Showing posts with label Mary Beard. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Mary Beard. Show all posts

Friday, 27 June 2014

24 hours a day the academic way

From Mary Beard's Blog:

This is how an academic called Arnoldo Momigliano spent his day: according to himself:

In my 24 hour continental timetable I divide my time each day as follows:
2 hours of pure sleep
1 hour of sleep dreaming about administration
2 hours of sleep dreaming about research
1 hour of sleep dreaming about teaching
½ hour of pure eating
1 hour of eating with research (= reading)
1 hour of eating with colleagues and of conversation on teaching and research
½ hour of pure walking
½ hour of walking with research (= thinking)
12 ½ hours of research with preparation for teaching (= reading, writing or also thinking)
1 hour of official teaching without thinking
1 hour of official administration without thinking
___
24

What is interesting is that his down time is not really down time in that the mind has to be occupied with something (unless you are absolutely gaga), so really he is working a 22 hour day, the mind being active (not really dreaming) even when he is asleep. I find it takes some sleep before you know whether yesterday's work stands up well today, or before you can see the next small step. I am always finding I have resolved something in my sleep, or I wake up and immediately remember something I have forgotten to do. When he teaches he isn't thinking: but I think this must be lecturing, which is not the same as teaching. However, he is dead right about administration, which is tiresome and doesn't involve thought. 12 and a half hours of research with preparation for teaching is a long day though. He could do with knocking off a bit earlier. 

Friday, 24 May 2013

A great pleasure - Cultural Exchange

Is the feature on Front Row called Cultural Exchange where famous personalities talk about a work of art which has inspired them. I always love to hear Mary Beard enthusing about the ancient goings on which she is so comfortable with, and I love to hear Will Self's voice - he could make anything sound fascinating, and I love Diana Athill and Germaine Greer - all the right people have been able to contribute - even the wonderful Anne Tyler!!! and today I was at home and able to hear a part of a reading of Dinner at the Homesick Restaurant by Anne Tyler which made me think - I am going to read that one again.

All Anne Tyler's books have got a point to them, it may be about the family dynamic being worked out over time, or it may be about the contribution that women who don't work (or work part time and informally) make to society, it may be about  the way you really can't escape your own personality wherever you go, even if you try to make your like work out differently (Ladder of Years), it maybe the fact that a marriage might not work, and end, but still continue in some shadowy way (The Amateur Marriage) but there is always something to take away from her novels, and maybe something funny, true and ridiculous to make you laugh along the way. On Cultural Exchange she contributed an old photograph. You can see it on the Radio 4 website and you can see how a person with some imagination (Anne has loads) would get a lot out of it.



Anne Tyler rarely gives interviews - I expect she thinks they are a waste of time - but she did a good one in the Guardian a year ago, and you can see from the comments how people love her writing but not in an uncritical way - we are disappointed with her occasional bland and twee novels. She is usually not afraid to confront the evil that men do - think of the beginning of the Accidental Tourist, the image of the innocent young boy being shot and killed in a MacDonald's. Oh, and she is popular with men, and Nick Hornby is a fan.

http://www.guardian.co.uk/books/2012/apr/13/anne-tyler-interview