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#fanny arbuthnot
pitt-able · 11 months
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The poor Duke [Prince Frederick, Duke of York and Albany] looked very ill, scarcely spoke & ate nothing. I am sadly afraid he is in a bad way, for he is grown very thin, never sleeps and has constant spasms in his stomach. Sir Henry Halford is very uneasy about him, and attributes his illness a good deal to mental un- easiness. (…) He will be a great loss if he does die, for he is universally beloved by every rank & class. The King [George IV], who (au fond and notwithstanding his jealousy of his popularity) loves him more than any of his family, is in great anxiety & uneasiness about him.
Francis Bamford, the Duke of Wellington, editors, The Journal of Mrs. Arbuthnot 1820-1832, Vol. 2, January 1826 – January 1832, Macmillan & Co Ltd., London, 1950, p. 28.
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Do you have any Napolington headcanons?
well I meant to reply to this an age and a half ago. 
Most of my silly thoughts on this are basically written out in Wolf and Pale (and that one with the Jersey Devil. I’m here to take Napoleon and Wellington through time and space with weird mythical creatures). 
Some off hand thoughts: 
Napoleon gets on very well with Wellington’s sons and berates him for being a shite father. ‘Petit Arthur is scared of you! What did you do to him? No son should fear their father. Shame. Shaaaaame.’ Arthur is like, ‘It’s haaard’ and Napoleon is like ‘no shit, no one said being a parent is a walk in the park.’ 
Napoleon buys Wellington King Arthur merch just to piss him off. ‘You’re going to give the murder fairies more ideas.’ Napoleon replies, ‘good. I’ve been bored since they’ve been sent back to fairy land.’ 
Although Woodford does not have a mayor Napoleon decides to run for mayor anyway and gets the town really into the idea. It’s a stiff competition between him, the Vicar and Arbuthnot who is in it for shits and giggles. Layton is forced to stump for Arbuthnot because otherwise Sir Hudson Lowe would be immensely displeased. Layton is depressed about this, not because he dislikes Arbuthnot but because he enjoys shocking his aged pere in London by stumping for that “radical jacobin revolutionary upstart.” Layton does not correct his aged pere. 
Wellington secretly enjoys being Minister of Occult Affairs and has the org chart for the ministry all drawn up and how it fits in with the War Office. He likes to look at it and rearrange the names of those he is taking along with him. Richard finds it during the few visits the brothers pay to each other and runs around with it, ‘I knew you liked your new role ickle Arthur!’ 
All my headcannons are people annoying Arthur. 
Napoleon still insists that ant infestations be left alone so he can catalogue their behaviour (just stealing this one from St. Helena shenanigans). He keeps a diligent log book. 
At some point the French exiles manage to make their vegetable garden grow and they’re all so chuffed about it and start offering unsolicited advice to local farmers who just ignore them. 
Bertrand wants Napoleon to go in on some cattle with Arbuthnot, since he thinks it will be profitable and he read a book on animal husbandry and it seems interesting, but Montholon is against this plan. A pitched battle breaks out in the French household. Las Cases decants to London for the duration of it. Napoleon feeds the flames of war with absolute glee until Fanny makes him end it. 
(He goes in on cattle with Arbuthnot. He names the first one he gets after the King of Prussia. ‘I feel like I’m insulting the cow, Arthur. It’s certainly smarter than the King of Prussia.’)
Napoleon collects a small menagerie in his retirement and has a cat named Bonbon and he refuses to admit he keeps it around because it reminds him of Josephine. 
At some point Napoleon convinces Bertrand that they should steal back Marengo from Lieutenant-Colonel Angerstein but Arthur stops them. Layton and his lass decide to do it for Napoleon and Bertrand but are deterred by Harriet who is like ‘you both hang out way too much with General Bonaparte it has done bad things for your moral compass.’ 
I hope these entertained you! Thank you so much for the ask I’m sorry for having neglected it until now. :D 
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janeaddamspeace · 7 years
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Faith Ringgold's Art Featured Around the Country and Abroad #JACBA Newsletter 21Jul2017
Professor Emerita Faith Ringgold Featured in 'Soul of a Nation'
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Featuring more than 150 works by over 60 artists, many on display in the UK for the first time, Soul of a Nation will be a timely opportunity to see how American cultural identity was re-shaped at a time of social unrest and political struggle.
Soul of a Nation will showcase this debate between figuration and abstraction, from Faith Ringgold's American People Series #20: Die 1967 and Wadsworth Jarrell's Black Prince 1971 to Frank Bowling's Texas Louise 1971 and Sam Gilliam's April 4 1969. A highlight will be Homage to Malcolm 1970 by Jack Whitten, who was awarded the National Medal of Arts by Barack Obama in 2015, which will be going on public display for the very first time.
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Aunt Harriet's Underground Railroad in the Sky by Faith Ringgold 1993 Awardee
'It Remains Relevant - History Repeats Itself' Faith Ringgold discusses the importance of art
AT THE time I made American People Series #20: Die, all hell was breaking loose across parts of the United States.
There were riots as people fought for their civil rights.
Not much of this was being recorded in the press or on the TV news, but I saw the violence myself, and felt I had to say something about it.
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Soul of a Nation: Art in the Age of Black Power, review
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Benny Andrews's Did the Bear Sit Under a Tree? is one of a number of punchy message-driven works that set the scene: the Stars and Stripes rolled back to reveal an angry black man waving his fists both at the Flag and the viewer.  If the execution is none too subtle, with the figure rendered in rough-hewn sacking-relief with a zip for a mouth, Andrews wanted to reflect the "raw" aesthetics of his background in rural Georgia.
Faith Ringgold's Die creates a frantic pattern of wild-eyed, bleeding black and white people in which it's impossible to tell who's stabbing or shooting who, all in a compelling pop-expressionist style that isn't revisited in the exhibition or, it seems, the artist's own work.
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Aunt Harriet's Underground Railroad in the Sky by Faith Ringgold 1993 Awardee
Soul of a Nation - Art in the Age of Black Power, exhibition review: Pride and prejudice. This ambitious and energetic show charts 20 years of the struggles that formed the modern black artistic identity in America
Tate Modern's Soul of a Nation: Art in the Age of Black Power is a trip through 20 years of black artists in the US experimenting with what black art could possibly be.
Benny Andrews worked with Bearden in another group, the Black Emergency Cultural Coalition. In Did the Bear Sit Under a Tree? (1969), a black protester shakes his fist at the American flag, which is meant to protect him, but is seen closed-off in its own cold space.
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Delivering Justice: W. W. Law and the Fight for Civil Rights, written by Jim Haskins, illustrated by Benny Andrews 2006 Awardee
Spencer Museum exhibitions highlight African-American story quilts
The Spencer Museum of Art recently opened two evocative exhibitions that highlight African-American quilting traditions.
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To complement this exhibition, Earle curated "Narratives of the Soul," which presents significant African-American quilts from the Spencer Museum's collection, as well as regional and national loans. One highlight of the exhibition is the art museum's "Flag Story Quilt" by renowned artist Faith Ringgold. Ringgold will give the keynote lecture for the Quilt Convention on Wednesday, July 12, at the Lied Center.
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Find out how to choose the right book during at A.K. Smiley Public Library presentation
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On Sept. 7 an upcoming adult literacy event when author Francisco Jimenez will speak at the Contemporary Club at 6 p.m. Jimenez, is the author of "The Circuit" and "Breaking Through," autobiographical stories about his life as a child of migrant workers and his love of education.
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The Circuit: Stories from the Life of a Migrant Child by Francisco Jiménez 1998 Awardee
Poetry Sunday: Lauren Wolk Local NPR for the Cape, Coast & Islands
Lauren Wolk reads her poem "Shopping for Bras."
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Wolf Hollow by Lauren Wolk 2017 Awardee
The Vibrant Art Of Roxbury's Ekua Holmes Recalls The Harlem Renaissance
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The exhibit mostly displays Holmes' paintings for the children's books she has recently illustrated, including her works on Fannie Lou Hamer, titled "Voice of Freedom" and "Out of Wonder, Poems Celebrating Poets." The Hamer book, produced with writer Carole Boston Weatherford, garnered a children's book trifecta: The Caldecott Honor Book, The Robert F. Sibert Honor Book and the John Steptoe New Talent Coretta Scott King Award.
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Birmingham, 1963 by Carole Boston Weatherford 2008 Awardee
Carlsbad Museum opens children's books illustration exhibit
The exhibit, "Childhood Classics: 100 Years of Original Illustration from the Art Kandy Collection," is open through Sept. 30 to allow for class field trips to view illustrations from children's books.
The exhibit, which originally opened in California, features original illustrations from Dr. Seuss' "Cat in the Hat", Garth Williams' "Stuart Little," "Where the Wild Things Are" by Maurice Sendak and Floyd Cooper's "Jump! From the Life of Michael Jordan."
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Ruth and the Green Book by Calvin Alexander Ramsey with Gwen Strauss and illustrated by Floyd Cooper 2011 Awardee
THE PEN TEN WITH CARMEN AGRA DEEDY
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In this week's interview, we speak with Carmen Agra Deedy, author of The Rooster Who Would Not Be Quiet!, a children's book-illustrated by Eugene Yelchin-about a rooster who insists on singing despite the mayor's no-singing laws. Deedy discusses young readers, surveillance, and the use of humor when confronting difficult realities.
What is the responsibility of the writer of children's books?
To respect the intelligence of young readers and never, ever, lie to them. They will love you for the former and crucify you should you ignore the latter.
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The Yellow Star: The Legend of King Christian X of Denmark by Carmen Agra Deedy 2001 Awardee
Meigs ancestor became renowned author
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The fame of the Rodgers family of Perryville and Havre de Grace extends far and wide with Commodore John Rodgers being the top echelon of that pyramid of fame.
If one were to trace the lineage of Meigs and Rodgers families for a bit, one will arrive at another Meigs of note who, sadly, hasn't reached the level of fame and recognition as her male ancestors with their impressive military careers. This ancestor was Cornelia Meigs, an author of fiction and biography, a teacher and historian of note and a critic of children's literature. Truly she was an astounding woman who contributed greatly to children's literature as a whole.
She would leave Bryn Mawr to teach writing at the New School of Social Research in New York and was the lead editor and a writer of "A Critical History of Children's Literature," published in 1953. The book was called landmark in the field of children's literature studies. It was later revised under Meigs' critical eye and reissued in 1969.
She would write over 30 fiction books for children, two plays, two biographies and several books and articles for adults.
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Jane Addams: Pioneer of Social Justice written by Cornelia Meigs 1971 Awardee
Books raise awareness, sensitivity to suffering
Today's reviewed books help create a more sensitive awareness of this global problem that promotes empathy, and that's a very good thing because if we were among the 65.6 million displaced people in the world, we'd surely want others to be empathetic toward our plight and offer us help.
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"A Long Walk to Water" by Linda Sue Park
Alternating narratives of two young people living in Sudan, this book is based on the true story of the life of Salva Dut, who, at age 11, was separated from his family and village during yet again another battle in the Second Sudanese Civil War. Against all odds, Salva's journey of many years, walking from one refugee camp to another, across Africa to Ethopia, to Kenya and back to Sudan, demonstrates enormous courage, hope and the will to survive.
The second voice in "A Long Walk to Water" is young Nya, who walks for eight hours every day simply to fetch water. How and why their lives intersect is both profound and moving.
An important work in many regards, "A Long Walk to Water" not only raises an awareness of the suffering of others, but in so doing, helps readers develop compassion, empathy and a deeper appreciation of those things many of us take for granted.
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A Long Walk to Water: Based on a True Story by Linda Sue Park 2011 Awardee
When My Name Was Keoko by Linda Sue Park 2003 Awardee
Thoreau Bicentennial Gathering: Celebrating the Life, Works, and Legacy of Henry David Thoreau
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PEN New England presentation of Thoreau Prize for Nature Writing to Sy Montgomery (Sy Montgomery, a naturalist, author and scriptwriter who writes for children as well as adults)
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Temple Grandin: How the Girl Who Loved Cows Embraced Autism and Changed the World by Sy Montgomery 2013 Awardee
Western Washington University and the Whatcom County Library System chosen as site for 2018 Arbuthnot Lecture
The 2018 May Hill Arbuthnot Honor Lecture featuring Naomi Shihab Nye will be held in the spring of 2018.
Sylvia Tag, Curator of The Children's Literature Interdisciplinary Collection, noted that, "Naomi Shihab Nye spreads hope and light through her poetry and prose. Western Washington University and the Whatcom County Library System are honored to host the Arbuthnot Honor Lecture, and invite her particular brilliance to illuminate our diverse and word-hungry communities."
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Habibi by Naomi Shihab Nye 1998 Awardee
Sitti's Secrets by Naomi Shihab Nye, illustrated by Nancy Carpenter 1995 Awardee
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Since 1953, the Jane Addams Children's Book Award annually acknowledges books published in the U.S. during the previous year. Books commended by the Award address themes of topics that engage children in thinking about peace, justice, world community and/or equality of the sexes and all races. The books also must meet conventional standards of literacy and artistic excellence.
A national committee chooses winners and honor books for younger and older children.
Read more about the 2017 Awards.
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