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SHAKSPER 2007: Possible Problem with Receiving Roundtable Digests
From: Hardy M. Cook (editor@shaksper.net) Date: 03/02/07
The Shakespeare Conference: SHK 18.0171 Friday, 2 March 2007 From: Hardy M. Cook <editor@shaksper.net> Date: Thursday, 1 Mar 2007 15:19:31 -0500 Subject: SHAKSPER Roundtable: Presentism Comment: SHK 18.0170 SHAKSPER Roundtable: Presentism Dear SHAKSPEReans, Several members have written to me, reporting that they have NOT been receiving some or all the Roundtable digests. I suspect that in some cases the problem might be a default setting in the program used to read e-mail. These programs do not accept messages that exceed a certain number of characters, and many of the Roundtable digests have been considerably long. If you did not received the digest from yesterday -- SHK 18.0170 SHAKSPER Roundtable: Presentism -- please check if you have such a default in your browser and change that default to "no limit" or to a much higher number of characters or words. I hope that this procedure will fix the problem in the future. If not, your ISP or university account might have such a limit, and you should inquire with technical support to see if you can have your threshold increased. Hardy M. Cook Editor PS: Another issue is that some have written to me mailing from another member without explanation. If you are copying a message to another member, please clearly indicate that this is the case. ******************** The following is the opening of the Roundtable digest of yesterday. This week's Roundtable includes eight posts: brief comments from new contributors Edmund Taft (on the "newness" question) and Linda Charnes (on definitions and labels), and a longer ones from new contributors Alan Dessen (from the point of view of a theatrical historian trying to discover stage practices of past theaters) and from Neema Parvini (who challenges Presentist critics and others to undertake a renewed interest in theory by questioning many of the assumptions inherited by critics from the writings of Foucault and Althusser. In addition previous contributor Michael Luskin takes up in detail the issue about historically "authentic" musical performances while Larry Weiss, Louis Swilley, and Hardy Cook revisit issues discussed in previous Roundtables-problems of using critical labels (Weiss and Cook), and the issue of "timeless" moral content in great works of art (Swilley). Your moderator feels he has had his say in plus and overplus over the last few weeks and happily will yield the floor to the many readers of these posts who might wish to respond to them. Therefore, I am omitting this week a commentary (except for two factual notes on the posts by Taft and Luskin) in the hope of bringing forth more from readers. I ask only that contributors adhere to norms of ordinary civility and to have a point (or points) expressed clearly. -Hugh Grady [ . . . ] _______________________________________________________________ S H A K S P E R: The Global Shakespeare Discussion List Hardy M. Cook, editor@shaksper.net The S H A K S P E R Web Site <http://www.shaksper.net> DISCLAIMER: Although SHAKSPER is a moderated discussion list, the opinions expressed on it are the sole property of the poster, and the editor assumes no responsibility for them.
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