Me.
he wasn't even looking at me and he found me
Mike Driver
Show & Tell
NASA

titsay

★
we're not kids anymore.
YOU ARE THE REASON
will byers stan first human second

roma★
Noah Kahan
EXPECTATIONS
No title available
d e v o n
Monterey Bay Aquarium

Andulka

Kiana Khansmith
cherry valley forever

if i look back, i am lost
official daine visual archive

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@dukeofmidnightcity
Me.
Jellies
Eighty two thousand, three hundred and seventy seven days of trying to figure out how this world works. Three hundred and twelve months of being kept outside looking in. Another year coming in, wondering why my life gets counted by how much time i spent circling round the sun.
The Origins of Mary Shelley’s “Frankenstein”
In 1815, the eruption of Mount Tambora plunged parts of the world into darkness and marked a gloomy period that came to be known as The Year Without a Summer. So when Mary and Percy Shelley arrived at the House of Lord Byron on Lake Geneva, their vacation was mostly spent indoors. For amusement, Byron proposed a challenge to his literary companions: Who could write the most chilling ghost story? This sparked an idea in 18-year-old Mary. Over the next few months, she would craft the story of Frankenstein.
Popular depictions may evoke a green and groaning figure, but that’s not Mary Shelley’s monster. In fact, in the book, Frankenstein refers to the nameless monster’s maker, Dr. Victor Frankenstein. So tense is the struggle between creator and creature that the two have merged in our collective imagination.
The book traces Dr. Frankenstein’s futile quest to impart and sustain life. He constructs his monster part by part from dead matter and electrifies it into conscious being. Upon completing the experiment, however, he’s horrified at the result and flees. But time and space aren’t enough to banish the abandoned monster, and the plot turns on a chilling chase between the two.
Shelley subtitled her fireside ghost story, “The Modern Prometheus.” That’s in reference to the Greek myth of the Titan Prometheus who stole fire from the gods and gave it to humanity. This gave humanity knowledge and power, but for tampering with the status quo, Prometheus was chained to a rock and eaten by vultures for eternity. Prometheus enjoyed a resurgence in the literature of the Romantic Period during the 18th century. Mary was a prominent Romantic, and shared the movement’s appreciation for nature, emotion, and the purity of art. The Romantics used these mythical references to signal the purity of the Ancient World in contrast to modernity. They typically regarded science with suspicion, and “Frankenstein” is one of the first cautionary tales about artificial intelligence. For Shelley, the terror was not supernatural, but born in a lab.
In addition, gothic devices infuse the text. The gothic genre is characterized by unease, eerie settings, the grotesque, and the fear of oblivion - all elements that can be seen in “Frankenstein.” But this horror had roots in personal trauma, as well. The text is filled with references to Shelley’s own circumstances. Born in 1797, Mary was the child of William Godwin and Mary Wollstonecraft. Both were radical intellectual figures, and her mother’s book, “A Vindication of the Rights of Women,” is a key feminist text. Tragically, she died as a result of complications from Mary’s birth. Mary was haunted by her mother’s death, and later experienced her own problems with childbirth. She became pregnant following her elopement with Percy at 16, but that baby died shortly after birth. Out of four more pregnancies, only one of their children survived. Some critics have linked this tragedy to the themes explored in “Frankenstein.” Shelley depicts birth as both creative and destructive, and the monster becomes a disfigured mirror of the natural cycle of life.
The monster, therefore, embodies Dr. Frankenstein’s corruption of nature in the quest for glory. This constitutes his fatal flaw, or hamartia. His god complex is most clear in the line, “Life and death appear to me ideal bounds which I should first break through and pour a torrent of light onto our dark world.” Although he accomplishes something awe-inspiring, he has played with fire at his own ethical expense. And that decision echoes throughout the novel, which is full of references to fire and imagery that contrasts light and dark. These moments suggest not only the spark of Prometheus’s fire, but the power of radical ideas to expose darker areas of life.
From the TED-Ed Lesson Everything you need to know to read “Frankenstein” - Iseult Gillespie
Animation by Silvia Prietov
In a suspected chemical weapon attack like the one in Syria on Tuesday, children are the most vulnerable targets. They are more likely than adults to die from chemical agents and to suffer injures. If they survive, they also suffer from the physical and mental trauma of the attack for far more years than adults simply because they have more years left to live.
The effects of chemical weapons are more devastating for kids for a number of reasons. “Because kids are smaller, there’s a higher impact on a smaller body,” said Dr. Steven Hinrichs, director of the Center for Biosecurity at the University of Nebraska Medical Center. A smaller dose of a chemical agent can do more damage to their organs.
Why Children Face The Greatest Danger From Chemical Weapons
Photo: Mohamed Al-Bakour/AFP/Getty Images
Speculative Paintings of a Graffiti-Covered Earth by Josh Keyes
“Not everyone is okay with living like an open wound. But the thing about open wounds is that, well, you aren’t ignoring it, you’re healing. The fresh air can get to it. It’s honest. You aren’t hiding who you are. You aren’t rotting. People can give you advice on how to heal without scarring badly.”
Warsan Shire
So, what if, instead of thinking about solving your whole life, you just think about adding additional good things. One at a time. Just let your pile of good things grow.
Rainbow Rowell, Attachments (via wordsnquotes)
Karasuno Third Years
Can we just appreciate
how completely shocked and overwhelmed
the third years are in this moment?
They worked so hard
to get from this moment
to this moment.
They’re going to Nationals.
All their hard work paid off, and I’m so very proud of them.
w h e n c r o w s f l o c k ,
#Everyone crying hysterically and celebrating # is me in this exact moment # they won!!!
I cried so hard during this part.
If you’ve heard the news, Episode 8 is the last episode in which Tanaka Kazunari played Ukai Keishin. I’m so glad he got to say this line and went out with a big flourish. Thank you for your amazing voice, and may you rest in peace.
“It was just one block. It was just one point out of 25. This is just a club. But once that moment arrives for you, that’s the moment you’ll be hooked on volleyball.”
These Photos of Fireflies Are Straight From a Fairytale
Each year, Tivoli, New York photographer Pete Mauney awaits the arrival of the fireflies, and for about three weeks each summer, the bioluminescent insects settle beneath the moonlight around his house on quiet evenings. He shoots almost every night.
(Continue Reading)
MoMA Film celebrates filmmaker Ira Sachs through August 3! Watch a clip from his latest, Little Men, which Vulture calls “one of the best scenes of the year,” and get your tickets to our screening on August 3 featuring a Q&A with Sachs and the film’s star Michael Barbieri.
[Little Men. 2016. USA. Directed by Ira Sachs. Screenplay by Mauricio Zacharias, Ira Sachs. With Jennifer Ehle, Alfred Molina, Greg Kinnear. 85 min.]
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