I Was Riding The Train Back Home From An Exhausting Day At Work. I Haven’t Been Wearing The Compulsory

I was riding the train back home from an exhausting day at work. I haven’t been wearing the compulsory hijab for months and today was no exception. At some point I stood on my tiptoes to see the station sign outside. There were two young men standing next to me, talking to each other. One facing me and the other with his back to me. Our eyes met for the briefest moment before I looked away.

I had taken my glasses off because my eyes were so tired and I was staring blearily at nothing when the guy facing me held his phone in front of my face. He was showing me a pic of a white background with some words on it. I tried to read the words with my poor sight. Thankfully the font was big enough for me to read the words. ‘چقد کیوتی تو’ (you’re so cute). I smiled. I found this simple, silent act so nice and kind. We didn’t exchange one word for the rest of the ride. He probably shows that pic to everyone who’s not wearing hijab and is fighting against the oppressive Islamic regime. Whatever the intent, the gesture warmed my heart and I felt slightly less alone.

More Posts from Captjackmerlyn and Others

2 years ago
Did Someone Say SEASON 2???! ✨✨✨✨✨✨✨✨
Did Someone Say SEASON 2???! ✨✨✨✨✨✨✨✨
Did Someone Say SEASON 2???! ✨✨✨✨✨✨✨✨
Did Someone Say SEASON 2???! ✨✨✨✨✨✨✨✨
Did Someone Say SEASON 2???! ✨✨✨✨✨✨✨✨
Did Someone Say SEASON 2???! ✨✨✨✨✨✨✨✨
Did Someone Say SEASON 2???! ✨✨✨✨✨✨✨✨
Did Someone Say SEASON 2???! ✨✨✨✨✨✨✨✨
Did Someone Say SEASON 2???! ✨✨✨✨✨✨✨✨
Did Someone Say SEASON 2???! ✨✨✨✨✨✨✨✨

Did someone say SEASON 2???! ✨✨✨✨✨✨✨✨


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2 years ago

Be kind to each other!

Happy Easter

Happy Easter
Happy Easter
Happy Easter

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2 years ago

This guy is really going to regret sitting down with Jon


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2 years ago

“[Keanu] Reeves said a recent conversation about “The Matrix” with a 15-year-old put things into a terrifying perspective. The actor explained to the teenager that his character, Neo, is fighting for what’s real. The teenager scoffed and said, “Who cares if it’s real?” “People are growing up with these tools: We’re listening to music already that’s made by AI in the style of Nirvana, there’s NFT digital art,” Reeves said. “It’s cool, like, Look what the cute machines can make! But there’s a corporatocracy behind it that’s looking to control those things. Culturally, socially, we’re gonna be confronted by the value of real, or the non-value. And then what’s going to be pushed on us? What’s going to be presented to us?” “It’s this sensorium. It’s spectacle. And it’s a system of control and manipulation,” Reeves continued. “We’re on our knees looking at cave walls and seeing the projections, and we’re not having the chance to look behind us.””

Keanu Reeves Slams Deepfakes, Film Contract Prevents Digital Edits - Variety


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2 years ago

Neil Gaiman's CHIVALRY: From Illuminated Manuscripts to Comics

One of the many reasons I wanted to adapt Neil Gaiman's Chivalry into graphic novel form was to create a comic as a bridge and commentary re: comics and illuminated manuscripts.

Neil Gaiman's CHIVALRY: From Illuminated Manuscripts To Comics

We're often told that the first comic book was Action Comics #1 featuring Superman, a collection of Superman comic strips that morphed into comic books as an art form.

Sequential art predates Action Comics #1.

Action Comics popularized sequential art book storytelling that had already appeared in other forms in fits and starts throughout history. Comic books didn't take off as a popular medium for several reasons, not least of which was the necessary printing process hadn't been invented yet and it's hard to popularize - and commercialize - something most people can never see. 

You find sequential art in cave paintings and in Egyptian hieroglyphics. I've read that comics (manga) were invented by the Japanese in 12th century scrolls.

And sequential art appears over and over again in Western art going back well over 1000 years, and in book form at least 1100 years ago.

The most obvious example of early sequential art in Western art - as a complete narrative in sequence - is the Bayeux Tapestry. 

Neil Gaiman's CHIVALRY: From Illuminated Manuscripts To Comics

At 230 feet long, this embroidered length of cloth was likely commissioned around the year 1070 by Bishop Odo, brother of William the Conqueror. It depicts the Battle of Hastings in 1066 and the invasion of England by the Normans. (The tapestry was made in England, not in France, but it is called the Bayeux tapestry because that's where it is now.)

Imagine what a task it was to embroider this thing. Whew. And you thought it was hard learning Photoshop.

This work of art is important in the history of sequential narrative, but the Norman invasion is also important to the legend of King Arthur - and another important English legend - for reasons we'll get into later. 

It's complicated.

All this is why you see this art in the background of this page of Chivalry.

Neil Gaiman's CHIVALRY: From Illuminated Manuscripts To Comics

Using the Romanesque art style of the tapestry in panel 1, I've added the Latin phrase "Rex Quondom, Rexque Futurus" - "The Once and Future King", the final words of Sir Thomas Malory's Le Morte d'Arthur as inscribed on King Arthur's tomb, and the title of T.H. White's famous Arthurian novel. 

My original intention was to draw this Bayeux Tapestry scene out and juxtapose it with shots of Galaad interacting with the children, but the two page sequence I imagined didn't really work as well in reality as it did in my head. 

Foremost among my concerns was that the tapestry reference might be too obscure for most readers. I wanted to weave the visual meta-text of Chivalry into the story (For further reading on this project and my use of visual meta-text, symbolism, and history in Neil Gaiman's Chivalry, go HERE. And HERE. And HERE. And Yet again HERE.) in such a way as it would enhance the experience for people who "got" the visual meaning, while not dragging things down for people who didn't. So I cut this scene down to one panel.

The tapestry is a complete, long form comic strip created over 1100 years before some people claim comics were invented. So, I loved being able to reference it here.

But even more interesting to me are the sequential art sequences that appear in illuminated manuscripts - comics in book form.

I once got into a rather vicious argument with an academic who insisted illuminated manuscripts were comics. I said no. She said yes. Then she insulted the lowly comic artist and blocked me on Facebook.

Whatever.

My point was not that you can't find sequential art in illuminated manuscripts. My point is that an illustrated book isn't de facto a comic. Most illuminated manuscripts are illustrated books. Some illuminated manuscripts contain sequential art.

Just because opera is music, that doesn't mean all music is opera.

Just because comics books are books that doesn't mean all books are comic books.

And just because some illuminated manuscripts contain sequential art, that doesn't mean all illuminated manuscripts are sequential art.

But one is.

Let me show you it.

One of the earliest examples of an illuminated manuscript with comic art is The Bible d'Etienne Harding which you can see in this really bad jpg here, sorry, best I could find.

Neil Gaiman's CHIVALRY: From Illuminated Manuscripts To Comics

Created around the year 1109, property of a French Cistercian monk, it combines sequences like this with pages of text and illustration.

Neil Gaiman's CHIVALRY: From Illuminated Manuscripts To Comics

Not a comic book IMHO, but an illuminated manuscript with sequences of text, illustration and sequential narrative.

It's no more a "comic book" than a newspaper is for having text, illustration, and comic strips in it.

IMHO, academic lady.

And here's a look at the Old English Hexateuch (hexateuch refers to the first 6 books of the Bible) which I think is far more visually complex and interesting work, and comes much closer to the illuminated manuscript as comic, but still intersperses large sequences of text and illustration with sequential storytelling sequences. So I don't consider it a comic, but a book with sequential work in it.

Neil Gaiman's CHIVALRY: From Illuminated Manuscripts To Comics

Now this work below is a different matter. This is from the Holkham Bible Picture Book, circa about 1330.

Neil Gaiman's CHIVALRY: From Illuminated Manuscripts To Comics

This thing is genius. It measures a little larger than a modern comic, around 8"x11", and almost every page of it is like this spread here. 231 pages of beautifully rendered art, with repeated use of banderoles - "speech scrolls"  (basically word balloons) -  and captions, and (mostly) real sequential art. I've never seen anything else that comes even close to it, and by all accounts, neither has anyone else. 

It may not be a modern comic book - but it's a comic book as far as I can tell. I don't think there's any other illuminated manuscript that is as complete, sophisticated, and innovative a sequential storytelling work.

If this were printed and seen by more people, the comic book medium would have taken off centuries earlier, IMHO. But it wasn't. It was tucked away in a monastery somewhere and few people ever saw it. It ended up being forgotten for centuries until it popped up again around 1816 when a banker sold it to an avid book collector, Thomas Coke, Earl of Leicester, who inherited Holkham Hall and its library and set about restoring and expanding it. 

The banker wrote, “a very curious MS. just brought here from the Continent. . . which I think one of the greatest curiosities I ever saw”.

Sequential art got invented over and over and over by one artist after another until one day centuries later, some teenaged boys found their newspaper strips gathered together in a cheap format, and suddenly comic books were popular and like new.

And then a lot of people who didn't seem to realize that books had had pictures in them for centuries got all up in arms about the harms of books with pictures in them.

I think it's funny that it is called the Holkham Bible Picture Book. There really was no "comic" art language when this work was created or when academics began to catalogue this sort of thing. Will they change the name now?

Who can say.

Anyway, another Holkham Bible Picture Book reference for you.

Neil Gaiman's CHIVALRY: From Illuminated Manuscripts To Comics

Look familiar?

I referenced it in this scene in Chivalry.

Neil Gaiman's CHIVALRY: From Illuminated Manuscripts To Comics

One of the fun things about the Holkham is that it opens with a discussion between a friar who has commissioned the work and the artist. The friar admonishes the artist to do a good job on the project because it will be shown to important people. And the artist responds, "Indeed, I certainly will and, if God lets me live, never will you see another such book."

He wasn't kidding.

You can see the entire manuscript HERE. 

Sponsored by my Patreon. Thank you.


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2 years ago

Reblog this post with your nationality and answer, genuinely curious!!

Reblog for bigger sample size 👍


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1 year ago

Torchwood is like. What if a sitcom was evil. In the parallel evil universe Torchwood is just a normal sitcom


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