Christopher Pittard
@christopherpittard.bsky.social
2.7K followers 1.5K following 1.3K posts
Senior Lecturer and Course Leader in English Literature. Victorianist. Specialist in detective fiction, Sherlock Holmes, Dickens, Wilkie Collins. New book: *Literary Illusions: Performance Magic and Victorian Literature* (Edinburgh UP, 2025).
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Reposted by Christopher Pittard
bretdevereaux.bsky.social
It's always striking seeing other academics talk about their academic parents and be reminded that close to a quarter of all tenure-line academics have at least one PhD parent.

That's not a critique, but I always wonder how different it would be to have a parent who already understood academia.
Reposted by Christopher Pittard
robpalk.bsky.social
There's loads of capital L literature written by people who aren't "straight white (often older) men" and it's weird that people feel the need to pretend otherwise
Reposted by Christopher Pittard
evilcleverdog.bsky.social
Using ChatGPT
edithcharles.bsky.social
What's something that isn't considered embarrassing but you think it should be?
christopherpittard.bsky.social
I see we're on the "it's not the physical properties of the book that matter, but the intellectual contents". But we read in material conditions, not as disembodied transmissions of thought. Or, put another way: good luck reading *Ulysses* printed in 6pt Comic Sans on toilet roll.
Reposted by Christopher Pittard
eicathomefinn.bsky.social
For reasons, it would be v. helpful to have information from a broad range of academic and non-academic (incl. GLAM) users of the BBC Written Archives OTHER THAN historians, briefly on: 1) What you've used it for and 2) How the proposed changes would impact on your research.

Reposts welcomed.
Historians dismayed by ‘scandal’ of BBC cutting access to...
Critics say new limit to trove of information sounds knell for independent research
observer.co.uk
christopherpittard.bsky.social
BBC4 are repeating *The Great Philosophers* tonight. I’m old enough to remember when it seemed that BBC4 might make new programmes like that.
christopherpittard.bsky.social
I should clarify that I meant "I said good day sir" in the voice not of Willy Wonka, but of Dixon Bainbridge.
christopherpittard.bsky.social
“I said ‘good day sir.’”
tammi.bsky.social
I found a 19th century Cat Villain!
A huge chonk of a fluffy cat sitting on a table near an open fire. The cat is cream and grey and appears to be shaped like a barrel in a fur coat. They are scowling fiercely with their moustache and bewhiskered ears apparently flowing back into the cold wind. There's a definite vibe that this villainous cat twirls their moustache as they evict orphans into the aforementioned blizzard and think Scrooge was an easy-going lightweight. They are magnificent.
christopherpittard.bsky.social
In other Southsea signage news, the long defunct fish and chip shop on Castle Road is no longer Uncle Buck’s. I don’t think it’s been open since I moved to Portsmouth, but it’s the principle.
christopherpittard.bsky.social
WHSmith in Southsea has finally fallen. Are there any high street WHS left?
christopherpittard.bsky.social
Reminded of the experience of reading *Don Quixote* - I loved it, but was genuinely expecting the windmill stuff to account for more than four pages.
philistella.bsky.social
Love this thread about reading Melmoth because it DOES contain all of those things and... absolutely none of them will be in the other 500+ pages of the book.
swordsjew.bsky.social
melmoth the wanderer absolutely slaps. we've got a sinister manor, a cursed painting, an evil dying miser, a gentle young idiot hero and a sinister irish witch in chapter 1
Reposted by Christopher Pittard
eggsbened.bsky.social
EXACTLY!
‘Where once there was a yearning to be “exposed to something extraordinary”, today politicians and arts administrators are besotted by the notion of “relevance”, of the arts as something with which people must immediately identify or recognise.’ observer.co.uk/news/columni...
It’s not opera that’s elitist but the idea that art is to...
The myth that culture has not been for the masses is debunked in a new book
observer.co.uk
christopherpittard.bsky.social
I often think nowadays about whose champagne we drank, and also the fact that whoever it was could just as easily have bought us a car.

In any case, there was no noise. None. Maybe the tech bro didn’t actually have any friends, or they all came around and just stared at the walls.
christopherpittard.bsky.social
My wife and I had our honeymoon in a basement flat in San Francisco. One day, the woman who owned the house said that the man next door was one of the founders of PayPal and was having a party that night. He had sent us a bottle of champagne to apologise for any noise…
christopherpittard.bsky.social
Caught five seconds of an episode of *Rick Stein’s Cornwall* and was reminded of a conversation I overheard in a bookshop in Truro. “I was asked to be on *Fern Britton’s Cornwall* and I said no; then I was contacted by *Rick Stein’s Cornwall* and I said fuck no.”
Reposted by Christopher Pittard
qmucu.bsky.social
*FIFTEEN THOUSAND JOBS LOST*.
If this were in a sector in which the PM could go and do a photoshoot looking like One Of The People, we’d have had a government intervention by now.
Reposted by Christopher Pittard
tedmccormick.bsky.social
A striking thing about articles I’ve read claiming to “study the effects” of generative AI on student writing skills and consumption of information is that (1) they nearly always find the effects are negative and (2) most “conclusions” are still written assuming that we must use AI, for some reason.
christopherpittard.bsky.social
Also, my thoughts are with the managers of Fitzcarraldo Editions in this difficult time.
christopherpittard.bsky.social
‘Middlemarch of the Cybermen.’
christopherpittard.bsky.social
Lionel Gadsden was an actor born in London in 1879, meaning that he lived in the same city as George Eliot and Wilkie Collins. His final acting job was on *Doctor Who.*
raxkingisdead.bsky.social
you ever think about those real weird overlaps. like tennessee williams might have listened to the ramones
Reposted by Christopher Pittard
rs4vp.org
Are you doing #19thC attribution research? Do you have DH skills and nowhere to use them? YOU could be the next editor of the Curran Index! We're still accepting applications thru next week on 15 Oct. Lead this ongoing + fully supported DH project into its next iteration! rs4vp.org/curran-edito...
Lead the Curran Index as Our New Editor – RSVP
RSVP seeks a new Editor or Editors to lead the Curran Index! Applications should be sent to VP Alison Chapman by October 15.
rs4vp.org
christopherpittard.bsky.social
Exactly. In my introductory Crime Writing seminar last week I showed exactly how ChatGPT had badly misrepresented my work on detective fiction, and told students that by not relying on AI they would be the people getting the jobs to fix its costly mistakes.
davidhiggins.bsky.social
A Gen AI argument I hate:

‘We disadvantage our students if we don’t teach them to use it “responsibly”’

For fuck’s sake, no.

1: it can’t be used responsibly
2: it’s antithetical to what makes humanities work worthwhile: critical thinking, deep research, self expression, self reflection, etc.
christopherpittard.bsky.social
I would also not be surprised if Storm Thorgerson had seen 'The Flypaper' and some of those long shots across the fields towards Ely stuck in the back of his mind when designing the cover for Pink Floyd's *The Division Bell.*