methods of organizing books alignment chart:
let's talk about Bridgerton tea, my ask is open
will byers stan first human second
Aqua Utopia|海の底で記憶を紡ぐ
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Discoholic 🪩

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wallacepolsom
"I'm Dorothy Gale from Kansas"
Today's Document

#extradirty
Alisa U Zemlji Chuda

❣ Chile in a Photography ❣

PR's Tumblrdome

ellievsbear

Andulka

@theartofmadeline
Show & Tell
Cosmic Funnies
i don't do bad sauce passes

Origami Around
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@quaint-study
methods of organizing books alignment chart:
studying in the law library • pembroke college, cambridge • summer 2018
i’m home and missing paris (and my desk) an awful lot.
Body/Horror/Monster reading list
Here’s the list I’ve compiled from my research and y’all’s suggestions…
THEORY Volatile Bodies - Elizabeth Grosz Unbearable Weight - Susan Bordo The Body in Pain - Elaine Scarry The Queer Art of Failure - Judith Halberstam The Monstrous-Feminine - Barbara Creed The Dread of Difference - Barry Keith Grant Men, Women, and Chain Saws - Carol J Clover Skin Shows: Gothic Horror and the Technology of Monsters - Judith Halberstam Monsters in the Closet: Homosexuality and the Horror Film - Harry M. Benshoff The Medusa Reader - Marjorie Garber/Nancy J. Vickers Coming to Writing & Laugh of the Medusa- Helene Cixous Accursed Share - Georges Bataille Death and Sensuality - Georges Bataille Intercourse - Andrea Dworkin History of Shit - Dominique Laporte History of Sexuality Vol 1 - Michel Foucault Discipline and Punish - Michel Foucault Gender Trouble - Judith Butler Bodies That Matter - Judith Butler Powers of Horror - Julia Kristeva Horror and the Monstrous-Feminine - Barbara Creed Horror and Male Masochism - Barbara Creed Illness as Metaphor & AIDS and Its Metaphors - Susan Sontag Phallic Titty Manifesto & The Skin-Cloth - Jackie Wang Technologies of the Gendered Body - Anne Balsamo Caliban and the Witch - Silvia Federici The Thirst for Annihilation - Nick Land Against Sex Positivity - negationparty Dictatorship of Postfeminist Imagination My Words to Victor Frankenstein - Susan Styker To Have Done with the Massacre of the Body - Felix Guattari Assuming a Body - Gayle Salamon The Absent Body - Drew Leder LITERATURE Dracula - Bram Stoker Frankenstein - Mary Shelley Written on the Body - Jeanette Winterson Aliens & Anorexia & I Love Dick - Chris Kraus The Thief’s Journal - Jean Genet Blood and Guts in High School & Hannibal Lecter My Father - Kathy Acker ART/MUSIC My Body & Stitch Bitch & Patchwork Girl - Shelley Jackson Diamanda Galas interview in Re/Search Rhythm 10, Rest Energy, Breathing In/Breathing Out - Maria Abramovic Interior Scroll - Carolee Schneemann The Litanies of Satan - Diamanda Galas
I will do this with you or anyone. Lez talk.
I need a word that describes the feeling of urgency/excitement/overwhelm over already having piles of books to read and then having to add on to the lists of books you want to find. I’ve only read a handful of these and I read some others + articles that deal with the history of monstrosity and sexuality for a paper I did last semester. Why can’t I learn to not sleep ever
Books & journals.
[from the archives]
Is there a skill you’ve always wanted to master someday, but kept procrastinating on? A language you started learning – then abandoned? A topic in class you’ve never quite grasped? Or maybe you just want to expand your horizon and try something new? Distract yourself from your usual studies?
This challenge is the perfect opportunity to achieve that! Pick a skill and see how much you can improve and grow in 30 days – or really start working on your to-read list (I know those books have been piling up), your portfolio for that dream job in Illustration you want, or your blog you’ve been meaning to post more original content on.
Self-growth and development are so, so important, which is the main reason why I created this challenge.
The idea of this challenge is that people from all communities come together to gain knowledge, add skills and just have fun with the amazing amount of resources out there. This way, we can all support and motivate each other, whatever field you might be interested in.
Post an introduction with the hashtag #30dol with your goals and expectations for the month (starting June 1st), and what your current level is. (Of course, you can join in later as well, but it’s fun to start a the same time!) In the end, you’ll be able to compare and see how much has changed!
Rules:
choose a topic or field you want to concentrate on
post an introduction to #30dol
define your goals or aspirations
update daily or weekly, we want to hear from you! ♥
post a picture, a sketch, or audio, whatever you deem fitting to show us all your progress for the day/week
Here are some ideas for you:
bullet journaling (read about it here on @emmastudies, here’s an amazing online course on it)
books/reading (if you don’t have a personal to-read list, here is one with the best books of the 20th century, best series with a gay plot/subplot, and books everyone should have read at least once)
coding (here are some sites to learn html, css, data science, python 3, java, etc.: x x x x)
design/illustration ( stickers and illustration, character illustration, Ink Illustration, 45 best adobe illustrator tutorials,
business/freelance/open your own shop (tips on how to open your own sticker shop, digital skills: web analytics and marketing)
languages (apps like lingodeer, duolingo, lingvist, busuu, blogs like @lovelybluepanda. there are also so many pdfs and amazing websites out there depending on your target language!)
online mass education courses (edx, coursera, skillshare, futurelearn where universities and professionals teach you about their subject - be that astronomy, engineering, ancient greek history, artificial intelligence or medicine!)
social media (learn to take iphone photos for your tumblr or instagram, and here’s a great post by @studyquill on how to start and maintain a studyblr!)
photography (travel street photography, find photographers you admire like annie leibovitz or henri cartier bresson and read about their path, or browse youtube channels like negative feedback which specialize on photography)
creative writing (there are tons of workshops online - you could also try to set yourself a piece or word limit similar to nanowrimo)
culinary (check recipe websites, or challenge yourself to try one new recipe a day, or dedicate the month to a specific cuisine)
music (learn music production, andrew huang has also made a video on how to start making music here)
film and filmmaking (karsten runquist’s channel is wonderful for film analysis, learn about cinematography basics here and film history here)
painting (acrylic painting, sketchbook illustration. you could challenge yourself to fill an entire sketchbook/create a piece every day or week, or to improve a specific technique)
Every resource linked is free (if you click on the links you can get Skillshare for free for two months and cancel anytime), so all you need is some free time and lots of motivation!!
I’m very happy to be announcing this to you all, and will be working on my Japanese for this challenge – so excited to see what you all and I will do and how far we can come!
Use #30dol as the general tag, and add your field (your specific subject, or writing, painting, lang(uages), pho(tography), film, book, design) to find people doing something similar! Though honestly one of the things I’m most excited about is the multidisciplinary aspect - we are such a brilliant and colorful community :)
Have fun guys!!
This sounds like a great thing to do for June - I’d love to see others doing it too!
My favourite bookshop and the most beautiful I know 📖💛
All Souls College, Oxford University, Oxford, England
by itchyfeet
Frankfurt, Germany, 1898
Can you recommend some books or somethung else to start learning more about classics and the whole history for someone who is just getting into classics but isnt studying them
yeah sure! classics is Big and i really don’t know much about greece so this list is mostly about rome. also, if you already have a text you’re interested in then honestly. i’d just get the oxford world’s classics edition because they have really in depth introductions.
the iliad (tr. caroline alexander) and the odyssey (tr. emily wilson) - homer. it’s…… homer
the oresteia (tr. sarah ruden) - aeschylus. tragedies are really short so you can read them quickly to see if they’re something you like
symposium (tr. robin waterfield) - plato. i’m not a fan of plato but imo the symposium is short and fairly easy to read, and a good place to start with for greek philosophy
a brief history of ancient greece: politics, society and culture - sarah b. pomeroy. i haven’t read this but i’ve been told it’s a good introduction to greek history
the rise of rome: from the iron age to the punic wars - kathryn lomas. this book covers around 800 years of history, putting rome in the context of the rest of italy. and it has really good analysis of the ancient sources and modern archeology. i also found it very accessible as a person who knew nothing about the period or archeology
the war with catilina and the war with iugurtha (tr. william batstone) - sallust. the history itself probably isn’t the most important, but it’s quite short, and a good introduction to roman historiography. also i love catilina,
augustan rome - andrew wallace-hadrill. it’s only 171 pages but is an amazing introduction to the period. it goes through the history and then looks at literary and cultural developments in relation to that history
the aeneid (tr. sarah ruden or frederick ahl) - vergil. it’s like….. possibly the most influential piece of roman literature ever
amores (tr. a.d. melville) - ovid. if you’re interested in latin elegy/augustan rome/ovid himself
the origin of empire: rome from the republic to hadrian - david potter. which was published like. last week so i haven’t read it yet. but it’s from the same series as the rise of rome and from the introduction and table of contents it looks equally good!
you can also be a goblin and get into roman history via historical fiction:
roma sub rosa series - steven saylor. my favourite……. detective novels set in the late republic. wicked characterisations of literally everyone
the cicero trilogy - robert harris. the books that got me into roman history. about cicero and will familiarise you with the politics of the late republic reaaaally quickly. humanises cicero but in the process oversimplifies Many Things
masters of rome - collen mccullough. rome from 115 - 27 bce. the first 2 books are about marius and sulla, and slap. after that they’re good but overshadowed by colleen’s thirst for caesar. took me 8 months to read
Finally reorganized my office bookcase so I don’t lose my mind trying to write a diss chapter, a conference paper, half a dozen grant applications, and a novel at the same time 🗃️
how do you fend off panic-attack imposter syndrome while applying for jobs and postdocs?
ugh, god, this is not going to be helpful, i’m sorry. to be honest i’ve just sort of… plateaued? it’s exhausting to be constantly reminding yourself that things won’t work out. it’s a fact, a statistical reality; stressing myself out about it doesn’t do anything to change that, as one rejection email i received yesterday put it, “given the number of applicants, we can offer less than one percent a fellowship.” i just feel like… any self-perceived inadequacies pale in comparison to the bare facts of the situation, and the only way to tackle that statistical reality is to just.. apply… and whatever!! if it happens it happens! i can confidently say that i’ve done just about everything i could have done to give myself the best shot; if that’s more or less than other people, that’s not something i can really control at this point. i may feel less-qualified or prepared, but that doesn’t matter in the face of the truth, which is that i’m going to apply to things anyway. otherwise, what’s the point of going through any of this in the first place?
applying for things is mechanical more than emotional for me, at this point. i’ve sent in 27 applications this year: 10 for tenure-track medieval lit jobs, 14 for postdocs, 3 for other jobs that are outside my field of expertise. last year i applied for 18 fellowships and grants, many of those for the second time. i get a lot of rejections. if i let myself emotionally attach to that process any more than the bare minimum, i would probably have dropped out of grad school by now.
i will also say, because this is something that my roommate has been tackling in a way that’s made me think a lot about it as well–seeking validation from the institution validates the institution. we all do it; it’s something we can’t help, if we’re participating in higher ed. but depending on what your own politics are around the university, that may or may not be something you want to do. for me, it matters a lot that i continue to be critical and to maintain a practice of knowledge and politics of “study,” to use moten & harney’s term, that exists apart from the academy, as much as that’s possible. coming back to that, and to the value of my own thinking outside the structure of the neoliberal university, is another way that i keep from overinvesting in the market.
Alnwick Castle
In case anyone is interested, here’s my article on Christopher Isherwood.
*curtsies* Hi Duke! Can you recommend any books that are about the relationship of art to humanity/relationships/individuals? Examples would be The Picture of Dorian Gray, The Princess Bride, and If We Were Villains (though more the latter two than Dorian Gray, because if memory serves the Picture there is technically important but secondary overall). Thanks very much for all the effort you put into this blog!
*Curtsies* Now this is my kinda book rec (shocking, I know). *Deep breath* aaaaand maybe look into:
Margaret Atwood, The Blind Assassin
Eve Babitz, Sex & Rage
Mikhail Bulgakov, Black Snow
Eleanor Catton, The Rehearsal
Robertson Davies, Tempest-Tost
Jennifer Egan, A Visit from the Goon Squad
Mark Andrew Ferguson, The Lost Boys Symphony
Jonathan Galassi, Muse
Hermann Hesse, Steppenwolf
Keri Hulme, The Bone People (lots of trigger warnings, approach with caution)
Siri Hustvedt, The Blazing World
Jonathan Lethem, The Fortress of Solitude
Iris Murdoch, The Sea, the Sea, The Black Prince, and Under the Net (but really honestly anything by Iris Murdoch)
Emily St. John Mandel, Station Eleven
W. Somerset Maugham, Theatre
Jacqueline Susann, Valley of the Dolls
Walter Tevis, The Man Who Fell to Earth (the intersection of art and science in this book is fascinating)
Laura Van Den Berg, The Third Hotel
Kate Weinberg, The Truants
Kayla Rae Whittaker, The Animators
Meg Wolitzer, Sleepwalking and The Interestings
Jan Wolkers, Turkish Delight (this one is very NSFW and also comes with a lot of trigger warnings)
There are certainly others I’m not thinking of, but this is probably enough to be getting started with. Happy reading!