When a mysterious illness blinded him at age 25, British naval officer James Holman took up a new pursuit: travel. For the next 40 years he roamed the world alone, describing his adventures in a series of popular books. In this week’s episode of the Futility Closet podcast, we’ll describe Holman’s remarkable career and his unique perspective on his experiences.
We’ll also remember some separating trains and puzzle over an oddly drawn battle plan.
Intro:
David Tennant’s 2008 turn as Hamlet enlisted the skull of composer André Tchaikowsky.
For J.B.S. Haldane’s 60th birthday, biologist John Maynard Smith composed an ode to Struthiomimus.
Sources for our feature on James Holman:
Jason Roberts, A Sense of the World: How a Blind Man Became History’s Greatest Traveler, 2009.
James Holman, The Narrative of a Journey Through France, etc., 1822.
James Holman, Travels Through Russia, Siberia, etc., 1825.
James Holman, A Voyage Round the World, 1834.
Sarah Bell, “Sensing Nature: Unravelling Metanarratives of Nature and Blindness,” in Sarah Atkinson and Rachel Hunt, eds., GeoHumanities and Health, 2020.
Eitan Bar-Yosef, “The ‘Deaf Traveller,’ the ‘Blind Traveller,’ and Constructions of Disability in Nineteenth-Century Travel Writing,” Victorian Review 35:2 (Fall 2009), 133-154.
Pieter François, “If It’s 1815, This Must Be Belgium: The Origins of the Modern Travel Guide,” Book History 15 (2012), 71-92.
Joseph Godlewski, “Zones of Entanglement: Nigeria’s Real and Imagined Compounds,” Traditional Dwellings and Settlements Review 28:2 (Spring 2017), 21-33.
Rebe Taylor, “The Polemics of Eating Fish in Tasmania: The Historical Evidence Revisited,” Aboriginal History 31 (2007), 1-26.
Mark Paterson, “‘Looking on Darkness, Which the Blind Do See’: Blindness, Empathy, and Feeling Seeing,” Mosaic: An Interdisciplinary Critical Journal 46:3 (September 2013), 159-177.
Keith Nicklin, “A Calabar Chief,” Journal of Museum Ethnography 1 (March 1989), 79-84.
Robert S. Fogarty, “Rank the Authors,” Antioch Review 65:2 (Spring 2007), 213.
Daniel Kish, “Human Echolocation: How to ‘See’ Like a Bat,” New Scientist 202:2703 (April 11, 2009), 31-33.
Robert Walch, “As He Alone ‘Sees’ It,” America 195:17 (Nov. 27, 2006), 25-26.
Anne McIlroy, “James Holman,” CanWest News, Dec. 16, 1992, 1.
Chris Barsanti, “The Blind Traveler,” Publishers Weekly 243:18 (May 1, 2006), 46.
Elizabeth Baigent, “Holman, James (1786–1857), traveller,” Oxford Dictionary of National Biography, Sept. 23, 2004.
My Futility Closet post on echolocator Ben Underwood.
Listener mail:
“The History of the Slip Coach,” Ruairidh MacVeigh, June 27, 2020.
“By Slip Coach to Bicester,” video of the last slip coach in operation.
Wikipedia, “Slip Coach” (accessed Nov. 25, 2020).
“Slip Coaches,” Railway Wonders of the World, June 21, 1935.
“2 Bedroom Restored Slip Coach in Saltash, St Germans, Cornwall, England,” One Off Places (accessed Dec. 3, 2020).
From listener Aleksandar Ćirković: The 19:38 train departing the main station at Nuremberg each day splits in four.
This week’s lateral thinking puzzle was contributed by listener Marie Nearing, who sent this corroborating link (warning — this spoils the puzzle).
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Many thanks to Doug Ross for the music in this episode.
If you have any questions or comments you can reach us at podcast@futilitycloset.com. Thanks for listening!