Sophie Ploeg
@sploeg.bsky.social
920 followers 490 following 630 posts
Art Historian. Ancient Rome. Early Modern. Ex artist. Also spaniels, tech and books. 🇬🇧🇳🇱 https://musings.sophieploeg.com
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sploeg.bsky.social
Not gonna even start until it’s all there…..
Reposted by Sophie Ploeg
oddthisday.bsky.social
Being forced to wait a week between episodes of Slow Horses should be prohibited under the Geneva Convention
Reposted by Sophie Ploeg
Reposted by Sophie Ploeg
iashedinburgh.bsky.social
Out now! Our latest book, "Women Who Dared", is released today from Edinburgh University Press. You can purchase direct from @edinburghup.bsky.social via their website or at all good bookshops: edinburghuniversitypress.com/book-women-w...
Women Who Dared
Women Who Dared
edinburghuniversitypress.com
Reposted by Sophie Ploeg
sonjadrimmer.bsky.social
“AI” isn’t a tool or technology or even a cluster of technologies with a misleading name. It’s the infrastructure at the foundation of a form of capitalism dependent on data brokering. We should be teaching our students about this and not teaching them about “responsible” use.
Reposted by Sophie Ploeg
raulpachecovega.bsky.social
“If you’re a writer, your first duty, a duty you owe to yourself and your readers, and to your writing itself, is to become wonderful. To become the best writer you can possibly be.”
― Theodora Goss

#WritingSky #AcademicSky
Reposted by Sophie Ploeg
drnwillburger.bsky.social
Children loved to play with toys in #Roman times too: some 1,800 years ago, a child in Cologne was buried with a terracotta horse with a rider on wheels. It was certainly a much-loved which the child was also supposed to play with in the afterlife.

📷 Römisch-Germanisches Museum Köln
🏺 #archaeology
The picture shows a terracotta horse with a rider on four wheels.
Reposted by Sophie Ploeg
jdmccafferty.bsky.social
Portrait of a woman
Michiel Jansz. van Miereveld, 1628.
The Wallace Collection.

For fans of galactically proportioned ruffs.
Reposted by Sophie Ploeg
doccrom.bsky.social
#OnThisDay - 29 September - in 106 BC Gnaeus Pompeius Magnus was born. Pompey was a key figure of the Late Republic, forming the First Triumvirate with Caesar and Crassus, but would be killed in Egypt one day shy of his 58th birthday. #AncientHistory 🏺

Image: Ny Carlsberg Glyptotek, Copenhagen
Reposted by Sophie Ploeg
beijingpalmer.bsky.social
This is my regular reminder to everyone that jstor is open to the general public now; a free account there will give you access to 100 papers a year.
youngvulgarian.marieleconte.com
regrettably if you try to point this out online you'll get yelled out by 79208 journalists going OH SO YOU WANT JOURNALISTS TO STARVE??? even if you're, say, a journalist yourself, and point out that while there are clearly no easy answers, the status quo isn't exactly working for society
Reposted by Sophie Ploeg
chapps.bsky.social
Another #Etruscan gem. This bust is a fragment of a statuette depicting the god Hermes (Turms) or the hero Perseus (Ferse), identified by the remains of wings emerging from either side of his head. Beautiful modeling, and quite a heavy jaw, with inlaid silver eyes. 🏺

150-50 BCE. #BritishMuseum
📸 me
Bronze bust of Hermes (Etruscan Turms) or Perseus (Etruscan Ferse), the eyes inlaid with silver. Identified by remains of wings emerging from either side of his head. He has a very pouty lower lip and a large softly rounded jaw. This head was seemingly once part of a large statuette, as you can see from the rough edges around the bottom of the neck, as if it were torn away from the larger sculpture. 

Etruscan, Etruria, Italy, ca. 150-50 BCE. Bronze and silver.

Height: 10.16 cm (4 in.)

British Museum, London (1884,0604.60)
Reposted by Sophie Ploeg
kpw1453.bsky.social
The bronze head of the goddess Sulis Minerva which was discovered in 1727 during the construction of sewer under Stall Street in Bath. Now part of the museum collections at The Roman Baths in Bath. 📸 My own. #FindsFriday #RomanBritain #Bath
Reposted by Sophie Ploeg
oddthisday.bsky.social
So, happy 31st anniversary to this diary entry in which 86-year-old writer and country house expert James Lees-Milne hears about a new-fangled thing called The Internet (from a gallery owner, jewellery dealer, Cartier expert, and all-round posh chap)
Diary entry, 25 September 1994: Harry Fane, whom I met last night dining with his mother Jane Westmorland, never reads a book, but knows everything about computers. He swears that books will cease to exist within thirty years and all reading will be done on computers. Already there is some kind of central information exchange accessible by computer which you can contact for any facts - the varieties of bamboo, child welfare in Peru, anything. Within minutes, all human knowledge on the subject is submitted on the computer screen. I suppose the modern equivalent of Selfridge's Information Bureau. Harry is supplied with these devices, so there is no subject in the world which he can't learn about in twenty minutes.
sploeg.bsky.social
If only this could be published in English as it applies to the UK as much as The Netherlands. Excellent piece on freedom of speech at universities
peterdebode.bsky.social
Dit geweldige stuk bewijst weer eens mijn stelling dat de beste artikelen tegenwoordig van vakspecialisten komen. Ik hoop dat de slijpsteenmensen ook meelezen want dan snappen ze dat Kirk's opvattingen samenvatten als "controversieel" nogal een eufemisme was.

www.volkskrant.nl/columns-opin...
Opinie: De universiteit is geen talkshowtafel
De druk op academische vrijheid komt niet vanuit studenten, maar vanuit politieke partijen die zich willen bemoeien met de inhoud van colleges. Ook media dragen daar aan bij door onvoldoende kritisch ...
www.volkskrant.nl
sploeg.bsky.social
I’ll go with the fairies 🤣 Kate Lister on a roll 🤩
k8lister.bsky.social
Historic ‘causes’ of #Autism