pathologically-literate
pathologically-literate
ephemera
71 posts
books and nature and cozy and nostalgia and any other current obsessions of mine
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pathologically-literate · 5 months ago
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pathologically-literate · 5 months ago
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launch out on his story, muse, daughter of zeus,
start from where you will - sing for our time too.
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pathologically-literate · 5 months ago
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RIP Henry Winter you would’ve hated the cast for Nolan’s The Odyssey
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pathologically-literate · 9 months ago
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pathologically-literate · 9 months ago
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An embroidery of the Wikipedia page for embroidery.
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pathologically-literate · 9 months ago
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pathologically-literate · 9 months ago
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J. R. R. Tolkien, undisputedly a most fluent speaker of this language, was criticized in his day for indulging his juvenile whim of writing fantasy, which was then considered—as it still is in many quarters— an inferior form of literature and disdained as mere “escapism.” “Of course it is escapist,” he cried. “That is its glory! When a soldier is a prisoner of war it is his duty to escape—and take as many with him as he can.” He went on to explain, “The moneylenders, the knownothings, the authoritarians have us all in prison; if we value the freedom of the mind and soul, if we’re partisans of liberty, then it’s our plain duty to escape, and to take as many people with us as possible.“
Stephen R. Lawhead
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pathologically-literate · 9 months ago
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pathologically-literate · 9 months ago
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the older I get the more I'm like wow Anne Shirley was right. I am so glad to live in a world with Octobers. Kindred spirits are not so scarce as I used to think. Dear old world you are very lovely and I am glad to be alive in you.
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pathologically-literate · 9 months ago
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"Hanging out with Jane and Rochester would be so annoying because you'd never be able to forget how they got together" overdone. boring.
"Hanging out with Jane and Rochester would be so annoying because they have five separate layers of increasingly obscure inside jokes" real and true
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pathologically-literate · 9 months ago
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A Mourning dove gets cozy, and settles in, to experience the sunset.
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pathologically-literate · 9 months ago
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This is excellent clarification! Also remember that Darcy’s aunt is a lady. She’s a lady by marriage but that connection to a title alone elevates him in the hierarchy of the time.
I've been trying to think of a less harsh way to put it, but every time I see an ostensible expert say that Mr Bennet and Darcy have the same social position and the only difference between them is that Darcy has more money, it's like ... um, either this person doesn't know what they're talking about or assumes their audience is so unsophisticated and ignorant that they can't handle the slightest degree of nuance.
Yes, it's obvious why this always comes up with P&P specifically, and explaining all the many differences and gradations in socioeconomic hierarchies between then and now is a steep task and not always necessary or useful. But Darcy and Mr Bennet are both untitled hereditary landowners. This means they have the same rank, yes—the technicality Elizabeth uses with Lady Catherine—but it also means that their status, incomes, reach of influence, and general consequence in their world are going to be primarily based on their inherited land, not that all these things except income would be functionally identical in their social world.
Awhile ago, I quoted a fairly concise description of England's class system at the time by the historian Dorothy Marshall, made decades ago, but—unusually—managing to convey some of the RL complexity around social position without belaboring the point too much. One of the most critical points she makes is this:
In spite of the number of people who got their living from manufacture or trade, fundamentally it was a society in which the ownership of land alone conveyed social prestige and full political rights.
The difference between someone like Mr Bennet and someone like Darcy in terms of socioeconomic power and status (often termed "consequence" at the time) is inevitably going to be more about hereditary land ownership than any other factor, including incomes and connections. Their incomes provide important information about the scale and value of the land they own, but wealth alone only tells a portion of the story here.
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pathologically-literate · 9 months ago
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pathologically-literate · 9 months ago
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I’m going through yet another Robin McKinley phase. Beauty was the first of her books I ever read and remains one of my top ten books of all time (which I do not say lightly!)
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vote yes if you have finished the entire book.
vote no if you have not finished the entire book.
(faq · submit a book)
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pathologically-literate · 9 months ago
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me reading one of the most famous books ever written: do people know about this book. do they know.
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pathologically-literate · 9 months ago
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Reading this right now and I love Ash’s relationship with her person
It is a much more straightforward thing to be a dog, and a dog's love, once given, is not reconsidered; it just is, like sunlight or mountains. It is for human beings to see the shadows behind the light, and the light behind the shadows. It is, perhaps, why dogs have people, and people have dogs.
Robin McKinley, Deerskin
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pathologically-literate · 10 months ago
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Forest full of autumn
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