Carnivalizing Carnivals
	 
    
    
     
    Hopefully I won't get into trouble for saying this (cross fingers), but I am amused that blogging Carnivals are unlike Carnivals themselves. The Early Modern Carnival, for instance (which Claire did a great job bringing together--go read 
here and 
here) , is a serious affair that brings together scholarly posts on a variety of subjects.  
Johno at Ministry of Minor Perfidy points out the 
Carnival of Recipes, a wealth of culinary delights.  I would say that they are essential reading.  However, they lack 
organisierte Narren, the sense of breaking away from the normal activities of blogging (or academia or anything else) to bring some satirical self-criticism and raucous revelry. Certainly we historians are ripe for parody.
        
    
   
  
  
  
  
  
 
  
  
1 Comments:
Ah, but some have gone in that direction. Se last four or so editions of Grabd Rounds, or the last Skeptic's Circle, or the Tar Heel Tavern - much more Carnival-like.
For some carnivals you may not know about, see here:
http://sciencepolitics.blogspot.com/2005/02/meta-carnival-1.html
A couple more have started since that post, though, but I have mentioned them in subsequent posts.
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