Victoria Moul
@victoriamoul.bsky.social
1.7K followers 820 following 410 posts
Critic, scholar, translator and poet in Paris. Recent reviews in the TLS and The Friday Poem. Most recent books from CUP & Palgrave. Poems in various places. Weekly substack on poetry & translation https://vamoul.substack.com/ https://www.victoriamoul.com
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victoriamoul.bsky.social
In translation, where as you point out there's more of this, Ancient Exchanges prints notes on the poems (which are broadly translations, but some very broadly -- more 'after' or imitation poems and the comments on the process are often quite personal). exchanges.uiowa.edu/ax-beyond
Reviews 1 — Exchanges
exchanges.uiowa.edu
victoriamoul.bsky.social
Oh we did (play it I mean). Always found it a bit dull myself but it was definitely a family staple.
victoriamoul.bsky.social
It's not just him though is it, there's at least one cameraman up there too. What about his equipment?!
victoriamoul.bsky.social
My mother remembers doing turnips. She says they were jolly hard work.
victoriamoul.bsky.social
Hilarious total lack of any kind of safety equipment in this classic clip. You have to wonder about the insurance situation.
victoriamoul.bsky.social
Ah the distant (but not that distant) scent of yet another French election. I've been French for about six years and it has been really excellent value, electorally speaking.
Reposted by Victoria Moul
lauraashe.bsky.social
I was once hungover at Heathrow, after an unplanned night of excess that included inexplicably watching the World Darts Championship. In the horrible pub in departures at 7am was the guy who came second, chain-downing pints of lager. I wanted to sympathize but I know nothing at all about darts so
victoriamoul.bsky.social
Haha, I'm not sure if anyone else will empathise with you Francis but I do -- I have a couple of scholarly articles that I wrote like that plus honestly pretty much the whole of my enormous last monograph. Truly a flow state!
victoriamoul.bsky.social
Today I have written about some of the many poetry books people have sent me over the last year (plus one fabulous one that I bought myself). Featuring James Appleby, David Bleiman, Graeme Richardson, Suzannah V. Evans, Reagan Upshaw, Alex Wylie, Henry Gould and Souleymane Diamanka (pictured).
On confidence and self-consciousness in poetry
A review of books people have sent me
open.substack.com
Reposted by Victoria Moul
lbflyawayhome.bsky.social
The modern world in old Ladybird books.

"Carriages get very dirty inside from all the tobacco ash"

(On the Railways, 1972)
Artist: John Berry
A photo realistic illustration of a woman in overalls, hoovering and deep cleaning the fabric seats of a railway carriage
Reposted by Victoria Moul
aeknight.bsky.social
Come listen to me talk about religious certificates next week! Featuring a fun mix of stranger churches’, recusant, and Church of England approaches to religious paperwork.
tudorstuartseminar.bsky.social
The IHR Tudor and Stuart seminar has joined Bluesky! Please follow and RT!

Our programme for the year is starting NEXT WEEK on Monday 29 September with Alison Knight @aeknight.bsky.social speaking on 'Certificates of Religion: Early Modern Belief on Paper'.
Online and in-person, 5.30pm
Book here:
Certificates of Religion: Early Modern Belief on Paper
www.history.ac.uk
Reposted by Victoria Moul
annaalexandrova.bsky.social
I hope Melvin Bragg's retirement will not end In Our Times. He has a lovely voice and manner but it's the people he invites that hold the show. I'll take this chance to post a thread of some of the more memorable episodes for me. Starting with Schaffer, Worrall, and @michelamassimi.bsky.social
BBC Radio 4 - In Our Time, The Scientific Method
Melvyn Bragg and his guests discuss the Scientific Method.
www.bbc.co.uk
victoriamoul.bsky.social
I enjoyed writing this piece so much that it is absolutely bound to be my least-popular essay ever and prompt a flood of de-subscribers. Go on, prove me wrong! (NB, those are mules, not horses; at least, they’re supposed to be.)
Finding the door of words: on originality
One day last week I saw a circular announcing a small academic conference or colloquium at Cambridge in December on the Pindaric fragments.
open.substack.com
victoriamoul.bsky.social
I've just read Bernard Noël, "Le poème des morts", which I found pretty extraordinary. Has anyone else read it?

Je viens de lire Bernard Noël, "Le poème des morts", que j'ai trouvé assez extraordinaire. Quelqun d'autre l'a-t-il lu?
victoriamoul.bsky.social
One for the #classicists -- what's the best thing you've ever read on Euripides, Alcestis?
victoriamoul.bsky.social
One of my readers asked for something about Dante in early modern England and I’ve written about this fun (and evergreen) bit of invective from the 1550s against corrupt bankers who charge too much interest.
Now buried in hell with Dante
Some lively anti-banker invective from the 1550s
open.substack.com
Reposted by Victoria Moul
gilbertwhite.bsky.social
1776: Stoparolae still remain. Young swallows continue to come forth. Much corn housed.
victoriamoul.bsky.social
Gosh it's just like that bit in Iliad 6 -- the message in "baleful signs", i.e. writing from the perspective of the non-literate.
Reposted by Victoria Moul
karlusss.bsky.social
Imagine being Norfolk County Council's numismatist and this comes in. Your 1,843-day streak of looking at Victorian pennies sent in by people paving over their lawns, broken by a coin capturing the exact moment of Saxon ambivalence about whether going with Christian stuff would provoke Odin's ire.
drfrancisyoung.bsky.social
Absolutely insane gold thrymsa from Norfolk in the latest @currentarchaeology.bsky.social. Never seen anything like this, wtf is going on