Fraser McGowan
@drmcgowan.bsky.social
Historian • Postdoctoral Researcher • Ph.D. on the early history of the U.S. National Intelligence Council • Interests: intelligence, 19-20thC history & culture, film, theatre and football • Glasgow, UK • Here since Aug '24 🌅
On my way to the pub over the weekend, I was waiting for my friend at the corner of his street. A huge firework went off in the distance and all the dogs inside the houses went berserk, howling and barking in unison for at least a couple of minutes. It was like the Twilight Bark. Poor things! 🐕
November 10, 2025 at 9:21 PM
On my way to the pub over the weekend, I was waiting for my friend at the corner of his street. A huge firework went off in the distance and all the dogs inside the houses went berserk, howling and barking in unison for at least a couple of minutes. It was like the Twilight Bark. Poor things! 🐕
These are fascinating. Thanks for sharing!
November 4, 2025 at 9:15 PM
These are fascinating. Thanks for sharing!
What a lovely room to read in, too! A lovely light.
October 26, 2025 at 10:16 PM
What a lovely room to read in, too! A lovely light.
I thoroughly enjoyed your lecture, Adrian. Well outside my area of expertise, but nevertheless, I'm interested in reading habits, literacy, and bibliographic history, particularly as the latter pertains to my home institution. Many congratulations on the completion of such a wortwhile project.
October 22, 2025 at 9:02 AM
I thoroughly enjoyed your lecture, Adrian. Well outside my area of expertise, but nevertheless, I'm interested in reading habits, literacy, and bibliographic history, particularly as the latter pertains to my home institution. Many congratulations on the completion of such a wortwhile project.
Unless academics start to win the argument against generative AI by persuading students that using it is self-defeating, I think universities will, sooner or later, have to rethink how to assess students. Entirely new modes of assessment may be needed. Otherwise, it'll all become a total sham.
October 21, 2025 at 11:13 AM
Unless academics start to win the argument against generative AI by persuading students that using it is self-defeating, I think universities will, sooner or later, have to rethink how to assess students. Entirely new modes of assessment may be needed. Otherwise, it'll all become a total sham.
Would be really interested in your thoughts on this once you've finished reading it. I read it last year and had mixed feelings. 📚
October 20, 2025 at 9:51 PM
Would be really interested in your thoughts on this once you've finished reading it. I read it last year and had mixed feelings. 📚
1958 proving to be another vintage year. 🤌
October 17, 2025 at 9:10 AM
1958 proving to be another vintage year. 🤌
A fascinating discovery, particularly the marginalia.
I suppose that annotations, while not being an exact account of their thoughts, give clues as to how the reader engaged with the book – as a repository of ideas, as a tool, as an object, as a status symbol, etc.
Great work. 👏
💙📚 #Booksky
I suppose that annotations, while not being an exact account of their thoughts, give clues as to how the reader engaged with the book – as a repository of ideas, as a tool, as an object, as a status symbol, etc.
Great work. 👏
💙📚 #Booksky
October 16, 2025 at 9:38 AM
A fascinating discovery, particularly the marginalia.
I suppose that annotations, while not being an exact account of their thoughts, give clues as to how the reader engaged with the book – as a repository of ideas, as a tool, as an object, as a status symbol, etc.
Great work. 👏
💙📚 #Booksky
I suppose that annotations, while not being an exact account of their thoughts, give clues as to how the reader engaged with the book – as a repository of ideas, as a tool, as an object, as a status symbol, etc.
Great work. 👏
💙📚 #Booksky
...and I'm someone who values theory, has learned a lot from the "cultural turn" in intelligence studies, and is generally persuaded that underlying structures affect how organisations function. Scope for applied critical theory, perhaps, but abstract theorising is becoming less useful now, imo.
October 14, 2025 at 11:14 AM
...and I'm someone who values theory, has learned a lot from the "cultural turn" in intelligence studies, and is generally persuaded that underlying structures affect how organisations function. Scope for applied critical theory, perhaps, but abstract theorising is becoming less useful now, imo.
In much the same that we are all post-postmodernists now, I suspect that we will all be post-critical intelligence studies in a few years' time. Not because critical studies aren't valuable in themselves, but simply because we're reaching the "...but what's the point?" stage of that research agenda.
October 14, 2025 at 11:00 AM
In much the same that we are all post-postmodernists now, I suspect that we will all be post-critical intelligence studies in a few years' time. Not because critical studies aren't valuable in themselves, but simply because we're reaching the "...but what's the point?" stage of that research agenda.
Not sure if you'll be giving the talk in the same venue as in the picture, but that looks like a lovely room to give a talk in!
October 9, 2025 at 9:04 AM
Not sure if you'll be giving the talk in the same venue as in the picture, but that looks like a lovely room to give a talk in!
Reposted by Fraser McGowan
Read this. His life story is genuinely remarkable - born in Uttar Pradesh, an Indian nationalist who served in the war, visited Hiroshima after the bomb under MacArthur, moved to Britain, worked for the BBC.
Incredible story of a man whose life is a story of how modern Britain was made.
Incredible story of a man whose life is a story of how modern Britain was made.
VJ Day: The WW2 veteran who moved Queen Camilla to tears
Yavar Abbas reflects on his experiences on the front line - and the wars engulfing the world today.
www.bbc.co.uk
October 8, 2025 at 12:07 PM
Read this. His life story is genuinely remarkable - born in Uttar Pradesh, an Indian nationalist who served in the war, visited Hiroshima after the bomb under MacArthur, moved to Britain, worked for the BBC.
Incredible story of a man whose life is a story of how modern Britain was made.
Incredible story of a man whose life is a story of how modern Britain was made.
If you're a big reader, you'll love it! One of the best second hand bookshops in the world.
October 7, 2025 at 10:24 AM
If you're a big reader, you'll love it! One of the best second hand bookshops in the world.
Have you given Barter Books a try? It's something of an institution in that part of the world!
October 7, 2025 at 10:21 AM
Have you given Barter Books a try? It's something of an institution in that part of the world!
Who could possibly forget your strength of feeling on that particular song? 😅
October 6, 2025 at 7:47 PM
Who could possibly forget your strength of feeling on that particular song? 😅
...was it Shotgun?
October 6, 2025 at 7:42 PM
...was it Shotgun?
Recommended to me over a decade ago by a relative who is sadly no longer with us. Regret taking so long to get around to reading it because I'd love to discuss it with her.
October 6, 2025 at 1:53 PM
Recommended to me over a decade ago by a relative who is sadly no longer with us. Regret taking so long to get around to reading it because I'd love to discuss it with her.
One of the best works of non-fiction I've ever read. Dense with detail but the prose flows beautifully. A modern classic, all about the role John Gilbert Winant (US amassador), Edward R. Murrow (broadcaster) and Averell Harriman (industrialist) played in bringing the US into WW2.
💙📚 #Booksky
💙📚 #Booksky
October 6, 2025 at 1:19 PM
One of the best works of non-fiction I've ever read. Dense with detail but the prose flows beautifully. A modern classic, all about the role John Gilbert Winant (US amassador), Edward R. Murrow (broadcaster) and Averell Harriman (industrialist) played in bringing the US into WW2.
💙📚 #Booksky
💙📚 #Booksky