The Vampyre by John William Polidori
Carmilla by J. Sharidon le Fanu
The Flowers Of Evil by Charles Baudelaire
Perfume: The Story Of A Murderer by Patrick Suskind & translated by John E. Woods
The Strange Case Of Doctor Jekyll & Mister Hyde by John Louis Stevenson
Complete Stories & Poems by Edgar Allen Poe
The Picture Of Dorian Grey by Oscar Wild
The Turn Of The Screw by Henry James
The Island Of Doctor Moreau by H.G. Wells
The Hounds Of Baskerville by Sir Arthur Conan Doyle
The Monk by Matthew Gregory Lewis
Jane Eyre by Charlotte Bronte
The Legend Of Sleepy Hollow by Washington Irving
Uncle Silas by J. Sheridan le Fanu
Melmoth The Wanderer by Charles Robert Maturin
The Woman In White by Wilkie Collins
*Note these are all novels published BEFORE the 1900s -- I've got a whole other list of those. If you're interested, hmu.
LITERATURE
House Mothers and Haunted Daughters: Shirley Jackson and Female Gothic (1996)
"No proper feeling for her house": The Relational Formation of White Womanliness in Shirley Jackson's Fiction (2013)
WALKING ALONE TOGETHER: FAMILY MONSTERS IN "THE HAUNTING OF HILL HOUSE" (2014)
"Some-are like My Own—": Emily Dickinson's Christology of Embodiment (2004)
A CIRCUMFERENCE OF EMILY DICKINSON (1973)
TWO WOMEN: THE STUDY OF THE DEATH THEME IN EMILY DICKINSON AND EDNA ST. VINCENT MILLAY (1967)
ECCENTRICITIES IN EMILY DICKINSON'S NATURE POETRY (1986)
Presence and Place in Emily Dickinson's Poetry (1984)
The Development of Dickinson's Style (1988)
The Riddles of Emily Dickinson (1978)
Identity, Complicity, and Resistance in The Handmaid's Tale (1994)
Forced, Forbidden and Rejected Motherhood in Margaret Atwood’s The Handmaid’s Tale (2006)
“TWO LEGGED WOMBS”: SURROGACY AND MARGARET ATWOOD’S THE HANDMAID’S TALE (2019)
“I AM A NATURAL RESOURCE”: THE ECONOMY OF COMMODIFICATION IN ATWOOD’S THE HANDMAID’S TALE (2011)
The Ambiguity of Power in Margaret Atwood’s The Handmaid’s Tale (2010)
Hairball Speaks: Margaret Atwood and the Narrative Legacy of the Female Grotesque (2010)
IS THERE NO BALM IN GILEAD? — BIBLICAL INTERTEXT IN THE HANDMAID'S TALE (1993)
The Eye as Weapon in If Beale Street Could Talk (1978)
The American Dream Unhinged: Romance and Reality in "The Great Gatsby" and "Fight Club" (2007)
Historicizing Japan's Abject Femininity: Reading Women's Bodies in "Nihon ryōiki" (2013)
THEATRE
"An Excellent Thing in Woman": Virgo and Viragos in "King Lear" (1998)
"Documents in Madness": Reading Madness and Gender in Shakespeare's Tragedies and Early Modern Culture (1991)
"Service" in King Lear (1958)
In Defense of Goneril and Regan (1970)
See What Breeds about Her Heart: "King Lear", Feminism, and Performance (2004)
“Struck with Her Tongue”: Speech, Gender, and Power in King Lear (2015)
"The Darke and Vicious Place": The Dread of the Vagina in "King Lear" (1999)
The Emotional Landscape of King Lear (1988)
FILM
Review: Reservoir Dogs (1993)
A Slice of Delirium: Scorsese's "Taxi Driver" Revisited (1995)
Review: Taxi Driver (1976)
TAXI DRIVER (1976)
Docufictions: An Interview with Martin Scorsese on Documentary Film (2007)
AMERICAN CINEMA OF THE SIXTIES (1984)
Anatomy of the "Prick Flick": TAKING THE MEASURE OF MANLY MOVIES (2017)
Films: All the President's Men at the ABC (1976)
Back to the Future: The Humanist "Matrix" (2003)
RE-WRITING "REALITY": READING "THE MATRIX" (2000)
Bringing Love to the Screen (Interview with James Laxton) (2020)
INTERVIEW WITH BARRY JENKINS (2016)
Chasing Fae: "The Watermelon Woman" and Black Lesbian Possibility (2000)
Class and Allegory in Contemporary Mass Culture: Dog Day Afternoon as a Political Film (1977)
Sidney Lumet's Humanism: The Return to the Father in "Twelve Angry Men" (1986)
Intensified Continuity Visual Style in Contemporary American Film (2002)
LOVE AND THEFT (Shoplifters) (2018)
Notes on the Split-Field Diopter (2007)
Positive Images & the Coming out Film: THE ART AND POLITICS OF GAY AND LESBIAN CINEMA (2000)
Rock 'n' Roll Sound Tracks and the Production of Nostalgia (1999)
The Sounds of Silence: Songs in Hollywood Films since the 1960s (2002)
The Godfather Saga (1978)
"Plastics": "The Graduate" as Film and Novel (1985)
The New Wave's American Reception (2010)
OTHER
Review: When Evolution Became Conversation: "Vestiges of Creation," Its Readers, and Its Respondents in Victorian Britain (2001)
Movement, knowledge, emotion: Gay activism and HIV/AIDS in Australia (2011)
On the Trail of the "Witches:" Wise Women, Midwives and the European Witch Hunts (1987)
"Cooking with Love": Food, Gender, and Power (2010)
Female Identity, Food, and Power in Contemporary Florence (1988)
Feminist Food Studies: A Brief History
A modern day holy anorexia? Religious language in advertising and anorexia nervosa in the West (2003)
Fast, Feast, and Flesh: The Religious Significance of Food to Medieval Women (1985)
The Problem of Female Sanctity in Carolingian Europe c. 780-920 (1995)
Women, piety and practice: A study of women and religious practice in Malaysia (2008)
It's world poetry day so here are some of my favorite poems:
Failing and Flying by Jack Gilbert
What the Living Do by Marie Howe
Night Walk by Franz Wright
Crossword by Lloyd Schwartz
The Great Fires by Jack Gilbert
Love Train by Tomás Q. Morín
Divorced Fathers and Pizza Crusts by Mark Halliday
Perhaps the World Ends Here by Joy Harjo
in another string of the multiverse, perhaps by Michaella Batten
acknowledgments by Danez Smith
Death Wish by Josh Alex Baker
San Francisco by Richard Brautigan
How to Watch Your Brother Die by Michael Lassell
You Are the Penultimate Love of My Life by Rebecca Hazelton
On Political(ized) Life by Kanika Lawton
All the Dead Boys Look Like Me by Christopher Soto
It Was the Animals by Natalie Diaz
In Time by W.S. Merwin
It Is Maybe Time to Admit That Michael Jordan Definitely Pushed Off by Hanif Abdurraqib
Dear Life by Maya C. Popa
I Could Touch It by Ellen Bass
To The Young Who Want To Die by Gwendolyn Brooks
Accident Report in the Tall, Tall Weeds by Ada Limón
Duke, could you recommend some books that are just... odd? I know that I'm not specific whatsoever. :(
Some extremely odd suggestions off the top of my head:
Octavia Butler, Dawn (this book is insane, lots of alien sex, good luck)
Arthur C. Clarke, Childhood’s End (will fuck you up for a while)
Susanna Clarke, Jonathan Strange and Mr. Norrell (a historical fiction/fantasy cinderblock well worth getting immersed in)
Glenn Duncan, I, Lucifer (blasphemous, filthy, and funny as hell)
Jennifer Egan, The Keep (one part family drama, one part fantasy, one part who the hell knows what)
Mark Andrew Ferguson, The Lost Boys Symphony (music and time travel)
Hermann Hesse, Steppenwolf (inexplicable magical-philosophical something)
Jack Kerouac, Big Sur (dude decamps to isolated cabin to struggle through DT, gets interrupted by Neal Cassady)
Jonathan Lethem, Chronic City (stoner art heists, escaped tigers, astronaut ghostwriters, and more)
Jack London, The Sea Wolf (one part high-seas adventure, one part queer romance in deep Victorian denial)
Walter Tevis, The Man Who Fell to Earth (bleak but one of my favorite underrated sci fi novels, also a traumatizing movie by Nicholas Roeg)
Iris Murdoch, Under the Net (a madcap romp through London/Paris featuring a kidnapped movie-star dog)
Ignazio Silone, Bread & Wine (half adventure novel, half political treatise, only 200 pages)
Laura Van Den Berg, The Third Hotel (a short, strange book that asks more questions than it answers)
Kurt Vonnegut, Breakfast of Champions (a hilarious burlesque of American culture)
Daniel Wallace, Extraordinary Adventures (one part rom-com, one part whodunit, one part wtf)
David Wong, John Dies at the End (campy comic horror)
Hope something here catches your eye!
poems about the moon 🌒
Worm Moon by Mary Oliver
Moon Song by Roy Ivan Johnson
To Catch the Moon by Chong Bum Kim
Morning Song by Sara Teasdale
Not The Moon by Margaret Atwood
Everyone Is Asleep by Enomoto Seifu-jo
The Sweetness of Dogs by Mary Oliver
The Moon Looked Into My Window by E. E. Cummings
Dear Moon by Warsan Shire
The Poet Of Ignorance by Anne Sexton
Owl and Pussycat, Some Years Later by Margaret Atwood
Will You Come? by Edward Thomas
If My Hands Could Peel by Federico García Lorca
Days Of Kindness by Leonard Cohen
The Moonlight by Noah Buchholz
The Moon was But a Chin of Gold by Emily Dickinson
What We Have by Warsan Shire
buy me a coffee
You may remember my Notion Tips posts, so I am back with more! Notion is not just a note taking and organisation app, here are some other things that can be made with Notion.
Show off your data in charts with Notion VIP charts
Make a website with Potion
Build a course with Float
Noggin is also a course builder
Make Flash cards with Zorbi
Notion Cover Generator
Make HTML Emails
Write Newsletters with Notion(beta)
Add a map to Notion (beta)
Create Automations
Icon Packs
More Icons
Gantt Charts and Embed HTML
Widgetbox App
This Calculator
Add fun Dividers
online library so far:
margaret atwood
the brontës (the complete works is a MASSIVE file fyi)
anne carson
hélène cixous
bell hooks
clarice lispector
audre lorde
virginia woolf
compilations
feminist theory
academic writing (both books and articles)
everything here is in pdf format so you should be able to download and read it on any device. it’s slow going because i have a lot of epubs that i have to convert before uploading and the folders i’ve listed here are neither complete nor comprehensive, but it’s a start!
I’ve seen a lot of curious people wanting to dive into classical music but don’t know where to start, so I have written out a list of pieces to listen to depending on mood. I’ve only put out a few, but please add more if you want to. hope this helps y’all out. :)
stereotypical delightful classical music:
battalia a 10 in d major (biber)
brandenburg concerto no. 5
brandenburg concerto no. 3
symphony no. 45 - “farewell” (haydn)
if you need to chill:
rondo alla turca
fur elise
anitra’s dance
in the steppes of central asia (borodin) (added by viola-ology)
if you need to sleep:
moonlight sonata
swan lake
corral nocturne
sleep (eric whitacre) (added by thelonecomposer)
if you need to wake up:
morning mood
summer (from the four seasons)
buckaroo holiday (if you’ve played this in orch you might end up screaming instead of waking up joyfully)
if you are feeling very proud:
pomp and circumstance
symphony no. 9 (beethoven; this is where ode to joy came from)
1812 overture
symphony no. 5, finale (tchaikovsky) (added by viola-ology)
american (dvořák)
if you feel really excited:
hoedown (copland)
bacchanale
spring (from the four seasons) (be careful, if you listen to this too much you’ll start hating it)
la gazza ladra
death and the maiden (schubert)
if you are angry and you want to take a baseball bat and start hitting a bush:
dance of the knights (from the romeo and juliet suite by prokofiev)
winter, mvt. 1 (from the four seasons)
symphony no. 10 mvt. 2 (shostakovich)
symphony no. 5 (beethoven)
totentanz (liszt)
quartet no. 8, mvt. 2 (shostakovich) (added by viola-ology)
young person’s guide to the orchestra, fugue (britten) (added by iwillsavemyworld)
symphony no. 5 mvt. 4 (shostakovich) (added by eternal-cadenza)
marche slave (tchaikovsky) (added by eternal-cadenza)
if you want to cry for a really long time:
fantasia based on russian themes (rimsky-korsakov)
adagio for strings (barber)
violin concerto in e minor (mendelssohn)
aase’s death
andante festivo
vocalise (rachmaninoff) (added by tropicalmunchakoopas)
if you want to feel like you’re on an adventure:
an american in paris (gershwin)
if you want chills:
danse macabre
russian easter overture
egmont overture (added by shayshay526)
if you want to study:
eine kleine nachtmusik
bolero (ravel)
serenade for strings (elgar)
scheherazade (rimsky-korsakov) (added by viola-ology)
pines of rome, mvt. 4 (resphigi) (added by viola-ology)
if you really want to dance:
capriccio espagnol (rimsky-korsakov)
blue danube
le cid (massenet) (added by viola-ology)
radetzky march
if you want to start bouncing in your chair:
hopak (mussorgsky)
les toreadors (from carmen suite no.1)
if you’re about to pass out and you need energy:
hungarian dance no. 1
hungarian dance no. 5
if you want to hear suspense within music:
firebird
in the hall of the mountain king
ride of the valkyries
night on bald mountain (mussorgsky) (added by viola-ology)
if you want a jazzy/classical feel:
rhapsody in blue
jazz suite no. 2 (shostakovich) (added by eternal-cadenza)
if you want to feel emotional with no explanation:
introduction and rondo capriccioso
unfinished symphony (schubert)
symphony no. 7, allegretto (beethoven) (added by viola-ology)
canon in d (pachelbel)
if you want to sit back and have a nice cup of tea:
st. paul’s suite
concerto for two violins (vivaldi)
l’arlésienne suite
concierto de aranjuez (added by tropicalmunchakoopas)
pieces that don’t really have a valid explanation:
symphony no. 40 (mozart)
cello suite no. 1 (bach)
polovtsian dances
enigma variations (elgar) (added by viola-ology)
perpetuum mobile
moto perpetuo (paganini)
pieces that just sound really cool:
scherzo tarantelle
dance of the goblins
caprice no. 24 (paganini)
new world symphony, allegro con fuoco (dvorak) (added by viola-ology)
le tombeau de couperin (added by tropicalmunchakoopas)
carnival of the animals (added by shadowraven45662)
if you feel like listening to concertos all day (I do not recommend doing that):
concerto for two violins (bach)
concerto for two violins (vivaldi)
violin concerto in a minor (vivaldi)
violin concerto (tchaikovsky) (added by iwillsavemyworld)
violin concerto in d minor (sibelius) (added by eternal-cadenza)
cello concerto in c (haydn)
piano concerto, mvt. 1 (pierne) (added by iwillsavemyworld)
harp concerto in E-flat major, mvt. 1 (added by iwillsavemyworld)
and if you really just hate classical music in general:
4′33″ (cage)
a lot of these pieces apply in multiple categories, but I sorted them by which I think they match the most. have fun exploring classical music!
also, thank you to viola-ology, iwillsavemyworld, shayshay526, eternal-cadenza, tropicalmunchakoopas, shadowraven45662, and thelonecomposer for adding on! if you would like to add on your own suggestions, please reblog and add on or message me so I can give you credit for the suggestion!
With that last set of Nuala Ní Dhomhnaill poems, Irish has reached the arbitrary 25-poem minimum to get its own index, so. Here it is.
All poems are accompanied by an English rendering, of variable quality.
Breathnach, Colm: “Macha”
Brennan, Deirdre: “An Tobar”
Ellis, Conleth: “Faire”
Ellis, Conleth: “Oilithireacht”
Ellis, Conleth: “Sa Stáisiún”
Kelly, Rita: “Dán Grá”
Kelly, Rita: “An Ré ina Luí”
Ní Dhomhnaill, Nuala: “Cadenza”
Ní Dhomhnaill, Nuala: “An tEach Uisce”
Ní Dhomhnaill, Nuala: “Fionnuala”
Ní Dhomhnaill, Nuala: “Muintir m'Athar”
Ní Dhomhnaill, Nuala: “Oscailt an Tuama”
Ní Dhomhnaill, Nuala: “Sionnach”
Ní Dhomhnaill, Nuala: “Tráigh Gheimhridh”
Ní Dhomhnaill, Nuala: “Tsunami”
Ní Dhomhnaill, Nuala: “Turas na Scríne”
Ní Ghlinn, Áine: “Sa Chistin”
Ó Céileachair, Séamas: “Uaigneas”
Ó Fiannachta, Pádraig: “Caisleán Gainimhe”
Ó Maolfabhail, Art: “Ní Bhíonn an Páganach gan a Chuid Féin den Charthanacht”
Ó Murchú, Aodh: “An Charraig”
Ó Murchú, Aodh: “Leascultúr”
Ó Néill, Séamus: “Amhrán Mhanannáin Mhic Lir”
Prút, Liam: “Réal sa tSeachtain”
Rosenstock, Gabriel: “Leacht Ceartaithe”
I love world literature, and I’ve been frustrated by the lack of representation of it in literature + academia communities on tumblr, so here are some recommendations. I haven’t read all of these myself yet, but the ones I have are excellent and the ones I haven’t come highly recommended from Goodreads and are on my to-read list!
With the exception of anthologies of older works, all of these books were written before 2000 (some literally thousands of years earlier), since I’m less familiar with super contemporary literature. Also, I only included each writer once, though many of them have multiple amazing books. I’m sure there are plenty of incredible books I’m missing, so please feel free to add on to this list! And countries that aren’t included absolutely have a lot to offer as well–usually, it was just hard to find books available in English translation (which all of the ones below are.)
List below the cut (it’s my first post with a cut so let’s hope I do it right… and also warning that it’s super long)
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