@certifiablyunhinged replied to your post: finding classes that fit into a schedule and won’t...
Im gonna have 18 elective credits probably in my 4th year and im dreading finding that many
that’s awful I’m so sorry
seen from United Kingdom
seen from Türkiye
seen from United States
seen from United Kingdom

seen from United States
seen from France
seen from Türkiye

seen from United States

seen from Türkiye
seen from Türkiye
seen from Italy
seen from Italy
seen from Uzbekistan

seen from Canada
seen from Yemen
seen from United Kingdom

seen from Malaysia

seen from Italy
seen from United Kingdom

seen from Australia
@certifiablyunhinged replied to your post: finding classes that fit into a schedule and won’t...
Im gonna have 18 elective credits probably in my 4th year and im dreading finding that many
that’s awful I’m so sorry
@certifiablyunhinged replied to your post: @certifiablyunhinged replied to your post: ...
Sign me up as professional bad vibe analyst, i can Get bad vibes from up to 100 meters, or 2 follower degrees
I’ll remember that, that’s a good kind of consultant to have on hand I’ll bet
@certifiablyunhinged replied to your post: trying to decide if it’s reasonable to block a...
It literally is, smash that button
cool, thank you Kurtis for validating this Bad Vibe
perfect @certifiablyunhinged
Tbh its a good angle pstew did a similar thing for macbeth, the wyrd sisters are fucked up ghost nurses and i havent actually seen it, but i have seen the really cool version of the porter scene in that one
yeah that sounds like it would be neat. I think it’s cool how things get done differently in adaptations that use different eras, it can just also be a little bit odd at times? like in the beginning there was some lady singing at a formal event and it was a very typical 1930s-sounding song and then McKellen starts talking in Shakespearean english and it’s a weird transition
but it’s a pretty cool thing in a lot of ways too. and it helps to make up for a lot of the context that modern audiences lack. like my prof for this course likes to talk a lot about the historical context of the plays because it makes a play’s relevance to its audience a lot more understandable to us and the whole thing is more appreciable? so I think it’s cool how adaptations like this kind of make that aspect more relatable for us by recontextualizing the work
Iis that the richard the iii thats like vaguely wwii ish? Where hes in a jeep when he says my kingdom for a horse, which i just realized how divorced from original meaning that becomes
yeah it’s like, 1930s civil war-ish England kind of thing is the general idea
my prof spoke highly of this version and a couple of the readings I’ve done for my essay referenced it so I figured it was worth a watch while I worked on my knitting and stuff anyway. it’s pretty interesting for sure but also quite peculiar so far
Akso i just realized thst yonic is a real word not just like s typo or something and im gonna say it in my rssay about the yellow wallpaaper 100% if i can
Knock yourself out man. It’s Scandinavian in origin I believe? Not as widely recognized as a word as phallic is but definitely useful at times like these
What the fuck kinda interpretstions is this where the dwarves are all individual phallus... what does that mean
Tbh? Idk. Idfk. This prof’s lectures are vague, confusing, and half-baked at best, and I haven’t read the source material from Bettelheim himself that she was referencing. But something about how they mine the earth for resources is apparently very phallic??? And how they embody masculinity or some shit but also there’s stuff about how they never actually approach Snow White romantically or sexually idkkkk it was a weird and awkward lecture for everyone