Day 1: London

We’re lucky to be here tonight. A 2-hour delay in Chicago because of mechanical trouble caused us to miss our connecting flight in Montreal. A number of other people were in the same predicament, so we were lucky to squeeze on to the last flight to England that night (after a good run around the whole airport, or as the check-in guy said “Better run, eh?”). Otherwise, it would have been a night in Montreal, only to arrive for another night in London.

Not too jet lagged, but still took it easy today: British Library and a bit of shopping. We’ll see if we can stay up long enough to see the Americans loose at football.

Off for vacation

My wife and I leaving tomorrow for London, England, and a tour of Milan, Florence, and Rome, Italy. If the Internet connections are good (go wireless!), we’re hoping to blog about the trip, as well as post images to the gallery.

I haven’t had quite as much time to update the blog as I would like, but have a number of story ideas that I’ve been working on which hopefully can be completed when we return.

Cheers,
-john

Why blog?

I’ve done a bit more thinking and reading about the issue of current and future academics who blog. My conclusion is that, especially given the concern that what I write today may have an impact on my future job prospects, it’s necessary to periodically reevaluate and assert what this exercise is all about.

  • Discourse of ideas: Daniel Drezner, for example, says “When I started blogging, I feared that it would prove a distraction from my scholarly research. What I did not anticipate was that it would actually trigger new research avenues.” I have found this to be true. Not being around the Journalism department very much means that there aren’t that many opportunities to talk about these issues, much less think/write them out and receive feedback from others. Since this blog is primarily academic, I hope that it serves this function and stays within the bounds of what would be an acceptable academic debate (theory, research, or otherwise).
  • Technology and Mass Communication: The combination of my interest in Internet technology, and the fact that blogging is becoming a greater factor in the Journalism word leads me to think that working on this type of publication would be a bonus. Knowing how blogs work technically, as well as understanding the culture (something I’m only beginning to do), I believe, will make me a more well-rounded researcher and educator.
  • Anonymous?: As the story of the L.A. Times blogger shows, blogging anonymously can come back to haunt you if you are outed. I would rather have everyone know about my (admittedly very open) intellectual style than risk problems down the road.
  • Intellectual diary: There are honestly a lot of news stories which I find interesting in regards to my academic interests which I don’t want to loose track of (and being able to add my current thoughts and organize with tags is even better).

With all of that said, I realize that there needs to be some focus to my work here. Except when I’m simply posting to remember a story, or working on hashing out an idea, I’ll try to keep things either theoretically or empirically grounded (meaning, as little politics as possible). It simply is the intellectually honest thing to do, even if one is thinking out loud.

Storms

Hail

It’s a strange feeling to think that someone just threw a rock at your house, then a moment later someone throws another from the other side of the house, followed by a deluge of noisy bangs (and a whiny dog).

Last night’s hail storm was quite the surprise.

Fortunately, we weren’t hit as badly as our old home, Iowa City. Head over to the Press Citizen and check out the photos. We wish them well.