Wikipedia:WikiProject Articles for creation/Help desk/Archives/2018 August 26

= August 26 =

08:52:02, 26 August 2018 review of submission by DondeEstaElBurro?
DondeEstaElBurro? (talk) 08:52, 26 August 2018 (UTC)

Are there any other submissions pending in English Wikipedia about the Harbin hotel fire?
 * No, I don't think so. Regards ~ Abelmoschus Esculentus  (talk to me) 08:59, 26 August 2018 (UTC)

09:44:50, 26 August 2018 review of submission by Vani Shaji
Vani Shaji (talk) 09:44, 26 August 2018 (UTC)

11:42:35, 26 August 2018 review of draft by PPh1lomena
{{SAFESUBST:Void|

{{Lafc|username=PPh1lomena|ts=11:42:35, 26 August 2018|link=

FIRST TELL US WHY YOU ARE REQUESTING HELP ON THE LINE BELOW THIS LINE. Take as many lines as you need. -->}}

I have written the following as a draft. What steps do I take from the draft box, to submit this for publication? Draft article:

{{collapse top}} Colin Bennett, born Colin Reginald Bennett (1939-2015) was an English philosopher of anomalies, the paranormal, and Ufology. He was a Fortean and postmodern thinker, and a noted biographer of Charles Fort, Edward Ruppelt and the UFO contactee George Adamski - this last book is said by Mac Tonnies to "probe the 20th century's military-industrial-mythological complex with an intellectual and literary fortitude seldom encountered in popular works on UFOs", which is a common view of Bennett’s contribution held by his peers and our contemporary experts. [1] His original views were widely admired and endorsed by our prominent contemporary esotericists and ufologists including John Michell,[2] John Keel[3] Jerome Clark [4] Lauren Colemanand Nick Pope [5] as well as the physicist Jack Sarfatti Bennett wrote the Introduction for Sarfatti's book, Commentaries on Physics, http://www.academia.edu/7363761/Colin_Bennetts_Foreword_to_Star_Gate_Sarfatti_Commentaries_on_Physics_Vol_1 Nobel LaureateJohn Forbes Nash Jr [6] and Uri Geller[7].

Bennett was the author of Looking for Orthon (Paraview Press, 2002), a biography of George Adamski. [8] His next book was on the life, work and ideas of Charles Fort, entitled Politics of the Imagination (Headpress, 2002,) which won The Anomalist Award for Best Biography, 2002. [9] His third biography was An American Demonology: Flying Saucers Over the White House (Headpress, 2005), the story of Captain Edward Ruppelt who headed Project Blue Book in the era of unprecedented UFO sightings over the White House the early 1950s. [10]

Bennett's very original and seminal essays on Ufology and Anomalies were widely published, often as cover stories as in Fortean Times, UFO Magazine (US) and Nexus, and further in Philosophy Now, Paranoia, Phenomena and realityuncovered.net.

Biography: Bennett was born in Long Eaton, Nottingham on 4th November, 1939, and educated at Balliol College, Oxford, where he was admitted in 1965 as a scholar of English Literature without possessing any qualification in Latin, on the basis of a thesis he submitted and an interview. [11]After graduation he lived and wrote all his life in Notting Hill, London. He died in London on 9th February 2015 of complications from diabetes and a stroke.

PUBLICATIONS:

Non-Fiction:

Looking for Orthon – The story of George Adamski, the first flying saucer contactee and how he changed the world. New York: Paraview Press, 2001

Politics of the Imagination – the life, work and ideas of Charles Fort. Manchester: Critical Vision, 2002

An American Demonology, Flying Saucers over the White House. Manchester, Headpress Books, 2005

Essays:

“Science as Showbusiness,” Fortean Times No 75, June 1994

“Rocket in His Pocket,” Fortean Times, Issue 132, March 2000

“Recipe for a Universe,” Fortean Times, October 2000

“Manchurian Candy or Big Doll Culture,” Fortean Times, Issue 148, July 2001

“Invasion of the Doll People,” Fortean Times No. 156, March 2002

“Lee Harvey Oswald as Fortean Man,” published as an appendix to Politics of the Imagination, Manchester: Headpress Books 2002

“A Late Disciple of Lucretius,” Philosophy Now, Issue 38, October 2002

“Imagine,” Paranormal Phenomena, September 25, 2005

“Managing Mystery,” UFO Magazine, August 2006

“Skepticism as Mystique: a Fortean Essay in Rationalist Panics and Skeptical Dementia,” published in UFO Magazine, December 2006

“Meme Wars: We Have an Agenda,” published on realityuncovered.net. No date given.

“Deconstruction of the B-29,” published in Flying Saucers Over the White House. New York: Cosimo Books, 2010.

“The Alien is Under Construction,” Paranoia, the Conspiracy Reader, Issue 40, Winter 2006 ”, “Putting the Noise Back into the System: a Postmodern Fortean Analysis of Consumerism, Cargo-cult Belief, and Ufology,” UFO Magazine, Vol. 23, No.3, April 2008

“Child Brides from Outer Space,” Reality Uncovered, May 10, 2010

“Weaponising the Narrative,” UFO Magazine (US), Volume 24, No. 5, June 2012

Novels:

The Infantryman’s Fear of Open Country. London: Fourth Estate, 1990.

The Entertainment Bomb. London: New Futurist Books, 1996

The Rumford Rogues. London: Headpress Books, 2009 {{collapse bottom}} PPh1lomena (talk) 11:42, 26 August 2018 (UTC)

PPh1lomena (talk) 11:42, 26 August 2018 (UTC)
 * Hi {{U|PPh1lomena}}. At the top of Draft:Colin Bennett Philosopher of Anomalies and UFOlogy is a large grey box. At the bottom center of that box is a somewhat lighter button labelled "Submit your draft for review!". When you're ready, click that button. --Worldbruce (talk) 13:25, 26 August 2018 (UTC)

14:48:36, 26 August 2018 review of submission by Mbukow
I updated article links and re-submitted - I am checking to see if this is still in-line for further review since the initial submission was very quickly removed for lack of links - and now it is almost 2 months later - Do I need to do something else - I want to verify this is in the right status. - Thank You - Mbukow (talk) 14:48, 26 August 2018 (UTC)
 * Hi . The draft is in the pool to be reviewed. It has been there six weeks. It will probably be at least another two weeks before it is evaluated. You may continue to improve it while you wait. The tone is off from the formal tone expected in an encyclopedia, the English isn't up to snuff, and it fails to follow the Manual of Style in a number of respects. If those things aren't obvious to you, you might benefit from studying some of Wikipedia's best articles and from some time improving existing articles (see Community portal for how to help). --Worldbruce (talk) 19:06, 26 August 2018 (UTC)