10 Excellent Essays About Words

Every Humanities student worth his salt should read these. 

tetw:

A Tetw reading list

How to Talk About Books You Haven’t Read by Pierre Bayard - Not reading is our main way of relating to most literature, find out how to make the most of your ignorance.

Tense Present by David Foster Wallace - In one of his finest essays, DFW reviews a dictionary of English usage, thereby tackling everything from democracy and free will to racism in academia.

The Rise of the Essay by Zadie Smith - Why do novelists write essays? And what excatly is an essay these days?

Words by Tony Judt - One of the very best essayists refelcts on his relationship with words.

The Birth of ‘The New Journalism’ by Tom Wolfe - Who put the ‘I’ in journalism? Tom Wolfe seems to think it was him and his friends.

Own Your Own Words by Steven Johnson - The ubiquity of Google has made it easy to gain control of a word or phrase, what effect is this new power having?

A Linguistic Big Bang by Lawrence Osborne - “For the first time in history, scholars are witnessing the birth of a language, a complex sign system being created by deaf children in Nicaragua.”

Cyber-Neologoliferation by James Gleick - A guided tour through the strange world of the lexicographer.

The Language of the Future by Henry Hitchings - A fascinating look at how English is mutating as it becomes the world’s lingua franca.

Printed Words, Computers, and Democratic Societies by Irving Louis Horowitz - This essay from 1983 looks forward to the advent home copmuting and the “videotext revolution”.

(Source: invisiblestories)

invisiblestories:

The heavens, pt. 5: the solar system

invisiblestories:

The heavens, pt. 5: the solar system

278. Vienna, 1913. (by tom gauld)

278. Vienna, 1913. (by tom gauld)

(Source: jesssiica)

Astronomical Clock - Prague: The astronomical dial has a background that represents the standing Earth and sky, and surrounding it operate four main moving components: the zodiacal ring, an outer rotating ring, an icon representing the Sun, and an icon representing the Moon.

Astronomical Clock - Prague: The astronomical dial has a background that represents the standing Earth and sky, and surrounding it operate four main moving components: the zodiacal ring, an outer rotating ring, an icon representing the Sun, and an icon representing the Moon.

The Ptolemaic Universe (1542)
(via Luminarium Encyclopedia: Medieval Cosmology and Worldview)

The Ptolemaic Universe (1542)

(via Luminarium Encyclopedia: Medieval Cosmology and Worldview)

But let’s not talk of old things that couldn’t be helped.
allthingseurope:

Château de Versailles, France
(by Panoramas)

allthingseurope:

Château de Versailles, France

(by Panoramas)

SINGAPORE: Eight English teachers have been awarded the Inspiring Teacher of English Award this year. Four of the award winners were teachers from primary schools and four were from secondary schools.