e-typo

As chronicled in your researcher's journal as I researched my history of early lifestyles in South Asia...

Another gender, anyone?
 "the difference among anthropologists whether one was a male and the other an emale"
-- from an electronic update on an important archaeological site I was just reading...

Current time travel apparatus location: New Delhi, India

For a bit

As chronicled in your researcher's journal as I researched my history of early lifestyles in South Asia...

...I'm planning to work on some other projects for the most part, except for a few loose ends for the monster history work I want to get out of the way. This I'm planning for the next week at least, but maybe two weeks. I'm hoping to continue Sanskrit though, and maybe have some fun with French and German as well. I'm basically exhausted with 10- to 12-hour days spent with the history and think that in the long run I'll do better all around if I step back for a bit! I'll continue to work but for 8 hours only, please! and mostly on some stuff that's a bit lighter.

I just read last night a fascinating account by E.F. Benson of his writing process (in his
Book of Months), which he compared to having a disease! Haha. The account includes
The patient takes nothing except his malady quite seriously....Large quantities of what is known as "sermon-paper " should be given without stint by the nurses, and special care taken that there should be in every room where the patient can possibly desire to sit plenty of black ink and suitable pens....He may refuse to go out altogether, or play any game, and here it is a mistake on the part of the nurses to urge him to do so. He may, in fact, be entirely left to himself....Then a change for the worse comes over the patient. The irritability returns, and with it an attack, more or less severe, of...indescribable misgivings. He expresses a wish for a large and settled income....Then [there] succeeds an attack of apparent coma with regard to everything except the disease itself, which is now confluent and completely encompasses him. A series of absolutely happy days ensue, accompanied by great mental activity and enormous consumption of sermon-paper. As soon as this definitely sets in the nurses may make themselves quite happy for the time being....And then the...manuscript, such as it is, is complete—and, personally, he is completely happy for about a week. Then ensues a...period, which is at times brightened by finding that something is better than one thought, but oftener darkened by finding that something is worse than one thought.
It's nice to discover "one" is not the only one who's basically gone into a writing coma when writing completely "encompasses" you!

...I even have a playlist for remembering to stop work before passing out! It's "my Take a Break playlist”…


Current time travel apparatus location: The Round Library, Bangalore, India

Oral history, oral literature

I originally wrote this not long after the much-lamented Sir Patrick "Paddy" Michael Leigh Fermor passed away in 2011...

In my leisure reading over breakfast, I was delighted and amazed to run across a mention of the much-lamented Sir Patrick Fermor. In his Travelling Heroes: Greeks and Their Myths in the Epic Age of Homer, Robin Lane Fox speaks, in his appendix on the dating of Homer, about the "memorable discussion" by J.A. Notopoulos of how "the orally composed Cretan 'epic'" had "elaborate anachronism...of the capture of the German general Kreipe by Paddy Leigh Fermor and his associates on 27 April 1944." I'm so pleased he's in an epic...

A Better Library work: preliminaries -- also writing and researching

As chronicled in your researcher's journal as I researched my history of early lifestyles in South Asia...

I've been working through my list of what I want to use at a better library, weeding out a few I no longer need, re-checking if any I still need are now digitized and accessible, and just making my overall list easier to use (like a master list I have now of every single one of the many journal subscriptions to which I need access). So far I've been happy to see that many of them are available at the University of Michigan rather than only somewhere in Germany! though I need to get much much farther along in my painstaking check before actually deciding on a library especially if it's not next door to where I would be staying anyway and would therefore entail a special trip. A couple days ago I was delighted to find a great source -- compliments of my favorite University of Cambridge! their Digital Himalaya Project with Professor Alan Macfarlane and Dr Mark Turin -- on Nepal. I'd really found too little on this whole country to call my monster work a history of lifestyles in South Asia. Yeah, it's a modern country, but I'm talking about the geographical area, which I can't mention just a few times and say I've covered it. Anyway, you can see some about their fabulous sources at http://www.digitalhimalaya.com/overview.php if you're interested.

I plan to spend a lot of today on working through some of the information for Nepal, using them where they fit in my very rough first draft, seeing where I still need more information and adding to my library list if necessary. This is probably the way I'll continue working for some time -- looking at my listed wanted sources, and if they are now available online using them right then within my already-done framework. (Of course even the framework may change some if the facts call for it.)

I've also worked with great pleasure on possible shorter works I could create now I have a very good idea of the facts available. My husband and I heard John Keay speak years ago in India, and I'll always remember this kind and intelligent man -- there with his lovely wife -- saying that yes it takes years and years of research to be ready to write, but that you can draw on that work for years and years too!

It still feels weird to be at this point! Happily weird!

Current time travel apparatus location: The Round Library, Bangalore, India

Further exultation

Also from my online journal when I was doing early work on my Lifestyles in Early South Asia, a little closer to when I moved back to my country (btw, the page count after later editing -- this was a very rough first draft, remember -- went down to under 1000):