50 posts!
And more to come!
noise dept.
almost home
d e v o n
Cosmic Funnies
Game of Thrones Daily

tannertan36
styofa doing anything
Monterey Bay Aquarium
Jules of Nature

shark vs the universe
taylor price
One Nice Bug Per Day
let's talk about Bridgerton tea, my ask is open
Sweet Seals For You, Always
ojovivo
Today's Document

izzy's playlists!
I'd rather be in outer space đ¸

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art blog(derogatory)
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@seacowartist
50 posts!
And more to come!
The Spotify playlist I made I also collaged the above image for it ,tell me what you think!
Inspired by my outfit and how i felt that day, outfit below đđ˝
writing is just sitting in front of a computer and making up problems for imaginary people while ignoring your own. fun and casual hobby.
I love how you can wish on them and they look fluffy and cloudlike when dying, and warm yellow đ when first blossomed đź.Also they're entirely edible.
But my favorite part is the thing that many hate the most:
Their endurance and stubborn will
They will survive horrible conditions , grow out of cracks in sidewalks
No matter what the world may throw,
they are determined to grow
A weed is just another way of saying a successful, prosperous plant
To dandelions with love,
A child of immigrants just like you
Ghibli-inspired Inktober by Anne Leblanc
adhd paralysis sucks bcuz im just sitting there and my brain is like
YOU ARE WASTING TIME YOU ARE WASTING TIME YOU ARE WASTING TIME YOU ARE WASTING TIME YOU ARE WASTING TIME YOU ARE WASTING TIME YOU ARE WASTING TIME YOU ARE WASTING TIME YOU ARE WASTING TIME YOU ARE WASTING TIME
no work done no rest gained. literally no point of this at all
just wanted to share these executive dysfunction comics i am so sorry to whoever drew them these have been saved on my phone for like 6 years
My manatee pokemon fan creation drawing.
It's a grass ghost type because the challenge had you do the opposite of one of your favorite types and one of mine is water!
My manatee pokemon fan creation drawing.
It's a grass ghost type because the challenge had you do the opposite of one of your favorite types and one of mine is water!
A disabled elf and her giant girlfriend
Kind comments and polite constructive criticism only!
What colors do you think I should use for them, when I color it in?
I should remake this drawing
someone: the disney little mermaid is a bad adaptation of the original story because sheâs meant to die at the end
me: the original story was meant to be an outlet for the male author having unrequited and repressed romantic feelings for another man and the only happy ending he saw for a same sex attracted man was to die and the only reward was being able to earn his soul through the joy of children his stories brought while the Disney adaptation touched upon the same themes with the work of Howard Ashman, another same sex attracted man but instead being able to give the mermaid a happy and loving relationship where she lives out her dreams is just as thematic and truer to the what the story sought to tell instead of having it become a tragedy. in this essay i
Okay so the rest of the essay be here:
I am going to preface this by saying the people involved in these stories did not intend for The Little Mermaid to be a 1:1 replica of their lives but itâs clear how significant their experiences shaped the telling of it.
Hans Christian Andersenâs sexuality isnât easy to define especially since the society and culture he lived in wouldnât have the language or the framework to discuss sexuality, and it would do a disservice to say he was gay when he didnât have a known romantic life. But his love life has been defined by his numerous unrequited loves that ranged from women to men, but also his steadfast refusal to have sex.
Another aspect of Andersen is how heavily religious he was and how that showed through his work. Some of his other stories like âThe Ugly Ducklingâ, âThe Emperorâs New Clothesâ, âThumbelinaâ, and âPrincess and the Peaâ, all have themes around being alienated but that there isnât a true villain in any of them and their happy endings be something close to divinity and good morality. Though not overtly religious in his stories itâs clear how much faith he had in God doing the right thing in the end.
The Little Mermaid however, is probably one of the most overt in how his religion and his sexuality intersected.
A brief overview of Andersenâs The Little Mermaid is that in his story, Mermaids are creatures born without souls, however they live significantly longer than humans.
But itâs precisely because of this, the titular Mermaid longs to become human in hopes she too will gain a soul. She chooses to trade her tongue to get a pair of legs to woo a human she rescued, and on these legs all she feels is pain and suffering, and she must do so in silence. If she cannot gain the love of her prince, she will die without a soul, and never get to heaven. All the while, the prince loves her only as a brother would in the time they spend together and eventually chooses to marry another girl.
The mermaid is then given a chance to return to her life as a mermaid if she kills the prince before she dies but in doing so she will never have a soul. She loves him too much to do so and chooses death over living as a creature with no soul.
But when she dies, she finds herself amongst the daughters of the air, and is told because of her love and her suffering she has the chance to gain a soul unlike any other mermaid. She can work for 200 years making sure children are happy and be granted a soul thereafter.
So, looking at this, you can draw clear parallels with this story and Andersenâs personal life.
Like the mermaid, Andersen saw himself as a creature without a soul. He too was in love with a man who only saw himself as a brother to Andersen. Andersen saw himself doomed to be silent, doomed to constantly feel like he was walking on knives and doomed to be alone.
But his idea of a joyous ending is that his suffering wasnât all for naught, that his stories that he wrote for children and the joy they brought WOULD eventually grant his greatest desire to be granted a soul and accepted into heaven.
Of course there isnât a villain, Andersen accepted that his culture that cruelly casted him out was correct in doing so, and that he had to work within the system to exist.
The Little Mermaidâs themes of suffering and love were tied to Andersenâs life and his sexuality intersecting with his religion.
The 1989 Disney version has consistently gone on record that despite have Musker and Clements being directors, Howard Ashman, a gay man with AIDS in the 80s, was the creative force in character writing, music and the creative direction the movie eventually went in.
In the movie, all of the religious aspects have been stripped away, and the motivations have been changed.
Ariel no longer wants to gain a soul, her desire to become human instead is tied with feeling alienated with her home life and wanting acceptance elsewhere. Her hobby of collecting human stuff HEAVILY echoes the experiences of many LGBT+ people who had interests outside of their gender roles, and being unable to to see eye to eye with bigoted parents. People often mistake her attempts at asserting her own identity as âbeing in loveâ when the narrative is about her wanting agency and respect for who she is.
Ursula being a villain in this version is tied to how LGBT+ people of the 1980s understanding at least part of their oppression was due to predatory and unscrupulous people, as well as being systematic. This contrasts with Andersenâs work because Andersen, despite suffering, always put faith in the systems surrounding him and only striving to work within them, while Ashman understood that to work with society you donât do business with morally neutral people.
While Andersen sees the only option for people, or to him, creatures, like him to gain any morally good ending, they need to remain passive and work within the system to get what they want.
But the 1989âs response to that is, no, to get a happy ending, you NEED to question the system, you need to fight against it because it is a system that only uses you to get what it needs and it needs to be destroyed to get a happy ending. Like, you CAN NOT separate how this change in the story occurred with Howard Ashman being a gay man with AIDS during 1980s America.
In the end, Ariel reconciling with her bigoted father to be able to live her life as a human with another man thematically ties in to how Andersen saw his own happy ending.
The Little Mermaid is a story that can not be separated from two men who dealt with complex relationships with their own identities, and itâs disingenuous to say the 1989 film is a bad adaptation for not religiously following the plot points of the original.
The Little Mermaid is at its best when it explores how a personâs sexuality and identity is alienated from the culture around them, and how they navigate the system that oppresses them.
Andersen saw the system to be just and his idea of a happy ending clashes with Howard Ashmanâs own experiences of a system that needed to be defied to have earned a happy ending.
All in all, the 1989 movie is a good adaptation, not for slavishly keeping every detail, but for reflecting where society is, and for keeping the themes of unrequited love, identity and coming of age relevant to their audience.
Exactly the little mermaid was about exploring identity and for Ariel , romance was part of her journey to finding her identity.
page of requests from my channel
^__^
you can request something for me to draw in the comments and i'd appreciate some feedback!!
tiktok - @_justsadguy._
telegram channel - @itsjustsadguy
have a nice day :-)
Recent drawings and doodles I've done
Fresh art piece for mermay
Finally starting a Snail Mail clubđ
Fantasy Mail âËâš âşââ§
I've been working really hard on it â and it was so much fun to create and draw the theme for June!
đŞ Join and get these goodies sent to your home đŞ
When we were children, my sister had private music lessons at her violin teacherâs house. I only visited there once, but I still remember that afternoon. The teacher had an artificial pond in her yard, a large beautiful thing with lily pads and plant life. And in the pond, there were goldfish. I had never seen such enormous goldfish.Â
I spent several minutes just staring at them (and trying to convince them to bite my fingers.) When my sisterâs violin lesson ended, her teacher came out to the yard and explained that these goldfish were the same small creatures that were often unfortunately sold in plastic bags at state fairs. They were only about two inches long apiece, when she bought them and put them in the new, empty pond. In essence, they were like every goldfish I had seen before, but they had been given a much larger, much richer environment in which to flourish. As a result, they had grown into some of the most remarkable, vibrant creatures my twelve-year-old self had ever met with. All because of a pond.Â
Funny what lessons children remember. My sister doesnât play the violin anymore, but that was the first time I caught a glimpse of the overwhelming extent to which it matters, the way the world treats us.
Reblogged again for this drawing I made for it
Give us room to grow and see how we flourish.
And if the pond freezes over because winter has come, itâll thaw again and the goldfish will be fine.