Imagen del autor

Antony Kamm (1931–2011)

Autor de The Romans: An Introduction

25 Obras 395 Miembros 5 Reseñas

Sobre El Autor

Antony Kamm is a former lecturer in publishing studies at the University of Stirling.

Incluye los nombres: Anthony Kamm, Anthony Kamm

Obras de Antony Kamm

Etiquetado

Conocimiento común

Fecha de nacimiento
1931-03-02
Fecha de fallecimiento
2011-11-02
Género
male
Nacionalidad
UK
Lugar de nacimiento
London, England, UK
Lugar de fallecimiento
Dollar, Clackmannanshire, Scotland, UK
Educación
University of Oxford (Worcester College)
Charterhouse, Godalming, Surrey, England, UK
Ocupaciones
publisher
historian
cricket player
Relaciones
Bell, Anthea (ex-wife)
Dunlop, Eileen (wife)
Biografía breve
Antony Kamm was born in London and studied classics and English at
Oxford, where he also played cricket for the university and was president of
the university English Club. Since then he has been a publisher, and a
lecturer in publishing studies, and has written more than twenty books, for
children as well as adults, including ancient history, biography, and
literary studies, and has compiled several anthologies of verse and of
childhood reminiscences. He has two sons, and twin granddaughters. He and
his wife, a children's novelist, live in Scotland.

Miembros

Reseñas

 
Denunciada
Mustygusher | Dec 19, 2022 |
https://www.academia.edu/18222944/Review_of_ANTONY_KAMM_and_MALCOLM_BAIRD_John_L...

British Journal for the History of Science 37 (2004), 221-2.
ANTONY KAMM and MALCOLM BAIRD, John Logie Baird: A Life
Edinburgh: National Museums of Scotland Publishing, 2002Pp. xii + 465. ISBN 1-901663-76-0. £25.00 (hardback)

John Logie Baird is closely linked with the history of television in the UK. This book, at 4 cm thick probably the most sizeable treatment in a long lineage, is a carefully researched and informative account of the man behind the inventions. As the title states, this is ‘a life’: a detailed biography that provides a balanced view without placing undue emphasis on any particular aspect. Thus we learn much about Baird’s undistinguished school career, his childhood inventions – including a glider, neighbourhood telephone line and battery-powered electric lighting for his home at the age of 12 – along with his adult tribulations in influencing the market for practical television. The account is chronological, with several of the sixteen chapters covering two-year periods. There are few detours to discuss the wider environment or consequences of Baird’s achievements. Thus his activities in television development are carefully sequenced and recorded, but not closely related to parallel developments elsewhere. Co-authored by Baird’s son, this book makes good use of family archives and the reminiscences of those who knew him. Sixty photographs illustrate little-seen aspects of his life; diagrams of apparatus and laboratory layouts are informative, but do not always fully illustrate the operational principles of Baird’s equipment. A wide range of other sources and interviewees are marshalled, ranging from research undertaken on the authors’ behalf by librarians and archivists, to the comparison of successive drafts of Baird’s autobiography, Sermons, Soap and Television.

The authors adopt a fairly indirect writing style, and the book is presented almost entirely as narrative rather than analysis. While this portrays Baird’s life as an undirected existence jostled or swamped by his circumstances – arguably a common feature of many lives, and one that the authors may wish to emphasise – it also provides few markers to motivate readers. An excellent index helps greatly in this respect, but in places the remarkable characteristics of this creative and tenacious man can be submerged in the particulars.Such details provide some valuable insights, however. One example is an illuminating comparison between Baird and John (later Lord) Reith, head of the BBC and a critic of early television and Baird’s mechanical version in particular. The two first met as students at the Glasgow and West of Scotland Technical College around 1907. Both were the youngest sons of fathers who sought reform of abuses of the social system and who idolised their mothers; both were widely read but limited to technical college educations (pp. 109-111). Their subsequent interactions reveal the extent to which Baird’s fortunes (or lack thereof) were determined by their personalities. Similarly, the fascinating account of Baird’s early promotion of his work in the UK and America (1927-8) reveals how seriously his commercial secrecy hampered his reputation and commercial alliances.Baird’s reticence challenges biographers. He had a complex and ambiguous character, and this biography provides a wealth of contrasting details that illustrate the futility of attempting to categorise him. Baird’s life-long poor health is repeatedly illustrated – including his rejection for military duty during the first world war for “conjunctivitis, poor vision and flat feet” (p. 13), but we get no nearer to understanding how this changing collection of symptoms interacted with his creativity or constrained his stamina.The book weaves together anecdotes with other documentary evidence extremely well. For example, it makes palpable the combination of commercial and physical risk during the BBC’s comparison-testing with the rival Marconi-EMI system with descriptions of high voltage running through the machine,floors wet with cyanide fixing fluid and large 6000 rpm spinning discs susceptible to imminent disintegration (p. 286). The technical accounts are accurate, although a couple of errors regarding stereoscopic technology are to be found (p. 335).The authors have documented their research well, cross-referencing facts routinely and dismantling myths. I would have welcomed further technical detail both on Baird’s designs and those of his competitors. The Epilogue interestingly addresses the post-war technical competition and historiography, describing the downs and ups of Baird’s posthumous reputation. An Appendix on‘John Logie Baird and the Supernatural’, while enlightening, is rather disembodied from the spirit of the rest of the book.This work contrasts with another recently reviewed book on Baird (Russell Burns, John Logie Baird,Television Pioneer (London, 2000), which highlights the technical details of his biography. Although only slightly longer, the Kamm & Baird version seems a more substantial tome providing a continuous and meticulous narrative of Baird’s life. It fills in gaps, such as information about his work on electronic television during his later years as well as his unusual romances, which are only touched upon by previous works. On the other hand, Kamm & Baird have provided relatively little interpretation of Baird’s life or work. There is much material here to write a contextual history of technology, but this worthy biography accomplishes much by focusing on Baird the man as seen by those around him.
… (más)
 
Denunciada
sfj2 | Mar 28, 2022 |
The Last Frontier was all right. It gave a good overview of the current knowledge of Rome’s invasions into Scotland with most of the book dealing with the Agricolan and Antonine invasions. The book ended with the aftermath of Rome's withdrawal from Britain and the start of the unification of Scotland.
½
 
Denunciada
bakabaka84 | otra reseña | Feb 26, 2012 |
I would be very surprised if this book was not a PhD thesis reworked for publication. It reads that way, though it is quite well written.

What essentially you get here is a history of the various Roman incursions into Scotland from the 70s until the Severan campaign at the beginning of the 3rd century. What this is not, however, is a history of the northern frontier. Hadrian's wall is mentioned, and some history given, but it is outside the geographical purview of the book. Unsurprisngly given the subject the most detail concerns the Agricolan invasion, and the Antonine invasion. The author is clearly on his toes, as there are frequent references to various archaeological finds made in the last few years. The author also puts the story - the Roman invasions - in the context of what happened in Scotland both before and after the Roman occupation of the southern two-thirds of Britain. Thus we begin with a rough and ready history of Stone Age Scotland, and end with Scotland achieving approximately its modern boundaries in the early 11th. The book is concentrated however in the period c.70AD to c.215AD, as one would expect. It does not advance any particularly radical theory, but rather seems to be a good overview of current knowledge.

An informative, clearly written, read.
… (más)
 
Denunciada
stnylan | otra reseña | Jul 29, 2006 |

También Puede Gustarte

Autores relacionados

Estadísticas

Obras
25
Miembros
395
Popularidad
#61,387
Valoración
½ 3.6
Reseñas
5
ISBNs
56
Idiomas
1

Tablas y Gráficos