Here she is 😍

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@period-dramallama
Here she is 😍
I read etiquette and homemaking guides from the 1800s mostly because they're a FASCINATING insight into cultural norms that we often don't think about. I honestly really recommend people crack one of these open at least once--it goes way beyond, like, "what to wear to a ball!!!"
The best ones have advice on decor, how to select high-quality furniture, childrearing, fashion, etc--from a contemporary perspective, and the things the authors feel the need to clarify vs the wild shit that will just casually mention like it's something everyone knows and agrees on is REALLY revealing of the culture and how it's shifted.
And while a lot of the advice is WILDLY bigoted or just outright funny, you'd be surprised how much of it is...just genuinely timeless, and shockingly compassionate.
They ALSO, as a writer, have INVALUABLE resources--because, again, they're talking about things that are so MUNDANE that a lot of the time nobody really sat down to formally document what normal, everyday people thought or cared about--because that's boring! But a book written to provide advice and information to, say, a young woman who's never run her own home before? You can fully expect an entire chapter dedicated to The Types Of Oven, and which features are useful and worth spending money on, and which features are a huge hassle to clean and a waste of space, and what to spend that money on instead.
And like. As a writer who frequently works in the 1800s? Fuck inflation calculators, this is the kind of thing I need. This is absolutely priceless.
Now that being said.
My current favorite 'etiquette guide' in the world is actually like....70% purely practical advice, written by a gentleman the groupchat has affectionately dubbed History's Most Autistic Man In The World, and thank god they didn't have Aderall back then
Because the AuDHD is strong in this one and as a result, in addition to the deeply practical and useful everyday reference points, we also have:
(rapeseed is now called canola and it is indeed very oily!)
I do love referencing conduct books and they are such good sources of information! It is good to keep in mind that they present an ideal, not everyone acted like this, most people probably didn't, or else you wouldn't need a book to get them in line...
Sir Henry Irving as Cardinal Wolsey for a production of Shakespeare’s ‘Henry VIII’
His productions were noted for their high-quality design, and he was the first to darken an auditorium in order to focus attention on the stage. In 1895 he became the first actor to be knighted – the result of his long crusade to see the theatre recognised as an art form.
mix-and-match fanfic writer asks
pick a number...
Which of your fics is your favorite?
Which of your fics is your least favorite?
Which of your fics is criminally underrated?
Which of your fics surprised you by how much attention it received?
Which of your fics is the funniest?
Which of your fics is the most serious?
Which of your fics is the most crack-like?
Which of your fics did you spend the most amount of time writing?
Which of your fics did you spend the least amount of time writing?
[Asker's choice: specify the fic you want to know more about.]
...and pick a letter...
a. What is something you wish more people noticed about it? b. What is something you would do differently if you were to rewrite it? c. What do you think makes it deserving of love? d. What is your favorite line or excerpt from it? e. Are there any lines or sections that you think don't belong in it? f. Which character (POV or not) was your favorite to write? g. Which section was most difficult to write? h. Which section was the easiest to write? i. Did anything substantial get cut from it? j. Describe it badly.
...to create a combo question! (ex. 1c, 5a, 9g)
As a writer I need everyone to know that whenever I write "exchanged glances" my intent is this
Alicia von Rittberg in Becoming Elizabeth (1.06-7) as Elizabeth Tudor
Friend: how's the novel going? Have you finished the timeline? Have you written any scenes?
Me: no and no
Me: but there's a dick joke in there now
Friend: ...
Me: Progress!
Historical inaccuracies in major published novels and period dramas bother me so much because I can't write a fan fiction that I know I'll post for free without being fairly certain I have the major facts right.
I'm writing a story right now that I probably won't post at all and I still spent a good hour and downloaded a research paper to figure out if women in feudal China were allowed to have baths during their periods. The answer is no, as I suspected, but I checked! I also learned about their version of pads which sound much better than European historical period solutions and kept reading long after I'd found my answer. It was all fascinating to learn about because history is interesting.
So I guess what I'm saying is, why write historical fiction or make a period drama if you aren't even interested in or in love with history? When I read Bernard Cornwell, for example, it feels like he's fascinated by the period he's writing about. No one seems strangely modern, but they all feel deeply human. I don't need a female character to point out sexism or patriarchy to me, it's obvious. I'm trusted to think about it for myself. The author trusts that I care as much as he does about the past.
I don't understand why you would produce historical fiction if you don't care about the past. Maybe I'm the wrong audience, maybe most people don't care, but I don't get it. And I don't expect everything to be perfect, we don't even know everything about even an era as recent as the Regency, but it doesn't even feel like some of these people care at all.
So today I learned someone in Korea is enjoying my stuff???
France, America, Latvia, Korea, i'm picking up readers over the world!! Very exciting
And now, Japan! ❤️
I'm all for Catherine Parr talking about her experiences as Henry's wife but not at the dinner table, c'mon. That should have been a private scene with just Elizabeth. And did she have to be disparaging to Anne and Catherine? Given she found herself in the same peril as them, wouldn't that inspire some sympathy or compassion for them? And surely a woman as intelligent as Catherine won't believe Anne was really guilty. And even if she did, did she have to rub it in Elizabeth's face like that? In front of everyone? Catherine can say she loves Elizabeth until she's blue in the face but I don't believe her.
Honestly it's a miracle any of these courtier characters survived Henry VIII because they all have ZERO SOCIAL SKILLS
HOW FUCKING DIFFICULT IS IT TO NOT HUMILIATE A PRINCESS AT THE GODDAMN DINNER TABLE
Lemmings. These shows are about LEMMINGS.
the borgias (2011 - 2013), neil jordan borgia (2011 - 2014), tom fontana
How I expect historical fiction research to go: wow what a thrilling discovery this will revolutionise the plot and put a whole new spin on the story
How it actually goes: what's the Tudor equivalent of finger guns. how was the primal urge to do finger guns expressed in this period.
“Thomas,” said Thomas, dying of plague.
this fanfiction shit easy
Arisa Hitomi as Mary I of England with Princess Elizabeth & Princess Mary (Lady Bess : The Musical , 2026)
this fanfic shit is easy
MARK RYLANCE and ANTON LESSER as Thomas Cromwell and Thomas More Wolf Hall (2015) | Episode three.
Detective series where Thomas Cromwell is the detective because he has to do fucking everything around here. He gets one hour of sleep every 200 pages.
One installment Cromwell is the murderer but he's so busy that he forgot about the murder because he's had 8 billion errands to do since.
Also the Nobility weigh him down with side quests "Find Purkoy Cromwell or I'll tell the king you're a heretic".
So he's legit surprised to discover he was the murderer all along.