There’s something unbelievably horrifying yet weirdly compelling about Robert Del Naja’s artwork.

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There’s something unbelievably horrifying yet weirdly compelling about Robert Del Naja’s artwork.
The Glass Essay, Anne Carson | Molly Brodak, Molly Brodak
in a perfect world, those two are the call
and this is the response
Cat Power by Mark Borthwick for Vanessa Bruno FW03-04
La linea d'acqua
Sara Palmieri
palestine masterpost-masterpost
i've been trying my best to collect a bunch of links to other, more structured resources about the genocide in gaza, and what you, reading this, can do about it, that i'm going to compile here.
DON'T SCROLL PAST. LOOK THROUGH THE LINKS. REBLOG.
less and less people are talking about gaza every day, but it is still a very real crisis.
education, donations, speaking out, global links (masterpost)
links to contextual articles
for americans - state/congressional contacts
how you can help palestine - donations, petitions, campaigns, upcoming protests (masterpost)
non-politically motivated charity links
canary mission
petitions and congressional contact (masterpost)
education, current news, taking action, direct action and donations, current protests (masterpost)
small monetary actions
2700 ebooks on israel and palestine, available for free
thorough article by storiesfromgaza, dated 10/30/23
targeted boycott + bds
how to find state/congressional contacts, bds, email template, donation links
sudan and congo
egypt, us/uk/canada/europe congressional contacts
direct links to help palestine
educate yourself (twitter links)
translating gaza (instagram link)
bds/targeted boycott information
compilation of palestine info and how to support it (masterpost), dated 10/28/23
latest info as of 11/3/23 and large amounts of immediate action to take (masterpost)
history of palestine and israel - articles, books, films, social media (masterpost)
socials to follow
journalists in north gaza
btselem
roni horn - still water (the river thames, for example) 1999
Mike Smith, East Tennessee
richard siken’s new poem in the new yorker—at the link, you can hear him read it in full
The YouTube comment most dear to me
i will never stop thinking about this poem my greek professor showed us
[image description: a poem by elisa gonzalez titled, "After My Brother's Death, I Reflect on the Iliad." poem reads as follows:
The water cuts out while shampoo still clogs my hair.
The nurse who swabs my nose hopes I don’t have the virus, it’s a bitch.
The building across from the cemetery calls itself LIFE STORAGE.
My little brother was shot, I tell the barista who asks how things have been,
and tip extra for her inconvenience. We speak only
to the dead, someone tells me—to comfort, I assume, or inspire,
but I take it literally, as I am wont: even my shut up and fuck and let’s cook tonight,
those are for you, Stephen. You won’t come to me in my dreams,
so I must communicate by other avenues.
A friend sends an image from Cy Twombly’s “Fifty Days at Iliam”
—a red bloom, the words “like a fire that consumes all before it”—
and asks: Have you seen this? It’s at the Philadelphia Museum of Art.
If I have, I can’t remember, though I did visit
with you, when you were eleven or twelve, when you tripped
silent alarm after silent alarm, skating out of each room
as guards jostled in, and I—though charged with keeping you
from trouble—joined the game, and the whole time we never laughed,
not till we were released into the grand air we couldn’t touch and could.
You are dead at twenty-two. As I rinse dishes, fumble for my keys, buy kale and radishes,
in my ear Priam repeats, I have kissed the hand of the man who killed my son.
Would I do that? I ask as I pass the store labelled SIGNS SIGNS.
I’ve studied the mug shot of the man who killed you; I can imagine his hands.
Of course I would. Each finger, even.
To hold your body again. And to resurrect you? Who knows what I am capable of.
If I were. Nights, I replay news footage: your blood on asphalt, sheen behind caution tape.
Homer’s similes, I’ve been told, are holes cut in the cloth between the world of war
and another, more peaceful world. On rereading, I find even there, a man kills his neighbor.
“Let Achilles cut me down, / as soon as I have taken my son into my arms
and have satisfied my desire for grief”—this, my mind’s new refrain
in the pharmacy queue, in the train’s rattling frame.
The same friend and I discuss a line by Zbigniew Herbert
“where a distant fire is burning / like a page of the Iliad.”
It’s nearly an ontological question, my friend says, the instability of reference:
The fires in the pages of the poem, the literal page set afire.
We see double.
You are the boy in the museum. You are the body consumed, ash.
Alone in a London museum, I saw a watercolor of twin flames, one black, one a gauzy red,
only to learn the title is “Boats at Sea.” It’s like how sometimes I forget you’re gone.
But it’s not like that, is it? Not at all. When in this world, similes carry us nowhere.
And now I see again the boy pelting through those galleries
a boy not you, a flash of red, red, chasing, or being chased—
Or did I invent him? Mischief companion. Brother. Listen to me
plead for your life though even in the dream I know you’re already dead.
How do I insure my desire for grief is never satisfied? Was Priam’s ever?
I tell my friend, I want the page itself to burn.
beneath the poem is the text, "Elisa Gonzalez, the winner of a 2020 Rona Jaffe Writers' Foundation Award, is at work on her first book." end image description.]
random 2000s lesbians on abandoned 16 year old flickr account you mean absolutely fucking everything to me
Laurel Hill Cemetery 1/19/24
Randall Patrick
because the color is half the taste by Paige Lewis
The eyes of various animals By: Unknown photographer From: Disney's Wonderful World of Knowledge 1971
Nathaniel Orion G. K., @elytrians , Anne Carson, Mulholland Drive (2001), Hélène Cixous, @finelythreadedsky , Valzhyna Mort, Sharp Objects (2018), Anne Carson, Twin Peaks, James Tate
alice notley | twin peaks | robert icke | rosanna warren