@teacherhead Great to see this topic being discussed. I’ve also written about aphantasia and teaching for those interested in the subject: https://t.co/tZ9ODTZdS0; and https://t.co/efC5kq8P8S
'Ghosts among the philosophers - Cambridge, home of analytic philosophy, was also a hotbed of psychical research. How did this spooky subject take root?' (the 'ectoplasm' featured is in the archive of the SPR, held at Cambridge University Library): https://t.co/chSqPsMeBI
Randolph Caldecott was born on this day, March 22, in 1846.
In Maurice Sendak’s words, Caldecott’s balance of pictures and words heralded “the beginning of the modern picture book”.
Have you ever thought about what you see — or don’t see — in your mind’s eye when you read? Take a look at this piece I’ve just written about aphantasia and reading: https://t.co/tZ9ODTYG2s
Died #OTD 1875, the artist Robert William Buss, leaving unfinished his best known work: "#Dickens's Dream." Take a closer look: which of these iconic characters can you identify? https://t.co/9xrFUEbjyx
DARK FAIRYLAND The entrance to fairyland is said to be in forests, hills, or in mountains. It is associated with the land of the dead in mythology. Mortals who enter may disappear forever unless they are able to perform some task of value to the fae
🎨Doré, 1870 #mythologymonday
According to @ZSLLibrary it's #WorldHippoDay, so here's Harrison Weir's wonderful chromolithograph of one, from "The Pictorial Cabinet of Marvels," 1878 https://t.co/MM2F6pewFF (just hoping it's too much of a mouthful for the crocodile!)
A digital exhibition for those interested in AI, historical images (and cathedrals). Based on work we are doing with @lampallib
https://t.co/Yya0By4Mno
A woodcut peering out from a 16th century binding. It's been used as the pastedown on a 1596 Frankfurt printing of Aristotle's Physics, but we can't see enough of it to know what it's from #Printed#Fragments#Bindings