Marie Curie's experimental notebook - which after almost a hundred years, is still radioactive. Wellcome Library. pic.twitter.com/XvxlFDi93A
— ✍ Bibliophilia (@Libroantiguo) August 3, 2014
Marie Curie's experimental notebook - which after almost a hundred years, is still radioactive. Wellcome Library. pic.twitter.com/XvxlFDi93A
— ✍ Bibliophilia (@Libroantiguo) August 3, 2014
Nelson Mandela born today 1918--here a handwritten draft page of his memoirs: #MandelaCentre pic.twitter.com/UKR0KoMuIo
— Michael Beschloss (@BeschlossDC) July 19, 2014
At the Paris Review Sadie Stein recalls the postcards she sent as a teenager and writes
Now, as a grownup on vacation, I’m sitting here with a pile of postcards in front of me, wondering what to do about it. What, after all, is a postcard? In the age of e-mail and Instagram and Twitter, it’s a self-conscious anachronism. When you read an old postcard, their messages—in that spindly, legible, Palmer-script hand—are often strikingly banal. People really do say “wish you were here,” without embarrassment, and talk about the weather. With traditional postcards, the thought is what counts; these were, by and large, generic images bearing the most impersonal of greetings.
I travel only rarely now and am much more likely to generate greetings with Postagram when I do, but I always ask friends and acquaintances to send postcards when they do, and I keep them posted throughout my house.
MT @robert_stagg: Jane Austen's writing desk: compact purposeful slightly splintery, like her novels pic.twitter.com/ecS95hLFON @JaneAustenHouse
— Humanities Division (@OxHumanities) July 2, 2014