'how kafkaesque' i say waiting in line at the taco bell. you think im talking about the alienating bureaucracy of waiting in a single file line for food premade in another state but actually im talking about the dead cockroach in the corner

shark vs the universe

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Acquired Stardust
Sade Olutola

Discoholic đȘ©
Lint Roller? I Barely Know Her
Claire Keane

ç„æ„ / Permanent Vacation
we're not kids anymore.
d e v o n
Jules of Nature
let's talk about Bridgerton tea, my ask is open
PUT YOUR BEARD IN MY MOUTH
Alisa U Zemlji Chuda
wallacepolsom
trying on a metaphor

romaâ

@theartofmadeline
hello vonnie
2025 on Tumblr: Trends That Defined the Year
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@dontdoducks
'how kafkaesque' i say waiting in line at the taco bell. you think im talking about the alienating bureaucracy of waiting in a single file line for food premade in another state but actually im talking about the dead cockroach in the corner
never thought hearing someone soft snore would make me so happy. (am I talking about my dog?? am I talking about my boy?? youâll never know)
In my art history class weâre discussing museums and repatriation and I am so fucking angry
Just wait until I have some free time, Iâll post my favorite whiny bitch responses from European museums.
First, a fun fact: âIt is noted in the report that some 90% of African cultural heritage currently exists outside of the continent and is displayed in major Western museums.â So keep that in mind when reading these.
Letâs get this party started, shall we?
âContrary to the sanctified treatment of objects in these museums, there have been cases in Africa where artworks have temporarily left the museum to be used in rituals.â
Europeans, clutching their pearls: But it is Art, it cannot be soiled by the hands of the masses who created it!!
Then I read a big long paragraph from a French museum director that in summary reads: Hey everyone, letâs start from scratch and pretend colonialism never happened. That good? Does that work for everyone? Awesome.Â
ââŠcultural objects from the area which is now Iraq are being used to promote BP [Oil], which supported the 2003 invasion of Iraq.â
So yâall just gonna an oil company sponsor an exhibit of dubiously obtained Iraqi artifacts? Cool, cool, no colonialist undertones there.
â[D]irector of the British Museum Hartwig Fischer said that while the museumâs trustees were open to all forms of cooperation, âthe collections have to be preserved as whole.ââ
You mean, all those collections donated from wealthy individuals who pillaged the entire world? If you really believe this Iâve got a simple solution for you: return the entire damn collection.
âUnlike Nazi-looted art, what was taken in the former colonies are not recognized as criminally obtained under international law.â
Hi yeah what the actual fuck
Then thereâs the Parthenon Marbles, and if you donât know, itâs a whole big Thing with a near comical backstory. But this post is long enough as is, and I donât want to bore you. In short: Britain has bunch of the carvings and statues that were left in the Greek Parthenon, and Greece wants them back. Here are some choice bits from the British Museumâs current official stance on the marbles:
âArchaeologists worldwide are agreed that the surviving sculptures could never be re-attached to the structure.â
That is??? Not the issue??? No one is suggesting this???
âacting with the full knowledge and permission of the Ottoman authoritiesâ
Really? You sure about that? Because it seems like no one else agrees with you on that. Also, even if there was clear permission, saying âThe empire that conquered Greece told us we could take themâ doesnât exactly strengthen your case.
âthe Greek authorities have now removed all the architectural sculptures from the Parthenon to the Acropolis Museum. They have thus completed a process begun by Lord Elgin 200 years agoâ
Are⊠are you suggesting that Greece only wants to preserve its heritage because you wanted to first? Seriously? Iâd be damn careful about touting yourself as paragons of historical preservation, Britain.
âThe Museum is a unique resource for the world: the breadth and depth of its collection allows the worldâs public to re-examine cultural identities and explore the connections between them.â
And how did your collection get so big, might I ask? Oh, you donât know? Because youâre not willing to do the research on how most of these artifacts were acquired? Fascinating.
âThis display does not alter the Trusteesâ view that the sculptures are part of everyoneâs shared heritage and transcend cultural boundaries.â
Guys Iâm dying they sound like an entitled white boy in an intro to philosophy class
By the way, this document that is less than 1,000 words mentions that the public can view the them âfree of chargeâ no less than 3 times.
Fun times.
Sources: (x) (x) (x) (x)
I actually was given a C minus in this class in my undergrad for calling out museums for being whiney about repatriation. My professor HATED me and we would get into heated arguments about how stolen artifacts needed to be returned. God those were the daysâŠ.lol FYI this professor Dr.Wilson got mad one day and told me to go back to Mexico and asked me if I was legal. I know this angerâŠlolÂ
Greeceâs Acropolis museum is literally a huge fuck you to the British Museum. The New Acropolis Museum opened in 2007. It looks amazing
Since you canât dig anywhere in Greece (especially right by the Acropolis) without hitting ruins or artifacts, they built a glass floor so that visitors can see the ruins below the building.
A huge part of the design for the new building was to emphasize that Greece is ready and capable of caring for the Elgin Marbles (a huge defense the British Museum will give is that colonized countries donât have the resources to care for the artifacts properly). So they went out of their way to make this as clear as possible.
The top floor of the building is entirely devoted to the metopes and friezes around the Parthenon. Like, so devoted that they even oriented the top floor to align with the actual Parthenon
So if you walk around the floor, everything is oriented as if you were walking around the actual Parthenon.
So the two ends of the floor are dedicated to the two pediments. And they were very particular with how theyâre displayed.
Wow there sure are a lot of things missing.
They left space for where the Elgin Marbles should be. All of the pieces are labelled. For all of the missing pieces, there is a sign saying that that piece is in the British Museum. Itâs pretty hard to miss when entire sections are not there.
That entire floor is just to show that they all belong together. The pediments need to be back together. Get your shit together British Museum
You missed my favorite part of the museum:
They have separate room devoted to these statues, with a spotlight shining on the empty spot where the sixth one is supposed to be. It was the saltiest museum I have ever been to, and I was living. My favorite part was when the tour guide pleaded to us to write to the British Museum and ask them to return the artifacts, and an older man from India muttered under his breath, âHa! Good luck with that.â
That aside, itâs also one of the most beautiful museums I have ever been in. The architecture is stunning. If you ever get a chance, absolutely go to it.
For those who donât know the story behind why all these Greek statues are in Britain, buckle up for a wild ride.
The Parthenon has a storied history, obviously, as it is was an incredible temple in a major Mediterranean port. It had started to show wear and tear over the years, and different people had attempted at various points to âsaveâ it, or at least save the carvings. Most of the time, these attempts did more harm than good.
Then along comes Thomas Bruce, a Scottish nobleman more commonly know as Lord Elgin. Between 1799-1803 he acts as British ambassador to the Ottoman empire, which controlled the entire region that is now Greece. He gets really interested in the old works of the classical civilizations and asks the Sultan of the Ottoman empire if he can undertake an extensive study and recording of the art at the Acropolis in Athens. Not only does the Sultan say yes, his agreement states that Elgin can âtake away any pieces of stone with old inscriptions or figures thereon.â It is agreed by all parties who are not the British Museum that the Sultan was referring only to the various pieces that were scattered across the ground, but not anything still standing.
Elgin interpreted this wording to mean, âTake anything you want. Go absolutely hog wild.â So he did. He sawed many of the marble carvings off the building to make them easier to transport, which did damage to both the carvings and structure of the building itself. Hereâs my favorite part: one of the ships he was using to transport the marbles sank. When Elgin found out, he sent a letter to local authorities asking them to retrieve the cargo, which he referred to as âstones of no interest to anyone but myself.â
He took literal metric tons of artwork, which he wanted to use to decorate his home back in Britain. Except he poured so much money into this project that he went into debt and had to sell the marbles. Parliament bought them (which was not a popular decision at the time) and put them in a public museum. Then in 1832 Greece won its independence from the Ottoman Empire, and the marbles have been a point of contention in Greek-British relations ever since.
Hereâs another quote from the British Museum displaying an astonishing degree of ethnocentrism!
âThe public display of the sculptures from spring 1807 encouraged Hellenists in their love of ancient Greece while, at the same time, it inspired the Philhellene movement in its sympathy for the inhabitants of modern Greece and their struggle for independence.â
The most recent volley in this fight was Britain saying, âwell, we canât give you the marbles, your museum is too dinky to display them in their full splendor.â In response, Greece built the above museum.
As many people mentioned in the comments, Black Panther was fantastic in that it brought the issue of museums and repatriation into the public view. Now with more voices joining in, hopefully change can happen more quickly.
You left out the part where the document giving Elgin permission to take them may or may not be a forgery, also!
This was a part of this I was not familiar with! And wow! I looked into it, and there is decent evidence that the agreement from the Sultan was faked! This story just keeps getting better and better!
Daily I sit with the language theyâve madeÂ
of our language.
â Solmaz Sharif, from âPersonal Effects,â Look
Youâre in the 7th grade. You donât even know you want a girlfriend. You still believe in the people who believe in Jesus, canât even feel that desire through its hell threat.
Andrea Gibson, âYour Lifeâ (via buttonpoetry)
When the Princess Becomes a Prophet by Jeannine Hall Gailey
im sapiophobic. if youre intelligent i will beat you to death
Youâre*
In Another World by Rasaq Malik
In another world I want to be a father without passing through the eternal insanity of mourning my children, without experiencing the ritual of watching my children return home as bodies folded like a prayer mat, without spending my nights telling them the stories of a hometown where natives become aliens searching for a shelter. I want my children to spread a mat outside my house and play without the walls of houses ripped by rifles. I want to watch my children grow to recite the name of their homeland like Lordâs Prayer, to frolic in the streets without being hunted like animals in the bush, without being mobbed to death. In another world I want my children to tame grasshoppers in the field, to play with their dolls in the living room, to inhale the fragrance of flowers waving as wind blows, to see the birds measure the sky with their wings.
how many centuries deep is your wound?
Adonis, from âUnintended Worship,â If Only the Sea Could Sleep (Green Integer, 2003)
âPeople who do nothing other than be in love are perhaps more serious and holier than those who sacrifice their love and their heart to an idea. Be this as it may, to write a book, to perform a deed, to make a painting with life in it, one must be a living person oneself.â
â Vincent van Gogh, from a letter to Theo van Gogh wr. c. October 1887 (via violentwavesofemotion)
Louise Gluck
Louise, my love.Â
I thought the nightmares, the visions, the demons would go away if there was enough love to put them down.
Anne Sexton, interviewed in The Art of Poetry No. 15 (via theclassicsreader)
donât we all?
But thereâs a story behind everything. How a picture got on a wall. How a scar got on your face. Sometimes the stories are simple, and sometimes they are hard and heartbreaking. But behind all your stories is always your motherâs story, because hers is where yours begin.
Mitch Albom, For One More Day (via wnq-writers)
Watch the full video of this awesome poem, âAlonzoâ by Cristopher Gibson.
im wearing my âauntie with no kids who only shows up to family reunions every decade if that and only stays for 15min max each time but is really funâ outfit today