Mary Beard writes "A Don's Life" reporting on both the modern and the ancient world. Subscribe to a feed of this Times Online blog at http://timesonline.typepad.com/dons_life/rss.xml
How do you match the Chinese? As the Olympic Games draw to a close, presumably the London 2012 organisers get even more jittery about how they can even start to match the Beijing extravaganza, on half the money.
There are some obvious tactics. First, they could go even further down the Beijing road. Why stop at voice-overs and fake fireworks? It would be much more economical to have the whole opening ceremony done digitally – and distributed to anyone who wanted to watch on a CD. No athletes need ever march into the stadium. It needn’t even be finished.
Nor should we bother too much about the spectators. China has had enough trouble bussing them in, so we could just build an Olympic sports television studio, with carefully positioned cameras, but no human on-lookers, except a few cheer-leaders.
Or alternatively make a virtue out of necessity and scale the whole opening extravaganza down a notch or ten. Perhaps just the Queen, the athletes and some Girl Guides and Boy Scouts… and NO fireworks.
For the future, though, the answer is obvious. The games should go permanently back to Olympia (in Greece, that is).
Continue reading "Give the Olympics back to Greece" »
Before I went on Any Questions last week I did a good deal of homework on Georgia etc. The one thing that was quickly very clear was that there were no ‘goodies’ in this conflict.
It’s certainly hard to condone the continuing Russian aggression. But I cant understand how quickly commenters have forgotten that it was Mr Saakashvili who struck the first formal blow. This doesn’t necessarily mean that he is solely culpable (there is such a thing as provocation), but the instant ‘whiting out’ of the Georgian first strike seems not all that different from the old ‘Turkish invasion of Cyprus’ story. OK, again the rights and wrongs are tricky, but it’s perverse to forget that the prompt to that invasion was a Greek-backed attempted coup.
In Georgia’s case a lot more gets swept under the carpet. For a start, it is a pretty disappointing beacon of democracy for the West to support: no independent judiciary, some recent strategic closing of non-government media, and – so far as I can tell – a good number of opposition leaders in prison (deservedly or not, I dont know).
And there is a good deal of sabre rattling from the American Right. Not just Cheney. McCain’s foreign policy advisor was until recently a paid lobbyist for Georgia. Surely that makes a difference. Pointing this out, tends to get you labelled as ‘anti-American’ – as if being opposed to right wing Republicans was the same as being opposed to America. (It seems, if you believe the report in the Sunday Times that even Condoleeza Rice was trying – unsuccessfully – to put the brake on Saakashvili.)
The bottom line is that the vast majority of us are quite ignorant about the Caucasus. I don’t know any Russian beyond the alphabet and I know no Georgian whatsoever, never mind Ossetian. It helps a bit that my husband does know Russian and has recently been to Georgia, and receives e-mail pleas and justifications from both sides. But, for the most part, like almost all of us, I'm dependent on very filtered news.
In any case for a classicist, as my fellow blogger pointed out when we were discussing it last week, Georgia signals one thing above all.
Continue reading "Georgia, Russia -- and the Golden Fleece" »
I am off to Berkeley next week, so I’m catching up a bit on all those lingering things I haven’t quite finished -- in addition to the lectures, that is. And in addition to doing Any Questions on Friday night. (You can Listen Again here – and tell me what you think, please.)
Anyway, the controversy of the moment is one of those extended warranties, which we took out about a year ago on the son’s iPod, when we bought it from John Lewis (against whom, let me say, I have no grudge at all). Everyone said that iPods were always going wrong so, unlike for fridges or televisions. So the three year insurance from Landmark Insurers (who now seem to be calling themselves AIG) seemed a good idea.
Indeed the blasted thing did go wrong. So a month ago we had it collected for mending. It should take, the insurers said, about 5 days. Sounded fine. But a week or so ago we realised that no mended iPod had been returned. So we rang again to find out what was going on.
Don’t get your hopes up.
Continue reading "Is it worth insuring your iPod?" »
I am one of those inverted patriots who takes considerable comfort in Team GB doing as usual (ie badly) at the Olympics. For me it’s a badge of honour that our precocious 14 year old and his partner managed to come last in the finals of the synchronised diving.
Diving in principle maybe OK -- though it’s dangerous enough even without any illegal substances (our 14-year-old’s partner has apparently had two operations already for retinal problems brought on by the diving). But what on earth is the point of synchronised diving?
And, of course, I smirk, when we discover that the fire-work foot-prints on the opening day were done by some version of CGI, or that the cute nine-year old was miming to a ‘less pretty’ girl’s voice (so much for communism’s commitment to feminism – if only), or that a good proportion of the eager spectators have been bus-ed in.
But were the ancient games much better? Were the ancient Greeks up-standing and honest sportsmen, honouring the gods rather than their own ambition?
Not really.
Even before the Roman empire and the emperor Nero came along (to win all the prizes), the Olympic Games were a hornet’s nest of corruption.
Continue reading "Were the ancient Olympics any better than the modern?" »
Let me finish the India story.
The main point of the journey, as I said, was to see the Taj Mahal – partly out of that vague “what you should see before you die” impetus, partly because there is a great new book by Giles Tillotson just about to come out in my Wonders of the World series, which had sparked my interest even more.
We got to Agra from Delhi when it was dark, booked to stay in the only hotel which has direct views of the Taj. If you’re coming all that way for such a short time you don’t want to miss a minute of the potential view . . though the truth was that it was mostly misty and/or dark while we were there (though see our best bedroom view on the left) .
Following all the advice, we then got up at 6.00 to see the building as the sun was coming up. Even on a grey-ish morning it was fantastic, and when we’d done the oohing and aahing, I read the family some pages of Tillotson on how the Taj had been fought over for centuries, how some of European critics had tried to claim a European ancestry for it (wasn’t it just too good for the Mughals to have done themselves?), and so on – up to Islamic-Hindu conflicts of more recent times.
It was in the imperial part of this story that Lord Curzon came in.
Continue reading "Lord Curzon and the Taj Mahal" »
I’m now full steam ahead on my Berkeley lectures about Roman laughter. And to be precise, off to spend the rest of Sunday in the library (thank heavens that our Faculty gives us access 24/7), for a side-splitting afternoon with some Roman jokes.
I’ve already given you some choice examples. But just for laugh, here’s another favourite, from the collection known as the Philogelos (or “Laughter-lover”):
A man goes to get his hair cut by a talkative barber. “How would you like your hair done,” asks the barber. “In silence,” replies the man.
Not bad?
Anyway a number of people have emailed me to find out a bit more about my work on this. So at the risk of vulgar self-advertising, I’m giving a link to quite a long interview I did on this for the New York Review of Books. Click here.
Some new Cambridge research has suggested that support for women’s equality in the workplace could be on the slide. This is not the usual sort of working mother scare story (“Recent research from the University of Poppleton suggests that babies who are not in close contact with their mothers for 23 hours out of 24 are likely to have lower IQs/ be prone to childhood cancer/will turn to crime . . . .<fill in your own nightmare>”). This is work on social attitudes. There is, as the research leader puts it, "mounting concern" amongst people at large that women who work full-time do so to the detriment of family life – and of themselves.
Surprise, surprise, I found myself thinking. As usual, with social reforms, you cant do it on the cheap. The solution isn’t to encourage mothers back to the kitchen. If you really think women have a right to the same career opportunities as men, and to expect promotion on the same terms, then you need to put money into it – and into the childcare provision and other forms of support that can make it possible.
It’s pricey. But so what? The women don’t get themselves pregnant, do they? Why should the impregnators get off scot-free?
Continue reading "What working mothers need" »
It’s time to confess that I’ve just been to India for the weekend – Friday to Monday. A mad enterprise in a way, but we (a) needed a break, (b) didn’t have time for more than a couple of days and (c) wanted to see the Taj Mahal. OK, it left rather a large carbon footprint, but no larger than if I had gone for a fortnight (as I told my conscience).
One tip for anyone thinking of following suit. Don’t try to do it cheap. If you want to cram a lot into a very short time, you have to pay what you would have paid for two weeks. You want everything to be comfortable and to work smoothly… you cant risk any of your three nights being hot and sleepless. Though there is one bizarre consequence of doing the trip upmarket -- you go to a very hot country and spend all your time being slightly cold, such is the over-efficiency of the air-conditioning (there is the carbon footprint problem, I fear).
Anyway, the result for me is that I now have the sense that I was there for at least five days – so much did we see, including the Taj (the ostensible reason for the visit).
Continue reading "Mad dogs and Englishmen" »
Between everything else, I’ve spent the last two weeks putting the final touches to my Pompeii book which is coming out in September in the UK and in November in the States (dont be confused by the different titles -- it's the same book). I haven’t done this as often as some – but my experience is that however much time you leave for checking the proofs etc, it never feels quite enough. And, no matter how many times you’ve looked things up, there always seems to be more to be done.
Mostly, it is the ‘have I left the iron on?’ phenomenon. Although you are at some level quite confident that those references to Pliny are actually right, once you’ve raised that tiny doubt in your mind, all you can do is check them again. And, of course, just like with the iron (which I did once find burning away, after I’d driven back from work) , every now and then, there really is some howler waiting to be discovered.
My own particular Achilles heel is the town of Cnidus.
Continue reading "Giving birth to a book" »
This picture shows ‘The Backs’ in Cambridge on a good and relatively traffic-free Sunday afternoon. For those of you who don’t know the town well, The Backs -- as the name suggests – is the stretch of ground that runs along the backs of the big old colleges (King’s, Clare, Trinity etc), with the river Cam wandering along the middle.
Cliché as this may sound (and even with those silly rick-shaws), it is a totally uplifting sight, with buds and crocuses and wonderful golden leaves in the autumn – and it works for me every time even after 30 years here. This is also where you get that canonical view of King’s College Chapel (here seen over the top of passing cars).
Or you would get the canonical view, if it wasn’t almost totally blocked by vast coaches for large parts of the day during the summer months.
Continue reading "How to spoil the best view in England" »
David Blunkett is trying to rescue his failing career with a bout of Oxbridge bashing – often the final recourse, even now, of a Labour politician on his last legs. “Yes my career is going nowhere, but I shall raise a few cheers if I lambast the privilege of the dons in their luxurious quads, and the student toffs.”
But even though I’ve heard it hundreds of times before, listening to his interview with the Fabian Review, I find myself fuming. Oxbridge, so the Blunkett line goes, has no idea how to choose the best. Oxford has been resistant to any move into the 21st century. Cambridge has paid only “lip service” to modernisation. Apparently we reject excellent working class students simply because they wont “fit in”.
Let me say to start by saying that I am basically on Blunkett’s side. That is, we both think that all the kids in the country should have access to excellent education, and that the very best universities (however the ‘best’ is defined) should be open to the brightest students – whatever their social, financial or educational background.
So far so good. And that is exactly the goal I have been working towards ever since I came to teach in Cambridge in 1984. It’s not always straightforward. It also means educating yourself in how you can fairly select these students (especially in a world in which most applicants have straight A’s at A level or are predicted to have that).
Continue reading "David Blunkett rants about Oxbridge" »
I must be a glutton for punishment. I have suffered a series of emphatic defeats in a variety of literary debates (I lost when I was representing the Parthenon against the Alhambra, when I was standing up for the Romans versus the Greeks and when I was saying no thank-you to an imaginary invitation to dinner with Socrates). So why accept the invitation to represent a famous author of my choice in a balloon debate at the Ways with Words festival at Dartington?
Answer? Partly because Sam Leith, of the Telegraph which sponsors the festival, was wickedly persuasive. Partly because I’d never been to Dartington, which everyone says is tremendously beautiful (and well worth the five hour train journey each way – which indeed it was). Partly because hope springs eternal – and I assume that one day I’ll get lucky.
You know the score of a balloon debate. You have to imagine a group of people – in this case writers – in a sinking hot air balloon. Each contestant argues for why his or her chosen author should be survive the disaster, when the others don’t. The audience weighs the arguments up and votes who to chuck out and who to keep in.
Fellow contestants were Andrew Davies (famous TV and movie adaptor of famous novels) who chose Jane Austen; the novelist Philip Hensher representing P. G. Wodehouse; and Carmen Callil, founder of Virago, with Voltaire. I opted for Homer (the Odyssey Homer, rather than the Iliad Homer). The whole thing was chaired by Alexander Waugh.
Things were looking good for Homer after the first presentations, at which we were allowed eight minutes to make the case for the survival of our chosen author.
Continue reading "Homer vs P. G. Wodehouse" »
I am delighted that the Hadrian exhibition at the British Museum looks set to be the huge success which it deserves. One of the downsides is that we classicists are going to have to get used to the rest of country enthusing about Hadrian in a way that will make us cringe.
Last night’s Newsnight Review was a good example of just this. Newsnight Review is usually an excellent programme, and last night they had three intelligent critics on board (David Aaronovitch of this parish, Marina Hyde and Simon Sebag Montefiore). The trouble was none of them semmed to know much more about Hadrian or the Roman empire than they had picked up in their preview visit to the show.
The result was that they gave all kinds of misleading impressions to the innocent viewer. For a start you could easily have come away with the idea that we were uniquely well-informed about Hadrian thanks to his autobiography. As the presenter said, “No extant copy of his autobiography survives. But later copies were made so we know a lot about his life”.
Well sorry guys, all we know is what may, or more likely may not, come from his autobiography in the scrappy, short and flagrantly unreliable biography in the series known as the Scriptores Historiae Augustae. So when Marina Hyde said “he was obsessed with cohesion the whole way through”, the truth is that we don’t have the foggiest clue what he was obsessed with.
Continue reading "Hadrian -- some myths busted" »
Doctors are apparently getting anxious about being “rated” online (at iwantgreatcare.org). University teachers have suffered this for years in websites like RateMyProfessors.com.
Whether this is a cover for personal vindictiveness, a useful sharing of information or just a bit of fun, I’m not entirely sure (though I must say I veer towards the vindictiveness line, occasionally lightened by a fan club element). It is, however, an all too predictable offshoot of “questionnaire culture” and “feedback society”,
Let me say at this point that I very much want to know what students think of my lectures and supervisions. And I have various ways of finding out. At Cambridge, where most lectures are optional, the bottom line is whether they are still coming at the end of term. But other good fact-finding methods are (surprise, surprise) asking them, or asking your colleagues tactfully to ask their own students. Sometimes an anonymous questionnaire helps too.
But our students tend to suffer from questionnaire fatigue (one for each lecture course, one rating, one rating the whole of their lectures per term, one rating their college teaching . . . ). So, even if you hand them out at the beginning of a lecture, and collect them before you leave the room, many of the responses are pretty perfunctory. If you opt, as my Faculty sometimes does, for an online version, you will be lucky to get a 20% response rate unless you offer a bribe. But it’s hard to give a random bottle of champagne if you also want the responses to be anonymous.
The bigger problem, though, is how to use the responses you get responsibly.
Continue reading "How do you rate your professor?" »
As some commenters have wondered, I have had a sneak preview of the Hadrian exhibition in the British Museum (in the old Round Reading Room, where the terracotta warriors were). The installation wasn’t quite finished when I saw it last week, but it was already looking stunning. There were all kinds of things I hadn’t seen “in the flesh” before.
Especially moving were the everyday household objects from one of the hideouts of the Jewish rebels who were so viciously crushed by Hadrian’s troops. House keys, pans, a straw basket that could have been made yesterday and a mirror. (According to the catalogue, this shows the presence of women among those hiding out. I’m sure there were women – but don’t men use mirrors too?)
These made a strange match for the wonderful bronze statue of Hadrian from a legionary camp on the River Jordan – the distinctive head of the emperor, over an elaborate bronze cuirass (though it’s far from certain that the head and the cuirass originally belonged together).There were also some great images of the young Antinous, Hadrian’s lover, who mysteriously drowned in the Nile. The Mondragone head from the Louvre is making a return visit after its appearance at the Henry Moore Institute in Leeds a couple of years ago. But the stars of this part of the show must be the silver dishes from a tomb in modern Georgia, one of which features Antinous in its central roundel.
As usual, there were all kinds of things on display from the home collection that I hadn’t realised the BM owned. I didn’t know for example that Charles Towneley had got his hands on some of the original pilaster capitals from Hadrian’s Pantheon. But everybody’s favourite, I suspect, are going to be the gorgeous pair of peacocks from Hadrian’s tomb (the Castel St Angelo) on loan from Rome.
There seems to me a good chance that this show will do a huge amount for the profile of Roman Latin and Roman culture over the next few months.
That said, there are also all kinds of more strictly historical issues raised by the presentation of Hadrian here that I hope wont get overlooked in the enthusiasm for the stunning collection of objects.
Continue reading "The Hadrian Show at the British Museum" »
Well, OK, it isn’t always. I don’t know what longueurs and anxieties go hand in hand with splitting the atom or curing cancer – or any of the equally worthy but less glamorous forms of science research. But anyone who does the library rather than the lab version of pushing back the frontiers of knowledge can tell you about the tedious days of reading pretty unappealing material (just try reading an ancient dictionary) looking for some particular gem that isn’t there. Even worse is the low level panic that the clever idea that set you on this particular month of reading is going to turn out to be a blind alley.
No academic autobiography that I know ever discusses this. In published recollection and authorised versions research tends to go right.
But actually, “going right” is itself a bit more complicated than it seems. Because the best days are not when you find what you’re looking for, but when you come across something completely unexpected.
In the Cambridge University Library there’s one predictable route to the unpredictable. It was the library’s nineteenth-century practice to bind up short books and pamphlets together, perhaps as many as ten or twenty in a single volume. So you order up the thing you’re wanting, and you get a load of what you weren’t expecting too.
The chances are that it’s one of the other things that takes your fancy.
Continue reading "Why research is fun" »
This blog does not usually feature restaurant reviews. But – inspired perhaps by the presence of Fay Maschler on the same plane back from Athens – I thought I’d venture to share with you a couple of my favourite, regular eateries near Chania.
In fact, we had a number of memorable meals while we were in Crete. One extraordinary evening involved dining in an inland village restaurant…a single table was already laid up for us in the road in front of the church as we drove in, and the lamb chops were already cooking on the brazier, and a feast followed. As one of my Greek friends said, it felt a bit like a scene in an Italian movie.
But for regular re-fuelling we went either to the restaurant in our village, or on the beach. Both of them must count as “unspoilt” (no glossy pictures of the food propped up outside, no man stationed in the road to entrap the passing tourist)…both have been going strong, to my knowledge, for 20 years. Both are in easy reach of Chania by car.
Continue reading "Where to eat near Chania" »
The Italian government apparently wants to renovate Pompeii and make it more user-friendly. The response to this announcement in the British press has been largely favourable – and no doubt struck a chord with many visitors.
It is, after all, terribly irritating to have to enter the site through battalions of private enterprise guides who swoop upon you with the standard: “You English? You want guide?”. It is also irritating to find many of the best houses in the town closed. Currently, for example, the famous House of the Vettii is closed for restoration.
That said, the new Berlusconi idea that all can be solved by a new “Pompeii commissioner” isn’t as attractive as many UK newspapers have implied. It all depends what you want Pompeii to be and what you think the problems are.
There isn’t actually much the matter with the current administration of Pompeii (apart from lack of funds) – and a very great deal to be said in its favour.
Continue reading "Is Pompeii in a state of emergency -- again?" »
After Athens, we took the boat to Crete. Instead of the 40 minute flight, this is the leisurely way. You get on the boat at Piraeus around 8.00 at night, and wake up in your little cabin at 5.30 in the morning as it chugs into Souda Bay.
This was partly a chance to do some reading and writing in the sun (up early, work till lunch; eat and swim at the beach; work again before supper). It was partly a return to old haunts. For years when they were young we took the children to the house (above) of some good Greek friends in a village outside Chania. A decade later we wanted to go back – and also see how much it had changed.
For us, there was good news and bad news.
Continue reading "Crete -- unspoilt and spoilt" »
. . . from the inside at least. I’m not so sure about the outside.
I’ve been in Athens for a few days and the main purpose was to see round the New Acropolis Museum, nearly finished and with a few sculptures already installed. My expectations were a bit muted, and I’d read rather too much about the whole thing being a mausoleum for the missing Elgin Marbles.
Actually it was, in all sorts of ways, a very nice surprise. The top floor where the Parthenon Marbles are to be displayed worked especially well – looking directly at the temple on the Acropolis itself and, as the jargon goes, having “a conversation” with it (though one of my Greek friends did mutter darkly about it being a rather one-sided conversation).
It’s a great view and the frieze comes over very powerfully, being on show at roughly the same height as the sections in the British Museum – but arranged as it was on the original building, not ‘inside out’ as in the Duveen Gallery.
They’re still trying to work out how best to display the metopes, and at what height.
Continue reading "The New Acropolis Museum is good . . ." »

Mary Beard is a
wickedly subversive commentator on both the modern and the ancient world. She is a professor in classics at Cambridge and classics editor of the TLS.
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