of the work examines the historical development of cultural policy, often highlighting early tendencies to neglect the economic potential of the arts and subsequent discovery and appropriation as a response to global capital restructuring. Some recent works have begun to explore the interconnections between capitalist production processes and the cultural content of outputs, and how this is reflected in the growth and development of particular places (Scott, 1997; Waterman, 1998).

At a more micro-level of analysis, others have examined specific aspects of cultural industries, such as the contribution of the cultural industries sector to employment and trade (Pratt, 1997a; 1997b), and economic organisation of particular cultural industries (for example, Sadler, 1997, on the music industry). Such analyses have been kept distinct from examinations of cultural policies from the perspective of socio-cultural and political agendas. Where such research has been done, particularly in non-Western, developing country contexts, the tendency has been to focus on questions of cultural imperialism: addressing questions about whether there is in fact cultural imperialism at work, and attempts by states through policy and various actions to halt or at least ameliorate such impacts (see, for example, Wallis and Malm, 1984; and Shuker, 1994). Little work has been done which focuses on the intersection between cultural economic policies and those cultural policies which bear socio-cultural and political agendas. In the context of Singapore, no systematic attention has been given to analysis of cultural policies (see, however, Koh, 1989). Particularly given Singapore's penchant towards developmentalism (see below) and its relatively nascent stage in the construction of nationhood, this issue bears scrutiny.

Odin that Gylfe

Where the land was ploughed there is now a lake called Logrin. Skjold, Odin's son, got this land, and married Gefion. And when Gefion informed Odin that Gylfe possessed a good land, Odin went thither, and Gylfe, being unable to make resistance, he too was a wise man skilled in witchcraft and sorcery, a peaceful compact was made, according to which Odin acquired a vast territory around Logrin; and in Sigtuna he established a great temple, where sacrifices henceforth were offered according to the custom of the Asas.

To his priests he gave dwellings-Noatun to Njord, Upsala to Frey, Himminbjorg to Heimdal, Thrudvang to Thor, Breidablik to Balder, Many new sports to the North with Odin, and he and the taught them to the Among other things, he taught them poetry and runes. Odin himself always talked in measured rhymes.

Besides, he was a most excellent sorcerer. He could change shape, make his foes in a conflict blind and deaf; he was a wizard, and could wake the dead. He owned the ship Skidbladner, which could be folded as a napkin. He had two ravens, which he had taught to speak, and they brought him tidings from all lands. He knew where all treasures were hid in the earth, and could call them forth with the aid of magic songs.

Among the customs he introduced in the North were cremation of the dead, the raising of mounds in memory of great men, the erection of bauta-stones in commemoration of others; and he introduced the three great sacrificial feasts-for a good year, for good crops, and for victory. Odin died in Svithiod. When he perceived the approach of death, he suffered himself to be marked with the point of a spear, and declared that he was going to Gudheim to visit his friends and receive all fallen in battle. This the Swedes believed. They have since worshipped him in the belief that he had an eternal life in the ancient Asgard, and they thought he revealed himself to them before great battles took place. On Svea's throne he was followed by Njord, the progenitor of the race of Ynglings. Thus Heimskringla. We now pass to the Younger Edda,* which in its Foreword gives us in the style of that time a general survey of history and religion.

Japanese linguistic variation

The Japanese language, like all languages, has a wide range of linguistic variation. Differing geographical dialects ranging from the various Ryukyuan dialects of Okinawa to the south to the Tohoku dialects in northern Honshu, differing social dialects such as the Yamanote and Shitamachi varieties in Tokyo, gendered language, casual, polite and honorific language, as well as young people's colloquial usage enrich the Japanese language.

During my time living in Japan (in eastern Fukuoka, in the northeastern area of the southern island of Kyushu) from 1997 through 2002, I was exposed to a great deal of linguistic variation. In the junior high school in which I taught, I could hear one of the female teachers use incredibly honorific and elegant language, while I could hear one of the male teachers using forms such as shashi, a local dialectal form (which, in my communications with people from other areas of Japan, I found to not be used outside of this particular area) meaning roughly "shut up." I could hear my students use forms such as chau, a Kansai variant of the standard chigau 'to be wrong, different,' a form that is not indigenous to the area, but had gained popularity due to Kansai (Osaka) based television comedy shows such as "Downtown" and "99." I could drive 30 minutes to the west and hear different forms from those used in the town that I lived; for example, in Eastern Fukuoka, ke (for standard kara 'since, because') is used, while in the central area of Fukuoka prefecture, the speakers often use ki.

Sunday, 1 November 2009

the local archaeological museum

In 2006 the archaeological excavation of hadrianoupolis in south-western paphlagonia was inaugurated by a team from dokuz eylül university, izmir, under the direction of dr ergün lafli. As a result of our 2005 surveys of the area, it had been confirmed that hadrianoupolis was indeed coincident with modern eskipazar, with finds dating from the 1st century bc to the 8th century ad. It also was determined that the core of the ancient city extended as far as the modern village of budaklar and its surrounding districts of haci ahmetler, çayli and eleler, along the eskipazar-mengen highway for 8 km east-west and 3 km north-south.

In 2003 the local archaeological museum of eregli had already undertaken a small-scale salvage excavation at the main church of hadrianoupolis, known as 'early byzantine church b', situated in the centre of the ancient city. The field surveys in 2005 identified the remains of at least 14 buildings at the site. Among them are two bath buildings of the late roman period, two early byzantine churches, a fortified structure of the byzantine period, a possible theatre, a vaulted building, a domed building and some domestic buildings with mosaic floors. In 2006 trenches were opened to investigate two of the best preserved of these buildings: bath building a and early byzantine church a. In 2007 'bath a', 'bath b', a late roman villa, an apsidal early byzantine building, as well as two roman monumental rock-cut graves were excavated. The 2008 and 2009 seasons concentrated on the restoration of these surface finds.

In general, these six campaigns have established that hadrianoupolis was a fortified regional centre during the late roman and early byzantine period (5th-7th centuries), when it can easily be defined as a polis with civic buildings and a fairly large urban population, as well as an extensive rural agrarian population. Most of the visible surface remains belong to this period. Roman and earlier remains seem to consist almost exclusively of inscriptions, rock-cut graves, some cultic monuments and a small amount of pottery (including sigillata), but not civic buildings. It seems that the city was abandoned during the 8th century. It also seems to be much more intact than pompeioupolis. Of course, there is nothing left of gangra, so hadrianoupolis is really the only large settlement of inland paphlagonia that can be excavated.

Trade relations between the maeotian tribes of the kuban region

Based on amphorae material, three distinct periods have been identified in trade relations between the maeotian tribes of the kuban region and the ancient greek world. The first (end of the 7th-5th century bc) was a time of gradual growth of trade. Maeotian tribes obtained wine of clazomenae, chios, lesbos, thasos, mende, the north aegean centres.

in the second period, the 4th century bc, graeco-maeotion trade bloomed. ?He rapid growth in trade at the beginning of the century was connected with the rise of the spartocids, the supremacy of panticapaeum, and the activation of political and trade relations between the cimmerian bosporus and athens. The volume and variety of wine imports reached a maximum in the second and third quarter of the 4th century bc, at the same time as maeotian grain exports peaked. Mende was the leading wine exporter to the kuban in the first and second quarters of the 4th century. An unknown mediterranean centre supplanted it in the third quarter of the 4th century, and kos and cnidus took the leading positions in the last quarter.

the third period was a time of rapid contraction in trade, starting in the first quarter of the 3rd century bc, connected with economic and political changes after the siraces (one of the sarmatian nomadic tribes) established supremacy in the kuban, and at its most severe in the first half of the 1st century bc. Thus, not only was the kuban region involved in graeco-barbarian trade, it was also one of the important agricultural regions of the ancient world in the 4th century ?c.