JENNY GERAS: Norman Geras: 1943-2013

I am very sad to announce that Norm died in Addenbrooke's hospital in Cambridge in the early hours of this morning. Writing this blog, and communicating with all his readers, has brought him an enormous amount of pleasure in the last ten years. I know that since writing here about his illness earlier in the year he received a lot of support from many of you, and that has meant a great deal to him, and to us, his family. The blog and all its archives will remain online.

Jenny Geras (Norm's daughter), 18 October 2013

JOHN GRAY: Norman Geras: 1943–2013

John Gray

[first published on the John’s blog]

Norman Geras

Norman Geras

The blogging world is a lesser place tonight. Prolific political blogger, Norman Geras, Manchester University Politics Professor has died.

I once heard him speak at a Euston Manifesto conference during which he described the SWP (Socialist Workers Party) as not socialists because they don’t believe in democracy, not workers since they are middle class and not a party but a cult. I never spoke to him, but I have long admired his numerous clever and insightful posts on “Normblog“.

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DAMIAN COUNSELL: A Fine Site

[first published in Norm’s Festscrift]

Damian Counsell

Norman Geras is an emeritus professor of politics, with well regarded books to his name. However it was not through these that I first became aware of him, but through his Weblog. ‘normblog’ is now an institution, one of only a handful of UK blogs worthy of the description. I suspect that its regular readers number in the tens of thousands and that hundreds of thousands have visited the site during its six years of existence. Although Norm is responsible for by far the greatest part of its content and he must be given credit for its extraordinary success, others have contributed to this achievement. Their contribution is, in turn, a result of Norm’s willingness to offer space to the opinions of others — even when those opinions differ from his own. As well as individual essays from friends, colleagues, comrades, opponents, and others; Norm publishes correspondence and runs regular slots, in which, for example, a different (dead-tree) writer each week writes about other writers, and a different blogger answers questions about him- or herself. Even without such contributions, normblog’s archive would still be a valuable scholarly resource in its own right.

Many people complain that, while the World Wide Web overflows with data, little of its content is true or useful information, and still less of it embodies any kind of wisdom. It is true that the medium is used to spread myths, publish libels, perpetrate fraud, cultivate hatred, and celebrate violence. (This has also long been true of the written word. One of the earliest and most prominent blogging software companies, the one responsible for hosting Norm’s blog in fact, refers the earlier technology of the printing press in its trade name: “Movable Type”.) Despite all this, the Web is a store of human knowledge unprecedented in its accessibility and scope. In return for its easy bounty, we have to apply more sophisticated forms of the skills we have had to cultivate since our ancestors first learned to speak: the ability to recognize accurate accounts of the external world, and the ability to identify worthwhile conclusions based on such accounts. There is both information and wisdom in normblog.

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MICK HARTLEY: Normblog at ten

Mick Hartley

[This first appeared on Mick Hartley’s blog]

Just a note to celebrate Norm's first decade of blogging.

He is I think, for certain sections of the UK blogosphere, something of a godfather. He is to me, at any rate. I corresponded with Norm before I ever put keyboard to blog, and he was kind enough to mention me once I'd started. That was back in the days of Iraq and the Euston Manifesto. A lot of water—an ocean of water—has flowed under all kinds of bridges since then, but here we still are, and I'm still, I'm happy to say, in almost total agreement with what he has to say.

Normblog also provides some kind of object lesson in how to mix up the posts, so that—gradually—some kind of portrait emerges of the man behind it all. There's the cricket, of course—an enthusiasm I don't fully share, admittedly, though I'm sufficiently au fait to appreciate the references – and there's the Country Music (Emmylou Harris notably, and who could argue). And then there are the novels. Norm, now he's retired, seems to have an extraordinary enthusiasm for the reading of fiction which I can only envy—and his recommendations are pretty damn good too. No doubt it helps to have both wife and daughter as successful writers.

But the core of Normblog is still the astute political analysis. So much to choose from, but just from the last week there's this excellent piece on Michael Rosen which, in the calmest most matter-of-fact way, and without resorting to any overblown rhetoric (not Norm's style at all)  just takes the poor man apart. There's no coming back from that.

So—here's to the next Normblog decade.