Summary
[...] that I think of it, one reason I was fond of the subject was that in my prepschool geography room there were piles and piles of shiny yellow National Geographic magazines available for skimming through. [...] not so much a surprise, more a deeply unpleasant shock. [...] as a lover of empiricism and passionate advocate of the fruits of the Enlightenment, I confess that it worries me that, despite President Obama's commitment to science, his statement 'I believe it is not in [the]. . .
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Extract
'Would I Live in America? In a Heartbeat'
Last week, Stephen Fry gave the inaugural Spectator Lecture at the Royal Geographical Society. His topic:
America's Place In The World. Here we reprint his speech in full'Thank you. Thank you very much. Good lord. Well, well. Here we are. Gathered together in the very lecture theatre where Henry Morton Stanley once told an enraptured world of his momentous meeting with Dr Livingstone. Charles Darwin was a member and gave talks in this same hall. Sir Richard Burton lectured here and John Hanning Speke. . . spoke. Shackleton and Hillary displayed their intimate frostbite scars to a spellbound RGS audience. Explorers, adventurers and navigators have been coming here for the best part of 180 years to tell of their discoveries. If only at school, geography teachers, surely the most scoffed and pilloried class of pedagogue there is, if only they had concentrated less on rift valleys, trig points and the major exports of Indonesia and more on the fact that geography could promise a classy royal society with the sexiest lecture theatre in the land - if only they had done that, then maybe cheap stand-up comedians and lazy cultural commentators would be less routinely scornful of geography teachers as a class and geography itself as a discipline, which is one I rather unfashionably enjoyed when I was young.Don't ask me why.Actually, now that I think of it, one reason I was fond of the subject was that in my prepschool geography room there were piles and piles of shiny yellow National Geographic magazines available for skimming through.These, with their glossy advertisements for Chesterfield cigarettes, Cadillac sedans and Dimple whisky, gave me my first view outside television of what America might be like. But there was another reason religiously to scan the magazines.National Geographic, before it became a 'brand' best known for an imbecilic and embarrassing suite of digital TV channels, was - thanks to its anthropological coverage in a pre-internet, pre-Channel 4, pretop-shelf age - the only place where a curious boy could look at full colour pictures of naked people. For that alone it deserves the thanks of generations. One did get the false impression that many peoples of t...See the full content of this document
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