The Diaries of Franz Kafka, 1914-1923
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The Diaries of Franz Kafka, 1914-1923
Joy Harjo, from “Becoming Seventy”
words, bodies, celestial bodies
“At night, I open the window and ask the moon to come and press its face against mine. Breathe into me. Close the language-door and open the love-window. The moon won’t use the door, only the window.”
— rumi, some kiss we want
“Moonlight making crosses on your body, and me putting my mouth on every one.”
— richard siken, snow and dirty rain
“Look at your face, you say, holding your own close to me to make a mirror. How calm you are. And the burning wheel passes gently over us.”
— louise glück, happiness
“So many times have we seen the morning star burn, kissing our eyes, and over our heads the grey light unwind in turning fans. / My words rained over you, stroking you. / A long time I have loved the sunned mother-of-pearl of your body. / I go so far as to think you own the universe.”
— pablo neruda, every day you play
“Soon we had bathed / the sun fell at our feet / and broke into the sliding /ferment of our warmth / we were an early evening”
— june jordan, then it was
Me going to the University every morning
Hanya Yanagihara, A Little Life
“is this moment radicalizing you?”
while i’m here, and still somehow have followers on this website, i thought it would be useful to repost an activism resource masterpost i saw on twitter a few days ago. it looks like the OP (@thebryreed) set her account to private, but i saved the links and figured they would be useful reading & listening, given everything that’s going on right now.
Malcolm X (1964) The Ballot or the Bullet
Martin and Malcolm by James Baldwin (1972)
Assata Shakur’s Autobiography (1987)
The Master’s Tools Will Never Dismantle the Master’s House by Audre Lorde (1979)
Are Prisons Obsolete? by Angela Davis (2003)
The Invention of Women by Oyěwùmí (1997) (this requires institutional access or creativity)
Sylvia Rivera’s Y’all Better Quiet Down speech (1973)
Toni Morrison’s Nobel Prize Speech (1993)
Fidel Castro’s History Will Absolve Me (1953)
Toni Morrison (2015) No Place for Self-Pity, No Room for Fear
W. E. B. DuBois Why I Won’t Vote (1956)
The wall above my desk is finally decorated and I’m very happy with how it turned out :’))
1.Old Royal Naval College,Painted Hall, Greenwich, UK
2. St. Nicholas side altar, Czech Republic
If you feel like you’ve seen this alread, that’s normal. This list of recommendation has been previously posted on my first account @praestantias which has been deleted for some reasons. So here I am, reposting it.
Hating how elitist and eurocentric the dark academia community became, I would truly appreciate that you leave some recommendation of book written by people of color, for I noticed that I am guilty of the eurocentric part, but I am really want to educate myself and read more non-white books.
Thank you for your suggestions!
Lindsay C. Gibson, Adult Children of Emotionally Immature Parents
A Girl with her hair unbraided, 1873, Ivan Kramskoi
Medium: oil,canvas
Kazimir Malevich, Black Circle, 1915
Happy Birthday, Kazimir Malevich
crash course in literary theory twentieth century onwards
structuralist linguistics: saussure invents linguistics to study language as structures. for him, words don’t give names to preexisting things but create concepts that determine the way we understand the world
russian formalism: thought literature was only form, no content. the idea that art existed to make the familiar seem strange. jakobson founded the moscow linguistics circle when he was 19 wyd with your life
new criticism: so cleanth brooks and robert penn warren right? they write this book called understanding poetry. this book changes the way english classes work forevaaaa. because suddenly class isn’t just about what the poem says but you can use 50 minutes to talk about how it’s said and make your own connections. birth of close reading. and the phrases “the intentional fallacy” and “the affective fallacy”
structuralism: levi-strauss takes saussure’s ideas and applies them to a bunch of myths and finds that their underlying structures are all the same. then applies it to culture as a whole and says they all operate on constructed binaries. lots of things to do with the centre.
deconstruction: derrida starts off this speech at this conference to glorify levi-strauss and then makes a career out of dragging him. the centre does not hold. there is no centre. as barthes writes, there was this guy named guy de maupassant who always ate in the restaurant on the eiffel tower because that was the only place he didn’t have to see the damn thing. basically that, but in theory.
new historicism: born out of the guilt complex of isolating the text from its author. focuses on historical context. greenblatt writes entire books about historical contexts of plays (like hamlet in purgatory). foucault is a huge influence and intertextuality (coined by julia kristeva) is a thing
marxist theory: the superstructures like culture are determined by the economic base. all the bourgeoisie and proletariat things. zizek (use the correct accent things please) and terry eagleton. my professor thinks literary critics are in a privileged position and hence feel the need to contribute to the world hence use marxist criticism to make themselves feel better and * sigh * i gotta write that on the exam
feminist theory: started all the way back with wollstonecraft and woolf. intertwined with political feminism. revisionary reading that exposes biases. judith butler!!!!!
queer theory: began as liberation movement. undo the idea that heterosexuality is the norm. identify and reclaim non heterosexual authors. michel foucault wrote a lot of things. yes, shakespeare was bi.
postcolonial studies: deals with hegemony of texts and cultural imperialism. analysis of history and culture of formerly colonised countries. expand literary canon to include colonial and postcolonial authors. achebe and rushdie all the way!
freudian psychoanalysis: IT’S NOT FUCKING REAL! everything that came out of freud’s mouth along with some carl jung stuff about collective consciousness and archetypes and whatever it was that lacan said about mirrors. maybe mention harold bloom’s anxiety of influence thing.
On Being Ill, Virginia Woolf
IF YOU LOVE WRITING BUT DON’T HAVE THE INSPIRATION FOR A 10-PART BOOK SAGA YOU SHOULD TAKE A LOOK AT THIS SITE
IT’S INCREDIBLY HELPFUL AND CAN FOR INSTANCE GENERATE TOPICS AND FIRST LINES, CONTAINS LOADS OF EXERCISES AND YOU CAN FIND PLENTY OF WRITING TIPS.
BLESS YOU I LOVE YOU OH MY GODS I’VE NEEDED THIS
WHERE HAVE YOU BEEN ALL MY LIFE?
This is a really cool site…
What an awesome way to get started or recharge or play around or experiment or…OK it’s good for all the writing things :D
oh…..
Alice Notley, “Voice” from Coming After: Essays on Poetry
outnumbered / angels in america, tony kushner / ljus, tommy hilding / felicity, mary oliver / the amber spyglass, philip pullman