July 24, 2008

Vampires

Video break

by Douglas Muir

Okay, someweird stuff has come out of Russia. Weird stuff comes out of everywhere, no biggy.
But this is… really weird.
If any Russian readers can give some context to this, I’d be fascinated.

March 31, 2008

History

Totally random historical post: Things to like about Marshal Antonescu

by Douglas Muir

I was going to do a rather obnoxious post about the Macedonian name issue, but decided not to. You can see a draft of it in the comments section over here.
Meanwhile, here’s an idea I’ve sometimes toyed with: a series of posts on the leaders of small European countries during the Second World War. [...]

July 8, 2007

France

Chris Walker is Ignorant

by Alex Harrowell

If you want to lecture the French on “economic reform”, it pays to have some knowledge of French economic history. If you insist on doing so despite knowing nothing, “Big Mouth Strikes Again” is not a good headline. Of course, it could be some downtrodden sub-editor’s revenge.
Anyway, Chris Walker writes in today’s Independent that Nicolas [...]

July 1, 2007

Geography

Web applications and geopolitics

by Alex Harrowell

I was recently fiddling with the German Federal Railways’ on-line European timetables, when I noticed something very strange. They have the best cross-European timetable, no doubt about it, but some odd things happen if you’re heading too far east. For example, when I asked it for a route from Paris to Tallinn, everything went a [...]

April 29, 2007

The European Union

Bloggers for Bronislaw

by Alex Harrowell

It is simply intolerable that a EU member state’s government should try to dismiss an MEP elected by the people. I think everyone can agree on that, right? It’s for the public to decide who should represent them. It’s for the member states as a whole to decide on the overall organisation of the EU. [...]

April 20, 2007

France

Une certaine idée de la France ?

by Tobias Schwarz

It’s interesting that Emmanuel’s remarks about biased statistics about the French economy in Anglophone publications led to some comments trying to asses the extent to which France is perceived as “the other”, at least as far as “the West” is concerned. There have always been claims about a natural rivalry of the two main “universalist” [...]

April 17, 2007

Europe and the world

The Jewish-European heritage

by Tobias Schwarz

On the day following Israel’s national holocaust memorial day, writing in Haaretz, Fania Oz-Salzberger reminds both Israelis and Europeans that, for centuries, Jewish history has been an enriching element of European history. Concerned about the effect of class trips of “roudy groups” of Israeli teenagers to Auschwitz, she recommends trips to Spain instead -
Take the [...]

March 10, 2007

Vampires

Tramp the Dirt Down

by Alex Harrowell

Somebody is worried that Slobodan Milosevic might escape from death. And so, they dug up his corpse and drove a stake through his heart.
Seriously. They really did it.
One might also want to read this.

February 11, 2007

Culture

The Orientalist by Tom Reiss

by Doug Merrill

Ali and Nino, the closest thing that modern Azerbaijan has to a national novel, was first published in German in 1937, sold in various translations, hit US bestseller lists in the early 1970s and bears the name Kurban Said as its author.
But the question of the author’s identity had never been resolved. All anyone agreed [...]

January 19, 2007

Economics and demography

Sometimes the stereotypes are right

by Alex Harrowell

It’s usually a charmingly naive belief that wars are the fault of leaders, and if the Ordinary People could choose we’d all live in peace. It doesn’t take long, considering some parts of the blogosphere, your local bar, the historical record and such, to realise this is absurdly simplistic. For one thing, there are always [...]

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