Good luck to the people of Hungary today. Hope you are able to expel OrbĂĄn.
GOOD. FUCKING. RIDDANCE.
almost home
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TVSTRANGERTHINGS
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One Nice Bug Per Day
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taylor price
Cosmic Funnies
"I'm Dorothy Gale from Kansas"
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Origami Around
YOU ARE THE REASON
d e v o n

@theartofmadeline
will byers stan first human second

â

oozey mess
Three Goblin Art
Sade Olutola

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@adelei420
Good luck to the people of Hungary today. Hope you are able to expel OrbĂĄn.
GOOD. FUCKING. RIDDANCE.
I found notes from Dottore pre-Dottore
A response I made to a friend's qrt on twitter! I can reactivate the style like a sleeper agent haha waaah
"these researchers published a paper on something that literally any of us could have told you đ" ok well my supervisors wont let me write something in my thesis unless I can back it up with a citation so maybe it's a good thing that they're amplifying your voice to the scientific community in a way that prevents people from writing off your experiences as annecdotal evidence
they did the research in the first place because they believed you and wanted to tell people about it. they are not our enemies.
people always go "Instead of spending all that time on a study they could have just listened to us when we said these thing happen"
they did listen, that's how studies work, they asked people about their experiences and put all the data together in a nice package that can be cited
Hehe Xiao Lanterns are fun
đ§¶ A comparison of traditional Icelandic and Norwegian knitwear đ§¶
Been busy working on a big project later this year, so I haven't been posting much đ Related: if anyone has got a favourite cultural christmas tradition specific to your country please inform me - I am doing research đ
I finally did Cynoâs second story quest today and here were my thoughts
1. This gentleman (Cyno) is immensely autistic
2. Thatâs a lot of homosexuals
3. I am eternally grateful to the illustrious Rick Riordan for the Kane Chronicles so I actually understood the Egyptian mythology references.
4. I actually got out my Brooklyn House Magicianâs Manual to look up anything I was foggy on, and in doing so found the origin for the name âAaru Villageâ
5. It funny to me hearing Hermanubis be talked about like he was a combat master/keeper of wisdom because Anubis was a god of funerals. I donât know if the gameâs depiction was actually more accurate than I think but whenever they were talking about wanting Hermanubisâs power/wisdom it just sounded to me like they were trying to find the secret to putting the âfunâ in âfuneralâ
Also I decided to walk everywhere during this quest and not use any teleport points and naturally I was sidetracked many many times by enemies on the path or seelies or whatever so I was just imagining Tighnari having to herd a Lumine acting like a toddler with absolutely zero attention span after eating an entire bag of sugar while heâs just trying to go after his boyfriend
Does Zeus sewing fetus Dionysus into his leg count as mpreg?
So I'm still brooding about (Peter Dinklage's performance in) the 2021 Cyrano film, and I think a significant part of what bothers me about the film as adaptation -- maybe the main thing besides some of the language; no one should say "okay" in the seventeenth century -- is that it reduces Cyrano.
In this film, Cyrano is a man who pines. And it is, to be fair, true that no one pines like Rostand's Cyrano ("Et je suis et serai jusque dans l'autre monde, celui qui vous aima sans mesure, celui..." Put me in the GROUND.) But my point is: that isn't all he is. He is, of course, a poet. He's a virtuosic fencer. He's a scientist. He's a lover of art, and a playwright. He is, in a very seventeenth-century way, a patriot, and his fellow Gascons adore him for it. He is, and I say this with profound admiration and affection, an asshole to those in power. And from curtailing the "Non, merci" speech to omitting "Ce sont les cadets de Gascon" and the hilarious and heartbreaking "I just fell from the moon!!!" delaying tactic, the film just makes him less. And I object to that! I love this character for all he is. And we should be able to see the man whom Roxane both loves as a friend and comes to desire through his letters.
This man is NOT OSHA COMPLIANT!!!
Gingerbread Town
From my Nutcracker AU
GeoUkr
Iâm experimenting with watercolors on procreate
Iryna in various Ukrainian winter coats because it finally got cold where I am and I found pictures of these coats on Pinterest and they looked so cozy!
Notes on "The Legend of Sleepy Hollow" by Washington Irving
(I used to love the film, but I hate to see Johnny Depp, so I decided to read the story for the first time.)
Nature, supernatural elements, rural and isolatedâin space and time.
Two types of masculinity, two men, two suitors:
Ichabod Crane: Is this a âtype of guyâ that Washington Irving was parodying? In theory, a modernising, civilising, culturally homogenising force. The line about how Connecticut exports woodsmen and schoolteachers. An outsider who ingratiates himself with the women in order to eat their food and look upon their daughters (vs. Brom who thrives in the masculine sphere). Living in poverty but has an air of superiority because he has had some education. In realityâonly owns two books, and they are books on superstition, does not finish any poems and they are quite bad. Sly, does not court Katrina openly, but visits her house as a singing master hired by her father. Cowardlyâdoes not challenge Brom, but takes his anger out on children and animals.
Brom Bones: Local suitor, Dutch. Strong and skilful, mischievous but not a bad man. Master of traditional masculine pursuits, such as: horseback riding, hunting, drinking, entertaining, making friends of men. He courts Katrina openly. Other suitors recognise his superiority and give up their pursuit of her. Compared to: Tatars, Don Cossacks, knights-errant of yore.
Two concepts of wealth:
The wealth of the land, that provides grain, fruit, meat, wool, wood, etc. Some of it is sold, a lot of it is shared, consumed locally. Luxuries can be bought, but the community is self-sufficient. The wealthy farmer is the one with a full larder, who can afford to be generous.
Wealth in terms of the monetary value it can be exchanged for. Ichabod fantasises about marrying Katrina, filling her with children, converting her fatherâs wealth into cash and taking her away from her culture, going into the wilderness to become a prominent figure, coasting on her money and by being one of the few Europeans who settle there. He believes himself superior, but his existence is parasitic.
Ethnographic, fetishistic description of the Dutch, especially Dutch women: âBuxom lasses, almost as antiquated as their mothers.â Katrina described as a coquette, though her behaviour is not indicative of it. Her old-fashioned dress, inherited from her female ancestors, is described as sexy by the narrator (not their words, but it is implied to be how Ichabod sees it). They must be flirtatious because their ways are different from those of the English women. Descriptions of food, traditional dress. Ichabod is obsessed with the superstitions, the ghost stories of the community.
Tim Burton is racist. Who knew? There are Black people living in the neighbourhood, in the farms. They attend van Tasselâs feast.
Iâd argue just about everyone in the story is some form of an a-hole and are portrayed as such, Ichabod as everything you said, condescending and gold-digging, and then Katrina is manipulative and leads Ichabod on, then Brom, who is generally well-liked, engages in a lot of childish and aggressive pranks and ultimately murders Ichabod.
For Katrina I disagree, she absolutely acts like a coquette, she had a number of suitors before Brom started courting her (though this in itself wouldnât be indicative of coquettishness), but she absolutely leads Ichabod on by explicitly encouraging his courting, walking with him by her lake and personally inviting him to her familyâs party. But then at the end of that party he hangs behind to speak with Katrina but then something went wrong and he left unhappy, the story says,
âCould that girl have been playing off any of her coquettish tricks? Was her encouragement of the poor pedagogue all a mere sham to secure her conquest of his rival?â
So yeah, I believe itâs canon that Katrina was leading Ichabod on to make Brom jealous. She was absolutely a coquette.
As for Brom, your description is accurate, I donât think Irving intended for him to be seen in a positive light. He was popular and manly, but also childish and committed murder.
Regarding stereotyping of the Dutch, I donât think Irving described Dutch girls in general as flirtatious, just Katrina. He does however stereotype them but in a romanticized pastoral way. The descriptions of the clothing is intended to add to the imagery of the rustic, pastoral atmosphere.
(Also the black people in the story were most likely enslaved. They are also described in a very patronizing way. The first guy is delivering invitations for the Van Tassels, the people at the party are either playing music or looking at the party from outside through the windows. So yeah, they were definitely there, but sadly not as free townspeople and not attending the party as guests. I do agree though that Burton doesnât cast enough POC, and the movie is hardly a historical documentary or even an accurate adaptation, he absolutely could have had original black characters.)
Do you know if using ? In the middle of sentences to indicate sarcasm was a common thing in informal victorian letters or if this is a personal Rachel quirk?
While Rachel is by far the most prolific user, it is used by quite a few other people in the letters - including several who only knew Rachel in passing. So it seems to have seen at least some wider use, but I'm not sure how general that use was, or how it varied by age/class/location/etc.
As of right now the only hard evidence I've found to support this outside of the letters, is a reference in an 1894 book titled English Grammar for Common Schools, by Robert C. Metcalf.
And another mention in a 1928 grammar book (Correct English, by William M. Tanner) which explicitly instructs readers not to use it in this manner.
So it seems to have been in wide enough use by the 1920s to be considered poor grammar by Mr. Tanner.
A couple of BrArgs, 1870s (again) and 1910s
I guess this means he lived, then