cysgbi

joined 2 months ago
[–] cysgbi@lemmy.wtf 3 points 21 hours ago

I have a fairly vanilla Gnome and a WIP Sway for testing. Gnome is a much easier workflow, and the customization just takes a little reading (much less than Sway or similar, you just have to use the GUI not manpages and dotfiles).

Application launcher shortcuts by default are bound to Super+numbers according to the order of the bar in the overlay. So if your terminal was application 3 in that bar just hit Super+3 (I just bound the launch command to Super+Return in the custom shortcuts). Shift+Super+PageDown or Shift+alt+Super+right will shift an app to a workspace to the right. Super+Up will make it fullscreen. My workflow is changed mostly due to a lack of a PageUp/Down on my laptop.

If you assume that the workspaces don't need to be numbered, Super+Tab just to jump to another app is handy, or Super+PageUp/Down. I use touchpad swipe controls a lot, or my user defined controls.

But for a two application workflow as described, Super+3 (or whatever to launch terminal), Super+up (To fullscreen), and then switch between them with Super+Tab, no extra workspaces required. That's three shortcuts, four if you move terminal to another workspace.

Gnome likes you to sit back and think about if what you are doing is really necessary (gnomey? gnome-like?), its quirky like that, but there are loads of options for user defined stuff in the settings, so the classic i3 bindings are really easy to put in or whatever.

[–] cysgbi@lemmy.wtf 2 points 6 days ago

Spent a good half an hour confused by Julius Caesar Scaliger.

[–] cysgbi@lemmy.wtf 3 points 1 week ago

Come see the lovely sights! Tot tibi tamque dabit formosas Roma puellas "Haec habet" ut dicas "quicquid in orbe fuit!" Ovid Ars Amatoria 55—56

[–] cysgbi@lemmy.wtf 3 points 1 month ago

That kinda language is common among both cisgendered straight and LGBTQ+ researchers btw.

[–] cysgbi@lemmy.wtf 4 points 1 month ago (1 children)

Honestly, historians are just cagey about anything that can be argued about. Typically they wan't to use language that is either verifiable or culturally specific (e.g. pederasty). One lecturer I know also emphasised that direct equivalency can be frankly problematic (e.g. lots of examples of Roman "homosexuality" is older men and younger boys). At the end of the day we can't speak to identity in most cases, and that identity will be culturally situated. We can talk about actions. Can't say if Julius Caesar was bisexual, can say he probably had sex with both men and women. Does sound like tiptoeing around to people used to saying "gay" not "men who have sex with men".

[–] cysgbi@lemmy.wtf 4 points 1 month ago

Cassius Dio is the most reliable source because we have crap sources for the period. The fact is that there are good reasons not to take his stuff on this particular topic at face value, and we don't have the other sources that might contradict him. I wouldn't criticise a historian (or a student) for reading it as just more transphobic invective, even if I personally think there's something to it as LGBT history.

As to the privacy, that's how I read these bits of Dio, he is quite coy about what is happening in the palace vs outside of it. Maybe I'm too skeptical.

[–] cysgbi@lemmy.wtf 5 points 1 month ago (2 children)

With all due respect to OPs interest in gender and sexuality throughout history (always good!), you would be hard pressed to find a serious classics department without some researchers in gender and sexuality in the ancient world in the last 30 years. You wouldn't learnt about it in school/general popular history because you would have to read large amounts of ancient texts mocking trans/gender-non-conforming people in crude language. It's better left to university or the wide range of books and articles on the topic. About Elagabalus in particular, they are really well known and you can find discussions of their gender identity (in period appropriate terms) in lots of places, but it's got problems as an example. Of the two major sources, the Historia Augusta is pure trash and Cassius Dio is an obvious hit piece. His source is " I spoke to people who know, trust me bro, no he didn't act feminine in public, but he did in private, trust me bro". It's not that Elagabalus wasn't gender-non-conforming (and I encourage everyone to read more about it in Cassius Dio book 80, it's easily available), it's just that similar allegations were made about a lot of unpopular emperors. Especially check out Suetonius' life of Nero for very similar stuff, Tiberius too. Or just start reading Martial's epigrams and stop when a man is called "effeminate" or a woman "masculine". Tl;dr there's lots to explore here. At least like 50 years of fairly accessible scholarship and digitised ancient sources. 😁