Accessibility Tools

  • Content scaling 100%
  • Font size 100%
  • Line height 100%
  • Letter spacing 100%
Print this page

Navigating knowledge

Learning by seeing and doing
by
April 2024, no. 463

The Floating University: Experience, empire, and the politics of knowledge by Tamson Pietsch

University of Chicago Press, US$65.95 hb, 323 pp

Navigating knowledge

Learning by seeing and doing
by
April 2024, no. 463

Novelists and historians alike must choose how to tell their story. They may prefer a traditional authoritative voice, recounting the story in chronological order. Events surprise or shock as they unfold on the page, arriving at an apparently inevitable conclusion. This familiar organising principle holds our attention, but comes with constraints. Material must make sense within the timeline, or the narrative stalls. Think of Tolstoy’s long digression on farming in Anna Karenina or Hugo on constructing the sewers of Paris in Les Misérables, as we wait impatiently for Jean Valjean to flee the barricades.

The Floating University: Experience, empire, and the politics of knowledge

The Floating University: Experience, empire, and the politics of knowledge

by Tamson Pietsch

University of Chicago Press, US$65.95 hb, 323 pp

You May Also Like