#Edwin Mullins
Explore tagged Tumblr posts
Text

Sacrificial Soldiers - Lioness (2023)
#2023#film#series#TV show#television#military#Lioness#Sacrificial Soldiers#Taylor Sheridan#Zoe Saldana#Joe McNamara#Dave Annable#Neal McNamara#Laysla De Oliveira#Cruz Manuelos#Nicole Kidman#Kaitlyn Meade#Michael Kelly#Byron Westfield#Morgan Freeman#Edwin Mullins#Kobane#Syria#CIA#SIG-Sauer#MCX#VIRTUS#Glock 48#spy
4 notes
·
View notes
Text
Im in the daniel Mullins server just lurking for notifs mostlyand ive glanced at the icon a couple times recently and i thought i was just going crazy but no that is edwin i made the mimic edwin reference in the discord icon.

Like wh

?
Him with the. Pieces. Difficult to put the pieces. Tye pieces. Pieces togeg. Tehhg. Geder. Piegeg togeger.
#nearly called the daniel mullins server the edwin mullins server im living in the bad future lol#rambles
0 notes
Text
"Hailing from the prolific Taylor Sheridan, Lioness Season 2 will bring back star and executive producer Zoë Saldaña, Laysla De Oliveira (who played Season 1’s titular operative, Marine Raider Cruz Mañuelos), Michael Kelly, executive producer Nicole Kidman, and Morgan Freeman (who has been upped to series regular as Secretary of State Edwin Mullins)." (Source)
2 notes
·
View notes
Text
Horse racing notes: Big City Lights seeks repeat in Palos Verdes Stakes
SANTA ANITA LEADERS (Through Sunday) Jockeys / Wins Juan Hernandez / 28 Flavien Prat / 27 Umberto Rispoli / 18 Hector Berrios / 16 Tiago Pereira / 15 Edwin Maldonado / 11 Antonio Fresu / 10 Trainers / Wins Bob Baffert / 16 Jeff Mullins / 13 Mark Glatt / 12 Doug O’Neill / 11 Mike Puype / 9 Michael McCarthy / 9 George Papaprodromou / 9 UPCOMING STAKES SANTA ANITA Saturday • $100,000, Grade III…
0 notes
Text
Heeeeeyyy, I love me a good fucking STUDY
for environments:
shot deck is a massive database of film shots searchable by grading, tod, shot type, characters and content! Studying from films really helps improve your values and composition as the shots are usually very carefully constructed! It helps you find ways to maintain realism while still packing mood and narrative into your work!
master paintings! I recommend the orientalists like Jean Leon Gerome in particular their environments had great compositions and throw around a ton of colour and light! I like the modern artists Craig Mullins and Richard Schmid also, as there is so much impressionist lost detail and simplicity yet the environments feel so real.
The 1960s era disney background artists like eyvind earle are a masterclass in stylisation and simplification and make a wonderful choice for studies. (That being said modern disney visdev artists like Nathan Fowkes are just as fantastic to study for the same reason)
architectural photography can be a great resource too- I love to look for work by urbEX people!
thumbnailing and comp studies- trying to break down a photo into as few values as possible and still have it be readable- this really helps train your brain in the relationship between light exposure and local value.
Im begging you if doing it in colour is too hard to start with just do it in black and white!!!!! Greyscale painting is an essential step in learning to paint and understand lighting scenarios!! Colour is hard!!!
there is no substitute for going outside and doing some plein air painting- really looking first hand at how the light effects different materials and objects, how it bounces around, what edges your eye naturally loses in certain lighting scenarios. Just go outside and draw and try to notice stuff.
for characters:
figure studies!!!! from life if you can but if you cant there are a ton of great resources out there- personally I love croquis cafe and posespace, but if you can afford it (and are interested in intense anatomy study) then scott eaton has a site called bodies in motion which is fantaaaastic. I think by now everyone knows nyx and senshistock, I also use a lot of grafit studio photorefs to study more complicated poses!!
Master studies (again). I particularly like to study the work of John Singer Sargent, Joaquin Sorolla, Edwin Austin Abbey, Alphonse Mucha (his le pater compositions are out of this world), any of the New Rochelle artists (e.g rockwell, tom lovell, those 1950s illustrators REALLY knew their shit).
I literally have a resin skull on my desk that I've used to do quick studies with different lighting, just 10 mins a day back when I was doing it and it levelled up my skill a lot!.
Material studies are essential to leveling up your character painting!!! Look at fur, look at metal, look at the way something embroidered reflects light vs tooled leather!!
gesture studies! Look at a dynamic pose and see how you can exaggerate the motion in away that captures the sense of movement. This is tricky to start with but its really worthwhile especially when you combine it with other exercises. Mixamo is a cool library to look into for this kind of thing as you can pause and rotate the models in the middle of their actions!
breakdown the work of artists you admire- it's ok to study other living artists (and try to reverse engineer how they are making their decisions) it's a very effective learning tool! Really figure out what it is about that persons workflow you like, and how you might incorporate that element into your own. Obviously, dont post studies of living artists work!
The most important thing is that when you do a study you go into it knowing what you want to learn. Dont try to do everything at once! It's ok to focus on the muscle structure and not give a damn about the gesture. It's ok to focus on the texture of the fur and completely ignore the characters face.
The best way to keep doing studies is to find refs you like- things you are interested in and that capture your imagination! Follow your curiosity and remember that just a tiny little bit a day makes a huge difference.
Gunna take a sec to recommend the tutorials of Devin Korwin. He talks about how to study and how to breakdown art fundamentals in a way that is at once both very advanced but also digestible. I highly recommend his pdfs!
What do you all study when you're doing art studies??
24K notes
·
View notes
Text

Cain: ‘My Punishment is Greater than I can bear.’ c. 1899. Edwin Roscoe Mullins
11 notes
·
View notes
Text
Reading Challenge 2021 (50/50)
vẫn đang cập nhật...
Mình có thể đọc một quyển sách dày nghìn trang trong hai ngày, rồi khóc vì nó suốt một tháng sau đó. Đấy, lý do mình đọc chậm đấy.
Mục tiêu đọc năm nay (thay đổi theo tâm trạng, nhưng vẫn là những gì mình muốn làm):
Đọc càng nhiều Murakami càng tốt, để ít nhất nắm được một cách khái quát lối viết và cách xây dựng cốt truyện chung của ông. Không có ý định trở thành người hâm mộ.
Đọc cho hết những cuốn kinh điển đã có trên giá từ lâu, như Chúa Nhẫn, Bóng ma trong nhà hát, Trăm năm cô đơn, Đồi gió hú, Giã từ vũ khí. Thật ra thì sau môn Văn học tiếng Anh kỳ trước, mình cũng hiểu được sự cần thiết của việc đọc tác phẩm kinh điển rồi.
Đọc thêm văn học Việt Nam hiện đại. Nguyễn Huy Thiệp, Ma Văn Kháng, Chu Lai là những cái tên hiện tại mình đang có trong đầu.
Đọc nhiều truyện ngắn giả tưởng hơn để dịch cho @thenutcrackers2021.
Còn dưới đây là số sách mình đọc từ đầu năm tới giờ:
Tháng 1
1. Khu vườn bí mật (1911) - Frances Hodgson Burnett
2. Mùa thu của cây dương (1997) - Kazumi Yumoto
3. Người minh họa (1951) - Ray Bradbury
4. 1Q84 (2009) - Haruki Murakami
5. Tôi là một con lừa (2013) - Nguyễn Phương Mai
Tháng 2
6. Bản chất của người (2014) - Han Kang
7. Kafka bên bờ biển (2002) - Haruki Murakami
8. Khu vườn mùa hạ (1992) - Kazumi Yumoto
9. Trăm năm cô đơn (1967) - Gabriel Garcia Marquez
10. Cảnh đồi mờ xám (1982) - Kazuo Ishiguro
11. Nhà hàng ở tận cùng vũ trụ (1980) - Douglas Adams
Tháng 4
12. Sáu kẻ bất hảo & Phi vụ bất khả (2015) - Leigh Bardugo
13. Mưu ma chước quỷ & Giang hồ hiểm ác (2016) - Leigh Bardugo
Tháng 5
14. Tử thần sống mãi (2010) - Lưu Từ Hân
15. Miền xanh thẳm (2000) - Trần Hoài Dương
16. Anh chàng Hobbit (1939) - J. R. R. Tolkien
Tháng 6
17. Chúa tể những chiếc nhẫn (1954) - J. R. R. Tolkien
Tháng 7
18. Đồi gió hú (1847) - Emily Bronte
19. Annihilation (2014) - Jeff VanderMeer
20. Killing Commendatore (2017) - Haruki Murakami
21. The Ice Storm (1994) - Rick Moody
22. Hồi ký viết dưới hầm (1864) - Fyodor Dostoyevsky
23. Đom đóm (1995) - Haruki Murakami
24. Tàn tro (2011) - Mike Mullin
25. The Adventures of Tom Bombadil (1962) - J. R. R. Tolkien
26. Shadow and Bone (2012) - Leigh Bardugo
27. Siege and Storm (2013) - Leigh Bardugo
28. Ruin and Rising (2014) - Leigh Bardugo
29. The Language of Thorns (2017) - Leigh Bardugo
Tháng 8
30. Người trộm bóng (2010) - Marc Levy
31. Terminal Boredom (1978) - Izumi Suzuki
Tháng 9
32. The Bumblebee Flies Anyway (1983) - Robert Cormier
Tháng 10
33. Phía Tây không có gì lạ (1929) - Erich Maria Remarque
34. Catfishing on CatNet (2019) - Naomi Kritzer
35. Fire Watch (1985) - Connie Willis
36. Thần thoại Bắc Âu (2017) - Neil Gaiman
37. Peter Pan (1911) - J. M. Barrie
38. Thăm thẳm mùa hè (2018) - Nguyễn Dương Quỳnh
39. Trường ca Achilles (2012) - Madeline Miller
40. Oscar và bà Áo Hồng (2002) - Eric-Emmanuel Schmitt
41. Ngược đường Trường Thi (1939) - Nguyễn Triệu Luật
42. Từ thăm thẳm lãng quên (1996) - Patrick Modiano
43. Ở quán cà phê của tuổi trẻ lạc lối (2011) - Patrick Modiano
44. Dune (1965) - Frank Herbert
Tháng 12
45. The Martian Chronicles (1950) - Ray Bradbury
46. La Belle Sauvage (2017) - Philip Pullman
47. Một thoáng ta rực rỡ ở nhân gian (2019) - Ocean Vuong
48. Kindred (1979) - Octavia E. Butler
49. Impossible Things (1993) - Connie Willis
50. Xứ Phẳng (1884) - Edwin A. Abbott
9 notes
·
View notes
Text
Week 2
From Origins to the Future: The Hero and the Epic Quest.
This week and the next we shall engage in one of the traditional approaches to comparative practice, following various re-appearances of a myth / hero / genre through successive literary periods and in different countries. The example we shall use is the figure of Odysseus / Ulysses in epic writing and film from Homer to the turn of the 21st century. We shall consider how this figure has changed, and focus on specific episodes of Homer’s original epic poem.
Homer, The Odyssey (read in particular Book 1 and the episode of the Cyclops (in Book 9);
Dante, Inferno (read canto 26, Ulysses);
James Joyce, Ulysses (read the ‘Cyclops’ episode (the 12th, pp. 280-330 in Johnson))
Stanley Kubrick, 2001: A Space Odyssey (1968) (Film: Please watch this in advance of the seminar)
Some secondary reading on Homer’s Odyssey & the figure of Odysseus/Ulysses
Boitani, Piero, The Shadow of Ulysses: Figures of a Myth, tr. Anita West (Oxford: Clarendon Press, 1994). [Has an excellent chapter on Dante's Ulysses]
Doherty, Lillian E., "The Snares of the Odyssey: A Feminist Narratological Reading", in Texts, Ideas, and the Classics: Scholarship, Theory, and Classical Literature, ed. by S. J. Harrison (Oxford: Oxford University Press, 2001), pp. 117-133. Foley, John M. (ed.), A Companion to Ancient Epic (Oxford: Blackwell, 2005)
Fowler, Robert (ed.), The Cambridge Companion to Homer (Cambridge: Cambridge UP, 2004).
Graziosi, Barbara, end Emily Greenwood (eds.), Homer in the Twentieth-Century: Between World Literature and the Western Canon (Oxford: Oxford University Press, 2007).
Jong, Irene de, A Narratological Commentary on the Odyssey (Cambridge: Cambridge University Press 2001)
Hall, Edith, The Return of Ulysses: A Cultural History of Homer’s Odyssey (London and New York: I.B. Tauris, 2008).
Lane Fox, Robin, Travelling Heroes: Greeks and their Myths in the Epic Age of Homer (London: Allen Lane, 2008)
Manguel, Alberto, Homer’s The Iliad and The Odyssey A Biography (London: Atlantic Books, 2007).
Murnaghan, Sheila, Disguise and Recognition in the Odyssey (Princeton: Princeton University Press, 1987).
Stanford, W. B. The Ulysses Theme: A Study in the Adaptability of a Traditional Hero (Ann Arbor: University of Michigan Press, 1963).
Some secondary reading on Kubrick
Bizony, Piers, 2001: Filming the Future (London: Aurum, 1994)
Chion, Michel, Kubrick's Cinema Odyssey. Trans. Claudia Gorbman (London: BFI, 2001)
Ciment, Michel, Kubrick. Trans. Gilbert Adair (New York: Holt, Rinehart, and Winston, 1983)
Cocks, Geoffrey, James Diedrick, and Glenn Perusek (eds.), Depth of Field: Stanley Kubrick, Film and the Uses of History (Madison, WI: University of Wisconsin Press, 2006)
Falsetto, Mario, Stanley Kubrick: A Narrative and Stylistic Analysis (Westport, Conn; London: Praeger, 1994)
Falsetto, Mario (ed.), Perspectives on Stanley Kubrick (New York: G.K. Hall; London: Prentice Hall, 1996)
Herr, Michael, Kubrick (New York: Grove Press, 2000)
Kolker, Robert (ed.), Stanley Kubrick's 2001: A Space Odyssey: New Essays (Oxford: Oxford University Press, 2006)
Nelson, Thomas Allen, Kubrick: Inside a Film Artist's Maze (Bloomington: Indiana University Press, 1982)
Naremore, James, On Kubrick (London: British Film Institute, 2007)
Rasmussen, Randy, Stanley Kubrick: Seven Films Analyzed (London: McFarland, 2001)
Wheat, Leonard F., Kubrick's 2001: A Triple Allegory (Lanham, MD, and London: Scarecrow Press, 2000)
Some secondary reading on the epic
Bates, Catherine (ed.), The Cambridge Companion to the Epic (Cambridge: Cambridge University Press, 2010)
Beissinger, Margaret, Jane Tylus, and Susanne Wofford (eds.) Epic Traditions in the Contemporary World: The Poetics of Community (Berkeley: University of California Press, 1999)
Clarke, M. J., B. G. F. Currie, and R. O. A. M. Lyne (eds.), Epic Interactions: Perspectives on Homer, Virgil, and the Epic Tradition (Oxford: Oxford University Press, 2006)
Danow, David K., Transformation as the Principle of Literary Creation from the Homeric Epic to the Joycean Novel (Lewiston, NY: Edwin Mellen Press, 2004)
Elley, Derek, The Epic Film: Myth and History (London: Routledge & Kegan Paul, 1984)
Foley, John Miles (ed.), A Companion to Ancient Epic (Oxford: Wiley-Blackwell, 2009)
Hardie, Philip, The Epic Successors of Virgil: A Study in the Dynamics of a Tradition (Cambridge: Cambridge University Press, 1993)
Hainsworth, J. B., The Idea of Epic (Berkeley: University of California Press, 1991)
Hurst, Isobel, Victorian Women Writers and the Classics: The Feminine of Homer (Oxford and New York: Oxford University Press, 2006)
King, Katherine Callen, Ancient Epic (Chichester: John Wiley & Sons, 2009)
Konstan, David and Kurt A. Raaflaub, eds., Epic and History (Chichester: Wiley-Blackwell, 2010)
Merchant, Paul: The Epic (London: Methuen, 1971)
Miller, Dean A., The Epic Hero (Baltimore and London: Johns Hopkins University Press, 2000)
Johns-Putta, Adeline, The History of the Epic (Basingstoke and New York: Palgrave Macmillan, 2006)
Newman, John Kevin, The Classical Epic Tradition (Madison: University of Wisconsin Press, 1986)
Quint, David, Epic and Empire: Politics and Generic Form from Virgil to Milton (Princeton, N.J: Princeton University Press, 1993).
Roisman, Hanna M., and Joseph Roisman (eds.), Essays on Homeric Epic (Waterville, ME: Colby College, 2002)
Toohey, Peter, Reading Epic: An Introduction to the Ancient Narratives (London : Routledge, 1992)
Tucker, Herbert F., Epic: Britain's Heroic Muse 1790-1910 (Oxford and New York: Oxford University Press, 2008)
Winnifrith, Tom, Penelope Murray and K.W. Gransden, eds., Aspects of the Epic (London: Macmillan, 1983)
Some secondary reading on Ulysses
Guidebooks: (These classic ‘guidebooks’ can supplement the annotations in your edition of Ulysses.)
Don Gifford, Ulysses Annotated (Berkeley: University of California Press, 1988) Weldon Thornton, Allusions in Ulysses: An Annotated List (Chapel Hill: University of North Carolina Press, 1968) Harry Blamires, The New Bloomsday Book (London: Routledge, 1996)
Some suggested criticism on Ulysses
(This is a small selection of Joycean criticism, from useful collections of essays (Attridge, Latham, Hart and Hayman), to critics who read language and narrative very closely (Kenner, Senn), to works on the Homeric in Ulysses (Flack, Kenner, Seidel), to a few examples of studies which read Joyce through theoretical, historical, comparative, and postcolonial approaches.)
Derek Attridge, ed., The Cambridge Companion to James Joyce (Cambridge: Cambridge University Press, 1990) — ed., James Joyce’s ‘Ulysses’: A Casebook (Oxford: Oxford University Press, 2004) Scarlett Baron, ‘Strandentwining Cable’: Joyce, Flaubert, and Intertextuality (Oxford: Oxford University Press, 2012) Frank Budgen, James Joyce and The Making of ‘Ulysses’ (Bloomington: Indiana University Press, 1961) Vincent J. Cheng, Joyce, Race and Empire (Cambridge: Cambridge University Press, 1995) Leah Culligan Flack, Modernism and Homer: The Odysseys of H.D., James Joyce, Osip Mandelstam, and Ezra Pound (Cambridge: Cambridge University Press, 2015) Clive Hart and David Hayman, eds., James Joyce’s ‘Ulysses’: Critical Essays (Berkeley: University of California Press, 1974) Hugh Kenner, Joyce’s Voices (Berkeley, Los Angeles, and London: University of California Press, 1978) — ‘Ulysses’ (London: George Allen and Unwin, 1980) Sean Latham, ed., The Cambridge Companion to ‘Ulysses’ (New York: Cambridge University Press, 2014) Karen Lawrence, The Odyssey of Style in ‘Ulysses’ (Princeton: Princeton University Press, 1981) Andrew J. Mitchell and Sam Slote, eds., Derrida and Joyce: Texts and Contexts, ed. (Albany: State University of New York Press, 2013) Katherine Mullin, James Joyce, Sexuality and Social Purity (Cambridge: Cambridge University Press, 2003) Michael Seidel, Epic Geography: James Joyce’s ‘Ulysses’ (Princeton and Guilford: Princeton University Press, 1976) Fritz Senn, Inductive Scrutinies: Focus on Joyce, ed. Christine O’Neill (Dublin: Lilliput, 1995) — Joyce’s Dislocutions: Essays on Reading as Translation, ed. John Paul Riquelme (Baltimore and London: Johns Hopkins University Press, 1984)
Online searchable concordance of Ulysses (e.g. if you can’t remember where the renowned Irish hero ‘Napoleon Bonaparte’ is mentioned, type it into a ‘string search’ and untick ‘whole word’) http://joyceconcordance.andreamoro.net/
Ulysses Synopsis
Ulysses: A Synopsis “Telemachia” 1 - “Telemachus” (Oxford World’s Classics, ed. J. Johnson, pp. 3-23 / Penguin, ed. D. Kiberd, pp. 1-28)- The chapter opens with Buck Mulligan celebrating a parodic mass in which Stephen Dedalus becomes an acolyte in spite of himself. Stephen is a melancholy artist obsessed with guilt since the death of his mother; his taciturn nature is contrasted with Mulligan’s clownish joviality. The Englishman Haines, their guest in the Martello Tower, combines seriousness with an enthusiasm for Gaelic culture; the three characters illustrate three possible positions in relation to Ireland, which is symbolised by the old peasant woman who brings in the milk: the dispossessed Son (Stephen), the treacherous usurper (Mulligan); the representant of English imperialism (Haines) who - through his dream of the panther, traditionally a symbol of Christ - is also associated by Stephen with the imperialism of the Roman Catholic Church. Stephen chooses errancy and exile: he gives over his key and will not come back. 2- “Nestor” (OWC 24-36 / Penguin 28-45)- Stephen teaches history and English Literature to a class of well-off schoolchildren who are disconcerted by his caustic humour and riddles. He confronts Mr Deasy (Nestor in Homer’s Odyssey) on Irish history and economics. The old headmaster cherishes his inaccurate reminiscences and promotes thrift, whereas Stephen squanders away the little money he has. Stephen views history as a nightmare. Despite the antagonism, Stephen agrees to help Mr Deasy is his fight against the foot and mouth disease which affects Irish cattle by helping him to publish a letter in the press. 3 - “Proteus” (37-50/45-64)- Stephen’s philosophical and aesthetic meditations lead him to question the reality of the outside world. Through a complex philosophical argument which hesitates between Aristotle and Berkeley, he redefines for himself the nature of visual and auditory perception. His literary recollections blend with the painful evocation of his past, especially the unsuccessful exile in Paris from which a telegram announcing his mother’s death recalled him. The sterility of Stephen’s “creations” in this chapter (which include urinating and depositing a snot on a ledge of rock [cf. Bloom’s own excremental “creation” in “Calypso”]) is pitted against the remarkable metamorphic poetic prose of the narrative and of Stephen’s stream of consciousness. Odyssey 4 - “Calypso” (53-67/64-85)- Leopold Bloom, who will increasingly become the major protagonist, is introduced in his home at 7 Eccles Street and is first seen preparing breakfast for himself and his wife Molly, who is still in bed. He goes out in search of a pork kidney at a Jewish butcher’s, where he picks up a leaflet advertising plantations in Palestine (inaugurating the theme of the lost, promised land, and of the “recall”). He brings Molly her mail, which includes a letter from Boylan, her future lover later in the day, announcing his visit. He explains to Molly the meaning of metempsychosis; the chapter ends with his defecation in the outhouse, mingled with his remarks on cheap literature. 5 - “The Lotus Eaters”(68-83/85-107) - Bloom has left his house for what will become the epic wanderings of an untypical literary hero, on an ordinary Dublin day - 16 June 1904. He first goes to fetch the reply, sent post restante, from his unknown penfriend Martha Clifford, to whom he sends amorous letters signed “Henry Flower”. He runs into several acquaintances on the way, unwittingly “throws away” a tip for the horse races (the source of a later misunderstanding), and eventually goes to the public baths. Throughout the chapter, drugs of all kinds (perfumes, tobacco, medicine, eroticism, religion, etc.) express a voluptuous narcissistic abandonment to the world of the senses. 6 - “Hades” (84-111/107-147)- Bloom goes to Paddy Dignam’s funeral together with Simon Dedalus (Stephen’s father) and other characters already seen in Dubliners. The conversation soon takes on a malevolent anti-Semitic tone which puts Bloom ill at ease. He thinks of death, remembering both his father’s suicide and the death of his son when he was only eleven days old. Bloom catches his first sign of Stephen (who does not see him). 7 - “Aeolus” (112-143/147-189)- Broken down into a series of newspaper articles complete with headings, this episode brings together, in different scenes and locations of the newspaper office, Bloom, Stephen, various “windbags” including Myles Crawford, the king of windy and hollow journalistic rhetoric. The orators outdo one another in eloquence and the parable of the captive Jews provides the Irish with a mythical model. Stephen narrates a story illustrative of the paralysis of his fellow Dubliners which nobody pays attention to, while Bloom the ad canvasser gets severely ticked off by Myles Crawford. 8 - “Lestrygonians” (144-175/190-234)- The “food chapter”: Bloom is obsessed with food (it is between 1pm and 2pm) and alimentary thoughts, and tastes and smells of all kinds percolate through into the language and style of the episode (the rhythm of the chapter is dictated by the “peristaltic” [digestive] movement of the organism). Put off by the monstrous devouring mouths in the restaurant and obsessed by the impending encounter between Molly and Boylan, he finally orders a Gorgonzola sandwich and a glass of Burgundy wine at Davy Byrne’s pub. 9 - “Scylla and Charybdis” (176-209/235-280)- In the National Library, Stephen spins out his Aristotelian theory of artistic creation which boils down to a sublimated autobiography; his paradoxes on Shakespeare’s life and works fail to convince his Platonist audience. In the complex reasoning of the young artist, Shakespeare becomes like a god who begets himself through his works. Bloom puts in an appearance; Mulligan meets up with Stephen and offers a more burlesque conclusion to the philological / theological debate. 10 - “Wandering Rocks” (210-244/280-328)- This chapter is a pause in the narrative of Stephen’s and Bloom’s day, and it has no precise correspondence in Homer’s Odyssey. This central and “pedestrian” chapter is made up of 19 episodes which offer vignettes and snapshots of the various characters and cross-sections of the Irish capital and society, including Church (Father Conmee) and State (the Viceroy’s cavalcade); the chapter breaks down the so far focalised point of view. Stephen and Bloom appear only briefly and are not mentioned among the witnesses of the Viceroy’s cavalcade through the city. 11 - “Sirens” (245-279/328-376)- The language of this chapter aspires to the condition of music and forges linguistic equivalents to trills, staccatos, counterpoints, etc. The venue is the Ormond Bar, run by two flashy barmaids or “sirens”; while the tenors are busy competing against each other in a virile singing contest, Bloom listens and replies to Martha. Having eluded the seductive snares of music, he exits, leaving behind an ironic fart. 12 - “Cyclops” (280-330/376-449)- A satire against the bellicose patriotism and anti-Semitism of the Citizen, the “Cyclops” who eventually attacks Bloom physically, the chapter oscillates between the Citizen’s rhetorical bombast and sarcastic deflations which leave unscathed neither the British Empire nor Irish nationalism, while the anonymous narrator - a sardonic barfly and debt collector - offers a brilliant instance of Dubliners’ garrulity. The narrative is periodically interrupted by parodic asides in other voices and styles. Bloom the wandering Jew, who had come to Barney Kiernan’s pub to arrange to offer some money to Paddy Dignam’s widow, finds himself involved in an argument about nationalism and attempts to expound his conception of humanity, love and homeland. At the end, his escape from the Citizen’s assault is turned into a grandiloquent apotheosis. 13 - “Nausicaa” (331-365/449-499)- Bloom rests on the Sandymount rocks (Stephen in “Proteus” had also walked along Sandymount beach) and gazes at young girls in their bloom. One of them, Gerty MacDowell, teases him into an erection by an increasingly daring exhibitionistic pose; the distant eroticism ends with Bloom’s masturbation, climaxing with fireworks. The narrating voice is that of a writer of the romantic pulp fiction then fed to women - the kind of books read by Gerty, who accordingly sees in Bloom a mysterious “dark stranger”. When the point of view shifts to Bloom, we see Gerty depart limping; Bloom dozes off in postmasturbatory gratitude. The accelerated crescendo of the first “tumescent” part is followed by the exhausted sobriety of the second, “detumescent” half. 14 - “Oxen of the Sun” (366-407/499-561)- Bloom’s and Stephen’s paths cross once more in the lying-in hospital, amidst roistering medics. The chapter takes us through a roughly chronologised pastiche of the different styles of the English language until the turn of the century, deceptively mimicking the evolution of the foetus until its birth. The painful delivery of Mina Purefoy takes on a universal value and, although the talk ominously focuses on sterility and contraception, a thunderclap and a rain shower at the moment of birth symbolise the triumph of fertility. 15 - “Circe” (408-565/561-703)- Blooms monitors from a distance Stephen’s drunken escapade to the red-light district, and follows him into the hallucinatory atmosphere of Bella Cohen’s brothel (Circe’s den in the Homeric parallel). The characters experience metamorphoses in a wild oneiric dramatisation of their fantasies, obsessions and senses of guilt. Stephen gets involved in a broil with two English soldiers and is knocked out cold; Bloom rescues him and transforms him into the ambiguous vision of his dead son Rudy. “Nostos” [=homecoming] 16 - “Eumaeus” (569-618/704-766)- Bloom leads Stephen to the cabman’s shelter, and the shared physical exhaustion (it is past midnight) and the unreliable narrator turn the chapter into an amusing, if often tedious, collection of deliberately jaded linguistic stereotypes, full of misunderstandings and approximations. 17 - “Ithaca” (619-689/766-871)- This impersonal catechism narrates the last actions of the novel: Bloom takes Stephen to 7 Eccles Street and offers him hot chocolate, they exchange views of Irish and Jewish culture, Stephen refuses Bloom’s offer of a bed for the night, they urinate together under the stars, and Stephen finally departs into the night. Bloom, back in the house, finds traces of Molly’s visitor earlier in the day, goes to bed, where he finds other traces of the visitor’s earlier presence, gives Molly an expurgated account of his day, and finally falls asleep, his head to her feet. The dialogic play between questions and answers universalises all the themes, sorts out human knowledge into vast catalogues, and finally transform the couple in bed into astral bodies. 18 - “Penelope” (690-732/871-933)- Molly’s thoughts flow freely along eight unpunctuated, meandering sentences. She begins with a reaction to Bloom’s request that she make breakfast in the morning, continuous with a celebration of her afternoon with Boylan, proceeds to review her marriage, her girlhood on Gibraltar, her infatuations and dreams of future romances, and finally returns to Bloom, seemingly reinstated into her imaginary life; this is one of the meanings of her numerous final “yesses”, also an affirmation of life itself.
Additional suggestions on Joyce's Ulysses/ Odysseus
Some of the texts through which Joyce reads and receives the figure of Odysseus/ Ulysses
Bérard, Victor, Les Phéniciens et l'Odyssée [originally published in 1902-03, there are no English translations that I know of; but you can find a lot about it, and Joyce's use of it in the book by Seidel, listed below; Bérard held the view that the Odyssey was "written" by a Greek poet, but recorded the travels of Phoenician sailors - the Phoenicians were a semitic people, which is relevant when you think that Leopold Bloom (Joyce's Ulysses figure) is a Jew]
Butler, Samuel, The Authoress of the Odyssey: Where and when she wrote, who she was, the use she made of the Iliad, and how the poem grew under her hands [originally published in 1897; Butler also transalted the Iliad and the Odyssey. There are various editions, including a cheap Kindle version; and it is in the library. Butler suggests that the Odyssey takes place in the island of Sicily, around the port city of Trapani, and that it is narrated by princess Nausicaa. The relevance to Joyce's book, which set on an island in and around the port city of Dublin, and whose final words are narrated by a woman, is evident.]
Lamb, Charles, The Adventures of Ulysses [originally published in 1808, there are various editions in print, and a free Kindle version. The book really is about the adventures and was meant as a book for boys, not as a full tranlation or account of the entire Odyssey. Joyce read this as child and wrote an essay at school about it!]
See also:
Seidel, Michael, Epic Geography: James Joyce's Ulysses (Princeton, N.J.: Princeton University Press, 1976) [not a book consulted by Joyce - of course! - but it looks at parallels between the geography of the Odyssey and of Ulysses and the movements of the characters, and relies extensively on Bérard's Les Phéniciens et l'Odyssée]
4 notes
·
View notes
Text
Barbra Hepworth
Barbra was a UK artist known for her sculpture work which would later heavily influence modern sculpture, with an emphasis on simplicity and abstraction.

Contrapuntal forms (1953, blue limestone)
The theme here seems to be unity of two.
The word contrapuntal for instance is a musical term, used to describe when two melodic lines are played at the same time, and the sculptures themselves seem to represent femininity and musculinity, with one being square and tall while the other is short and round. Perhaps this metaphorically suggests that ‘completion’ only occurs as a conjunction of these two concepts.

Single form
This sculpture was made in memory of a friend and collector of barbras works, Dag Hammarskjöld, as such it is a statement about him and the kind of human he was, art critic Edwin Mullins stated:
"it is a torso, it is a profile with an eye, it is an expanse of space in which the sun rises, it is a blade, it is a human hand ... raised flat in a sign of authority, or of salute, or as a gesture of allegiance"
It is at moments like this that I’m drawn to what derek said about “artists brains being wired different” becuase I would have never got to that conclusion myself
2 notes
·
View notes
Text
Dean’s List Fall 2018
NATCHITOCHES – One thousand two hundred sixty students were named to the Fall 2018 Dean’s List at Northwestern State University. Students on the list earned a grade point average of between 3.5 and 3.99. Those named to the Dean’s List by hometown are as follows.
Aberdeen Proving Grd, Maryland -- Adrian Borel
Addis -- William Seaman
Alexandria – Iris Barrera, Marquita Benjamin, Morgan Bryant, Katylyn Cox, Ashley Day, Qurshea Decoste, Destiny Dotson, Selena Elmore, KelVina Ford, Daryn Freeman, Maeghan George, Khloe Jasper, Leslie Katz, Taylar Lee, Kelli Leone, ShaKiyla Lindsey, Jimmie Magee, Madalyn Mayer, Lauren McLeod, Olivia Mosley, Lashanda Moss, Kellie Pebbles, Ragan Richey, Imani Ricks, Sydney Roseman, Kaitlin Roshto, Caleb Ross, Shakera Shorts, Kizzy Slaughter, Avery Tharp, Alexander Trotter, Hailey Urena, Alysha Walker, Christopher Warren, William Welch, Aalyiah Williams;
Anacoco – Alan Cosio, Danielle Egan, Elizabeth Guy, Andrea Halladay, Madeleine Hensley, Karington Johnson, Kelen Kay, Jason Ortiz, Clarissa Owens, Brooke Phillips, Amanda Sorg, Erica Wade, Emily Williams;
Angers, France – Sophie Podevin;
Angola – Ursula Poarch;
Arlington, Texas -- Samantha Bell, Devin Gipson, Charles Rogers;
Arnaudville –Bailey Dautreuil;
Athens – Ryan Carroway;
Atlanta – Jonathan Friis, Alexis Hanson, Peyton Howell,
Aurora, Colorado – William McCullough;
Austin, Texas – Skylar Besch, Ysmina Smith;
Avondale – James Brown, Mikala Clark;
Ball – Stephen Carpenter, Lauren Nugent, Vanessa Toney;
Barksdale AFB – Victoria Charles, Jeanine Matthews;
Bastrop – Anna Akins, Alisha Bolton, Haleigh Irby, Chadwick Jones, Haleigh Vollmar;
Baton Rouge – Merodac Beraki, Randy Blackwell, Rosa Campbell, Joshua Cheatwood, Peyton Clark, Emmanuel Dunn, Bryn Edmonston, Maisyn Guillory, Kelly Guillot, Melvin Hudson Misterie Jarrell, DJacqulyn Johnson, Elizebeth Ledet, Bethany Lee, Sarah Lovern, Madalyn Mullins, Mary Pourciau, Colleen Reese, Ethan Smith, Reagan Smith, Haley Sylvester, Sarah Talbot, Jessica Joseph;
Bayside, Nova Scotia – April Trowbrige;
Baytown, Texas – Norma Trejo;
Belcher – Jessica Herbert;
Belle Chasse – Hayley Barbazon, Alexander Melcer, Jade Talazac, Natalie Wilson, Annie Wright;
Belle Rose – Thomas Daigle;
Belmont – Jayce Gentry;
Bentley – Stephanie Hayes;
Benton – Haley Crosby, Holly Crosby, Jessica Gates, Joshua Johnson, Kara Knippers, Abigail Lauterbach, Hannah Schott, Daniel Scott, Ted Scott, Jadyn Sepulvado, Torea Taylor, Audrey Trujillo, Kimberly Umphries, Jackson Mathews;
Berwick – Brittany Vidos;
Bossier City – Christian Baker, Clayton Brown, Amber Engel, Sydney Gootee, Sydney Shannon, Austin Averitt, Alexandra Borrmann, Courtney Brooks, Abigail Castillo, Emily Cheatham, Lacy Chism, Caitlin Cover, Ri’Kaela England, Kelly Flores, Matthew Flynn, Kelsey Gallman, Candace Guillory, Rebecca Hickson, Jodi Hill, Anqumesha Jeter, Elizabeth Jones, Abigail Kent, Tina Kile, Marci King, Rebecca Markle, Arielle Martignetti, Claire McMillan, Brittany Morris, Kennedy Parson, Brittani Phillips, Khayla Pugh, Litzy Rivera, Kassidy Robideaux, Andrew Robinson, Rheagan Rowland, Jeffrey Ruiz, Elisha Scott, Hope Spaw, Brittany Spence, Tori Spraggins, Terrence Stewart, Susan Stone, Savannah Swaim, Benjamin Tanner, Avery Tibbets, Kortney Toellner, Jirneicia Ward, Courtney Wilson, Dominique Wineglass, Jennifer Woods, Nour Zeidan, Andrea Holley, Ashley Bennett, Ashanti Hill, Brittney Malmay,
Boyce – Bo Bowers, Sarah Hill, Amanda Land, Hannah Miller, Wyatt Miller, Miranda Perry, Ashley Smith, Jessie Turner;
Breaux Bridge – Blythe Duvall, Shayla James, Ashtin Mouton, Tyler Thibodeaux;
Brookeland, Texas – Morgan Horn, Paige West;
Brusly – Emma Wallace;
Buda, Texas – Kathryn Wristen;
Bullard, Texas – Brandon Duecker;
Bunkie – Brett Baker, Izola Williams, Kearia Wilson;
Burleson, Texas – Eric Neeley;
Bush – Saige Tassin;
Callisburg, Texas – Maycy English;
Calvin – Chris Price;
Campti – Destiny Potts, Stoney Slaughter, Alexis Smith;
Canton – Tiffany Cayson;
Carencro – Malik Babin, Destiny Kennerson, Jasmin Thibodeaux;
Cartagena, Colombia – Edwin Castro Frias, Jose Colon-Marrugo, Valeria Correa Meza, Victor Lopez Ramos, Romulo Osorio Herrera, Cristian Paez Geney, Daniel Racero Rocha;
Cartagena Bolivar, Colombia – Alejandro Dager Carrasquilla, Luis Osorio Betancourt, Saily Romero Marrugo, Valeria Perez Espinosa, Veronica Perez Espinosa, Ramon Sarruf Monroyl
Carthage, Illinois – Nicole Clark;
Castor – Kaycee Collinsworth;
Center, Texas – Chelsea Henderson;
Central – Christian Chustz;
Chalmette – Dylan Fuselier, Sara Mendoza;
Cheneyville – Fontana Mitchell;
Clayton – Glendalyn Boothe, Ruben Smith;
Cleburne, Texas – Patrick Murr;
Clifton – Toni Smith;
Clinton, Mississippi – Adam Moncure;
Cloutierville – Alexia Gistarb;
Colfax – Camren Bell, Alison Churchman, Mikayla Richardson, Evan White;
College Station, Texas – Jasmyn Hunter;
Columbia – Tyler Duchesne, Jackson McCann;
Converse – Zachary Faircloth, Nicolas Farmer, Ashley Forgues Brock, Skyler Laroux, Elaina Richardson, Noah Sepulvado, Ashley Sims;
Coppell, Texas – Jada Freeman;
Cottonport – Rayne Canoe, Zachary Gauthier, Justin Tigner;
Coushatta – Kori Allen, La’Zaria Clark, Elizabeth Cummins, Dillon Foshee, Jason Gross, Ashley Guye, Tawanda Johnson, Sidney Jones, Emily King, Jeremy Lawson, William Lee, Aaron Murray, Allison Pearah, Jon Russell, Amey Sepulvado, Carmie Williams, Caroline Wren;
Covington – Kayla Keys, Andrea Mier, Cathleen Oviedo, Etienne Blanchat;
Crowley – Alyssa Huval;
Cumberland, Maryland – Rebekah Apple;
Cypress, Texas – Alexis Gomez;
Dallas, Texas – Nadia Carney, Natalie Robledo;
Darrow – Micheal Douglas;
DeKalb, Texas – Jaquan Jackson;
DeQuincy – Austin Nichols, Hayden Robertson;
DeRidder – Carson Brown, Maygin Chesson, Alphonse Engram Ashleigh Fedderman, Bambi Hardesty, Michael Keeper, Dustin Lauderback, Kyla Lockhart, Kimberly Nolen, Don Prater, Hayley Richard, Shynikia Roberson, Mikalyn Russell, Lauren Taylor, Ebony Terry;
Deer Park, Texas – Patrick McDonald, Blake Stephenson;
Denham Springs – Caitlyn Cutrer, Caitlin Griffin Halle Mahfouz, Jonathan Rodriguez, Stephanie Ryals, Amy Thomas, Emily Williams;
Denton, Texas – Ian Edwards;
Derry – Hannah Antee;
Des Allemands – Dilaney Deroche;
Destrehan – Patrick Juneau, Kiera Robinson;
Deville – Kealee Anderson, Hailey Bolton, Alexis Dennis, Kayla Dewilde, Candice Dryden, Amy Henderson, Karlee Littleton, Marlee Paulk, Vivian Vallery;
Dike, Texas – Brynn Offut;
Dodson – Kierstyn Cyrus, Nolan Griffin, Lydia McGaha, Brittany Walker;
Donaldsonville – Natalie Landry, Madeline Sotile;
Doyle – Mackensie Ulrich;
Dry Creek – Kayla Mandelin;
Dry Prong – Jacob Boydstun, Sarah Desselle, Christy Gough, Alisabeth Lockhart;
Duson – Autumn Ritter, Lane Royer;
Duvall, Washington – Jason Smigelski;
Effie – Jaydan Perkins;
Elizabeth – Clyde Hurst;
Elm Grove – Gabrielle Smith;
Elmer – Jerrica Beebe, Mikayla Deloach, Halston Rachal, Joseph Rachal;
Enon Valley, Pennsylvania – Jennifer Smiley;
Eros – Alecia Smith;
Ethel – Abby Guillory;
Eunice – Carli Esters, Tammy Richard, Emily Deshotel;
Evans – Lakin Smith;
Evergreen – Shelby Riche;
Farmerville – Jalissa Loyd;
Ferriday – Shanequa Tyler, Dalenesha Wimley;
Fisher – Hayden Courtney;
Flatwoods – Jasmine George;
Florien – Gabrielle Bryant, Ashley Carter, Travis Cook, Faith Hopkins, McKenzie Kuhlow, Megan Lampkin, Noah Parker, Emma Ray, Ashley Ross, Elizabeth Squillini, Shari Wilson;
Forest Hill – Andrianne Dore, Rachel Humphries, Claudia Marie, Charli Stanley;
Forest Park, Illinois – Kimberly Murray;
Forney, Texas – Kaymi Wheeler;
Fort Polk – Laura Cerqueira, Amanda Dhondt, Jasmine Dyer, Clarrissa Lancour, Jennifer Lara Hager, Andrea Marquez, Clare Masa, Blaise Nkengafac, Madison Popp, Lindsay Romero, Shiela May Tabonares, Whitney Tipton, Christian Wood;
Fort Riley, Kansas – Breanna Bryan;
Fort Sill, Oklahoma – Iryana Burrus;
Fort Worth, Texas – Charles Gregory Meade;
Franklin – Chaqaire Jenkins, Cheyenne Smith;
Franklinton – Brian Geragthy, Aron Stephens;
Freeland, Washington – Paul Aune;
Fresno, Texas – Terres Anderson;
Frierson – John Rachal, Valerie Smith;
Frisco, Texas – Adam Trupp;
Gardena, California – Cole Llorens;
Geismar – Kristi Contreary;
Georgetown – Laura White;
Gibsland – Tyler Sneed;
Glenmora – Kristopher Devore, Precious Goins, Abbie Johnson, Megan Johnson, Nellie Johnson, Savannah Thompson, Tiara Baker;
Gloster – Kylee Causey, Jennifer Simmons, Johnette Whorton;
Goldonna – Alexander Guillory;
Gonzales – Addison Adams, Ryan Gremillion, Victoria Gardner, Legand Lilly, Corey Payne, Jamien Sampson, Zoe Tapp, Jaci Templet, Trencia Washington;
Gorman, Texas – Kourtney Seaton;
Gramercy – Amber Theisges;
Grand Cane – Nathan Graham, Emily Miller, Matthew Raybon;
Gray – Cassie Becnel, Tevyn Johnson;
Greenwell Springs – Katherine Bryant, Katherine Langlois;
Gretna – Chloe Johnson, Jasmine Myles, Trinity Velazquez;
Gueydan – Hannah Sedatol;
Gulfport, Mississippi – Tamara Benton;
Gun Barrel City, Texas – Colton Banghart;
Hahnville – Catelyn Errington;
Hammond – Andrea Hidalgo, Kaylon Willoughby, William Woodworth;
Harlingen, Texas – Frances Knight;
Harvey – Tajalai Evans, Christiana Johnson, Alexis Taylor;
Hattiesburg, Mississippi – Mary Mitchell;
Haughton – Matthew Bailey, Benny Broadway, Arneshia Brooks, Katelynn Edwards, Shelby Grubbs, Kobe Jackson, Kylee Jackson, Daniel Langen, Sarah Ledford, Nicklaus Lowery, Angie Nguyen, Jamie Phillips, Makenzie Rains, Licentra Randolph, Kaylee Swart, Valerie Taylor, Zoey Thomas, Logan Turner, Lomia Watkins, Larissa Wells, Hunter Woods;
Haynesville – Eriel Fields, Sabrina Sowell, Allyssa Dodds;
Heflin – Rachael Vickers;
Henderson, Texas – Andrew Blackmon, Christina Marie Colley;
Henderson – Asha Cormier;
Hessmer – Kaitlynn Burke, Laney Jeansonne;
Hineston – Richard Clark, Madison Morrison, Karlie Taylor;
Homer – Francene Ferguson, Shannon Rhodes;
Honolulu, Hawaii – Melissa Baker, Hans Andersen Tan;
Hornbeck – Sarah Ceballos, Jerry Hughes, Jr., Carrie Wilson;
Hosston – Alaysia Fredieu;
Houma – Kelsey Chauvin, Anna Gautreaux, Zoe Hebert, Dylan LeBlanc, Venessa McKinley, Sara Rebstock, Kyle Siddle;
Houston, Texas – Bruce Beth, Brittany Davis, Oai Lee Huynhl
Hutto, Texas – Tommi Long;
Ida – Madison Campbell;
Independence – Chloe Whiddon;
Iota – Morgan Gotte, Katie Latiola;
Iowa – Marvette Williams;
Jamestown – Kylie Knotts;
Jeanerette – Brandy Jackson;
Jefferson – Matthew Broekman, Codi Vernace, Amanda Wilburn;
Jena – Tiara Brown, Candace Decker, Jessi McNeely, Dena Ray;
Jennings – Emily Benoit, Destany Brown, Phillip Gotte, KaTierra Lewis;
Jonesboro – Natalee Gray, Tia Moore;
Jonesville – Rachel Eichmann, Kayla Robertson, Kameron Stevenson, James White;
Kalaupapa, Hawaii – Kamamalu Nishihira-Asuncion;
Keatchie – Brittany Miller, Amber Nash, Sarah Plaisance;
Keithville – McKenzie Knotts, Shleby Loftin, Cara Lorensen, Dominique Jackson, Jerry Parks, Deja White;
Kemp, Texas – Katelynn Messer
Kenner – Gennyfer Pena;
Kerens, Texas – Brandon Brumbelow, Diego Maldonado;
Killeen, Texas – William Hooper, Nathalohn Nanai;
Kinder – Teralyn Plumber, Stewart Wheeler;
Kingwood, Texas – Alexandria Bailey;
Konarskie, Poland – Elzbieta Iwaniuk;
Labadieville – Jacelynn LeBlanc, Logan Simoneaux;
Lacombe – Casey Casler;
Lafayette – Taylor Aucoin, Bailey Begnaud, Natalye Bradley, Javian Bush, Amari Carmouche, Joshua Delaughter, Shaniya Fuselier, Ashley Guidry, Adele Hebert, Bryce Hernandez, Julia Laperouse, Collin Monaghan, Joshua Monaghan, Sarah Palmintier, Christina Poole, Jordan Redd, Madison Weathers, Ireland Williams;
Lake Arthur – Nicole Andrews, Tuesdi Stipek, Hannah Worley;
Lake Charles – Rebekah Nicholas, Emily Roller, Isaiah Roy;
Lake Wales, Florida – LaRon James;
Lakeside, California – Amanda Lee;
LaPlace – Melvin Bates, Jalen Haydel, Jacob St. Pierre;
Larose – Nicholas Hebert;
Las Vegas, Nevada – Caitlin Schweighart;
Lavon, Texas – Berenice Bretado, Matthew Howeth;
League City, Texas – Kennedi Carter, Mary Gilbert, Emily Ornelas, Lacee Savage, Christopher Zirkle;
Leander – Karissa Boswell;
Leavenworth, Kansas – Anuhea Iyo;
Lecompte – Logan Cheek, Allison Williams;
Leesville – Dakota Abrams, Kimberly Alwell, Summer Atkins, Kaitlyn Bailey, Hannah Baker, Marilyn Brooks, Rachal Brown, Kaylee Busby, Victoria Carbaugh, Jessica Clare, Angie Culbert, Baylor Dillon, Raegan Dotson, Brandon Fredieu, Miranda Fulks, Ashley Garcia, Sean Grady, Morgan Hall, Britney Harvey, Kimberly Henley, Haley Hood, Kelly Kealaula, Zachary Keeton, Lane Koury, Samatha LaMonte, Daniella Lowry, Karl Marzahl, Kylie McAllister, Amy McKellar, Kelly Mitchell, Emily Moore, Taylor Newman, Joseph Orchi, Kaitlyn Pajinag, Victoria Perkins, Elizabeth Rios, Amber Rose, Chloe Rouleau, Destiny Sanders, David Santos, Erin Schwartz, Riley Shackelford, Brandy Sherman, Joseph Slaughter, Claire Smyth, Heather Snell, Alicia Stanford, Collin Strickland, Sydni Striedel, Matthew Ward, Marissa Weldon, Mikayla Zills;
Lena – Lashae’ Lucas, Courtland Smith;
Lettsworth – Meilyn Woods;
Lindale, Texas – Eden Cook;
Little Elm, Texas – Jasmine Ealy, Daniel Larin, Brian Lenox, Kaitlyn McCullogh;
Livingston – Chase Crane;
Logansport – Kendoyle Cox, Megan Holmes, Maci Martin, Charles McClintock;
Longview, Texas – Hannah Dunn;
Lonoke, Arkansas – Rachel Terry;
Loranger – Cambree Bailey, Jessi Dominique;
Luling – Macie Barrios, Nathan Roth;
Lumberton, Texas – Joshua Terry;
Mabank, Texas – Dustin Huffman;
Madisonville – Sarahjane Ladut, Bailey Perrilloux;
Magnolia, Texas – Kyle Moore;
Mamou – Melissa Soileau;
Mandeville – Maci Burt, Mya Holmes, Sheridan Smith, Jalen Willis;
Mansfield – Canessia Johnson, Samantha Powell;
Mansura – Beau Barbry, Magen Hegger;
Many – Chelsa Arthur, Victoria Barnhill, Rachel Bensinger, Toby Bruce, Maegan Burkett, Hannah Chanler, Patrick Colston, Sarah Cross, Timothy Early, Tiarra Frazier, Brittney Garcie, Emily Holcomb, Mayci Lewis, Jenifer Meadows, Athena Mitchell, Kasey Moore, Seth Ozsoy, Chelsea Parrie, Andrew Penfield, Heather Trichel, Krisha Williams, Tyler Colston, Sheridan Gowen;
Marble Falls, Texas – Sarah Lewis;
Maringouin – Laura Scronce;
Marksville – Olivia Johnson, Shelby Lemoine, Madeleine Morrow, Tanner Nugent, Mackenzie Stanley;
Marrero – Tara Brown, Jade Duthu, Dorothy Gioia;
Marshall, Missouri – KaNeeshia Gay;
Marshall, Texas – Sydney Swilley, Abigail Upton;
Marthaville – Dylan Daniels, Mallory Powell, Hannah Sattler, Frank Lester;
Maurice – Jenna-Clair Courville, Adele Vincent, Elise Vincent;
Meraux – Sophie Stechmann;
Merryville – Aric Johnson;
Metairie – Kathryn Bancroft, Anna Birbiglia, Taylor Crawford, Cameron Duhe, Mary Gaffney, Ellie Mandel, Andrew Pitari;
Midlothian, Texas – Rachel Fowler;
Midlothian, Illinois – Daniel Hlad;
Minden – Roxy Easley, Abby Greene, Peyton Gray, Fisher McLemore, Kirsten Sibley, Amber Slater, Asata Sylvas, Edoard Talamayan, Madison Tanner, Jordan Young;
Minneapolis, Minnesota – Jenna Carlson;
Missouri City, Texas – Cayla Jones;
Monroe – William Adcock, Allie Ellerbe, Jaronda Griffin, Parron Jones, Skylar Sorrell, Jarviar Wade, Brittany Wilson;
Montegut – Megan Pellegrin;
Montgomery – Morgan Bartlett, Morgan McManus, Erikk Sluss, Hannah Vercher, Michael Waxley;
Moreauville – Austin Dismer, Nicholas Jackson;
Morrow – Quaniqua Joseph;
Murcia, Colombia – Cristina Gonzalez Corchon;
Natchez – Jackson Carroll, Jacorrian Davis, Courtney Sarpy, Morgan Slaugher, Patricia Wise;
Natchez, Mississippi – Victoria Bradford;
Natchitoches – Adedayo Adeniji, Jordan Alex, Tyler Anderson, James Armstrong, Aaron Averett, Brock Barrios, Gracie Bennett, Gavin Bergeron, Ciara Blade, Keaton Booker, Charles Bouchie, Shenita Braxton, Taylor Burch, Deasia Burrell, Ladiamond Burrell, Morgan Burris, Ebone Burton, Kezia Butler, Savannah Bynog, John Byone, Maria Carmona-Ruiz, Kiondra Clark, Lane Clevenger, Kaia Collins, Leanna Coy, Whitney Crooks, Kenneth Darcy, Kara Davis, Kelsy Davis, Sean Day, Leah Deford, Trenton Downs, Ashley Dranguet, Peyton Ebarb, Virginia Falgoust, Daniela Forero Salcedo, Hannah Forsythe, Eric Fredieu, Katlynn French, Luis Gallo Quintero, Abbie Gandy, Jeffrey Goff, Samuel Greene, Julian Guerrero Acevedo, Laura Guzman Rodriguez, Brianca Hall, Valentina Herazo Alvarez, John Howell, Jared Hulsey, Emily Johnson, Zachary Johnson, Abagael Kinney, Lyndon Knueppel, Karlee Laurence, Carlomagno Leon Jimenez, Maya Levo, Alba Maloff, Brooklyn Martin, Paula Martinez Marrugo, LiZhang Matuschka, Tyler McCain, Michael McClung, Kristin McQuillin, Jasmine Milsap, Sarah Moody, Coy Morgan, Matthew Nelson, Jorgia Nevers, Kevin Nutt, Kiara Padilla, Griffiana Paige, Kenneth Penrod, Chaka Palm, Kevin Price, Shalondria Rainey, LaKendria Remo, Alejandro Restrepo Cardozo, Kierstin Richter, William Rogers, Maria Rushing, Chandler Sarpy, Gabrielle Scarborough, Natalle Sers, Anise Settle, Anna Sibley, Jonathan Simmons, Patrick Sprung, Josie Stamey, Nicholas Swank, Carosha Taylor, Samuel Taylor, Harrison Thomas, Enonedria Thompson, Margaret Thompson, Caitlyn Tobin, Austin Townsend, Ricardo Ventura, Eva Venzant, Lauren Vienne, Ryan Wade, Daniel Whatley, Thomas Wiggins, Sherri Williams, Rylee Wyer, Naoko Yoshida,
Navasota, Texas – Shelton Eppler;
New Braunfels, Texas – Charli Fouts;
New Iberia – Tara Bonvillain, Kyrsten Freyou, Jacob Gary, Jeannette Hardy, Nicole Moore, Madison Romero, Alexis Trosclair;
New Llano – Laura Cowell, Sylvia Milerski, Dennis Stein, Collar Wilson;
New Orleans – Faith Burke, RyShaneka Kirsh, Trevor Morgan, Gloria Smyly, Rishard Winford;
Noble – Savannah Anderson, Landen Funderburk, Joshua Ray;
Nolensville, Tennessee – Joseph Tappel;
Norfolk, Virginia – Samantha Broughton;
North Richland Hills, Texas – Cody Germany;
North York, Ontario – Alexander Comanita;
Oakdale – Clayton Ashworth, Staci Brown, Kirstin Richard;
Olla – Morgan Barbo, Cierra Evans, Tanner Terrell;
Opelousas – Jordan Brisco, Kenya Gradnigo, Amy Levier, Sheridan Mayo, Kayla Pitre;
Paincourtville – Hannah Brister;
Panama City, Florida – Adam Normand;
Paradis – Kaitlyn Dunn, Kallie Lutz;
Pearland, Texas – Clent Jones;
Pineville – Victoria Bordelon, Raegan Brocato, Kaitlyn Burns, Taylor Campbell, Caitlin Crawford, Deanna Daniel, Katlin Ernst, Victoria Gambino, Brooke Gongre, Kaitlyn Jackson, Landon King, Laura Lachney, Carlee Lake, Jeffery Lepage, Emily Litton, James Perry, Cinnamon Player, Hannah Pusateri, Diane Richey, Rachel Rudd, Amaria Sapp, Jordan Sensat, Micah St. Andre, Reygan Taylor, Jaclyn Whatley, Rodney Williams;
Plain Dealing – Nicholas Cason;
Plano, Texas – Asher Van Meter;
Plaucheville – Matthew Armand;
Pleasant Hill – Makenzi Patrick, Yasmine Maxie;
Pollock – Tanner Brazil, Erika Clark, Dalton Kopp, Samantha Wilber,
Pollok, Texas – Katelyn Boles;
Ponchatoula – Kaitlyn Hawkins;
Port Allen – Kennedy Cullen, Evan Daigle, Samantha Moses;
Port Barre – Lauren Deville, Skylar Guidroz, Kirsten Sonnier;
Prairieville – Donesha Blount, Lauren Breaux, Claire Credeur, Chloe Lambert, Kyle Munson, Ellise Vice, Derek Walle, Brady Wilson;
Princeton – Micah Larkins, Alyssia Mobley, Katelyn Nattin, Ariell Shield;
Provencal – Rachel Head, Christopher Jennings, Samantha Toro;
Puyallup, Washington – Aine Oh;
Quitman – Cassie Tucker;
Raceland – Paige Parks, DQuincy McGuire;
Rayne – Bailey Beard, Bishop Breaux;
Rayville – Emily Rawls, Terry Rogers, Leslie Sharbono;
Reno, Nevada – Olivia Marazzo, Sydney Oren;
Richardson, Texas – Riley Cantrell, Lauren-Ashley Clarke;
Ringgold – Joseph Hays, Terreny Langford, Lauren Nelson, Olivia Prado, Aileecia Tipton, Darrion Sims, Caleb Vining, Tyler Weathers;
River Ridge – Alexander Thibodeau, Taylor Young;
Robeline – Chad Berly, Jonathan Chism, Hunter DuBois, Alecia Eddleman, Kelsey Elkins, Hannah Hennigan, Richard McCollum, Morgan Neugent, Ember O’Bannon, Megan Palmer, Lillian Rachal, Tyler Tousek, Jeffrey Watley;
Rosepine – Emilee Johnson;
Rosharon, Texas – Whitney Washington;
Ruston – Irene Hild, Lara Schales, Jamesha Woods;
Saint Amant – Kylie Nix;
Saint Bernard – Emily Snyder;
Saint Francisville – Robert Burke, Claire Leming, Ryan Reed;
Saint Gervais la Foret, France – Marcelline Poitevin;
Saint Martinville – Chaselyn Lewis;
Saline – Isabella Jones, Malayna Poche;
San Antonio, Texas – Hayden Brown, Paris Finkbeiner, Kelli Gamble;
San Pedro Sula, Cortes, Colombia – Jose Bustillo Aguero, Cesia Corrales, Bella Trimino Gutierrez;
Saratoga, Arkansas – Christie Sain;
Scott – Hannah Durgin, Taylor Joseph;
Scurry, Texas – Rebecca Blackshear;
Shantow City, China – Zhixin Lin;
Shongaloo – Kayla Mouser;
Shreveport – DayJah Alexander, Maria Awwad, Shakendra Bailey, Erin Batts, Antanae Baylock, JiKeeriya-Jontay Bowden, Rakeisha Brown, Anquaneshia Burnham, Kaylan Campbell, Neeley Caudle, Kesherion Collins, Hannah Crnkovic, Kendall Crosby, April Daniels, Joslyn Davis, Destiny Deal, Kevin Denks, Kimberly Dennis, Kaitlyn Doyal, Chenara Dredden, Laura Mary-Katherine Duhon, Shalanda Duncan, Reagan Escude, Chloe Farrar, Jenna Fielder, Sterlin Foster, Jamie French, Tyler Gardner, JaSae Gatlin, Rayvin Gaudet, Evan Gibson, Karina Goodnight, Lauren Gore, Ashleigh Grace, Anna Green, Elaina Guerrero, Matthew Haltom, Jennifer Hardey, Regyne Hardy, Kelsey Harlow, Madison Harper, Kimberly Housley, Shleby Hunter, Madyson Istre, Jazzmine Jackson, Caitlin Johnson, Carly Johnson, Christopher Johnson, Jada Johnson, Zachary Johnson, William Mahoney, Caitlyn Malloy, LaTonya Martin, Aysia Mills, Acquiria Mitchell, Dylan Molenhour, Shanautica Montgomery, Kelly Moody, Kendall Murray, Aaron Navarre, Hannah Nicholls, Olivia Noonan, Annabelle Parker, Soleil Paterson, Mary Murray, Michael Phelps, Hayden Pilcher, Laura Pritchard, Bailey Rech, Nahjee Reid, Mallori Sanders, Kendall Sanford, Angelica Satcher, Yuriana Sauseda, Katherine Sawyer, Lawson Scott, Cynthia Shahriar, Shermaine Shorter, Mary Sibley, Ciara Sipes, Richard Sloan, Jessica Sowers, Lindsey Sullivan, Jordan Taylor, Joyce Taylor, Rodnisha Terry, Anne Tibbit, Chloe Vance, Kayla Waller, Lajayda Williams, Suzanne Williams, Kristy Wilson, Jonathan Zavalydriga;
Simmesport – Olivia Draper, Taylor Myers;
Simpson – David Marquis, Christina Snider;
Singer – Emily Smith;
Slidell – Rikki Ayers, Brittany Brooks, Jacqueline Coleman, Shakera Dixon, Jordan Garcia, Thomas Garner, Claire Harvey, William Jensen, Tristan Johnson, Allyssa Marshall, Isabel Melhado, Kha Nguyen, John Norvel, Theresa Sharp, Raina Woods;
Spain – Judit Castillo Gargallo;
Spring, Texas – Victoria Harris;
St. Francisville – Emeria Jones;
St. Martinville – Cassandra Zenon;
Starks – Sara Hyatt, Melina Royer;
Stonewall – Carolyn Davlin, Emmy Hinds, Tobert Mcallen, Hunter Tuck, Jonathan Perot, Hunter Tuck;
Sulphur – Andrina Ferguson, Madeline Fortenberry, Derek Henry, Helen-Lois Mancil, Trevor Molitor, Elisabeth Perez, Makenzie Simon, Justin Sittig, Andrew Stephens, Shelby Sullivan, Sonya Wren;
Sunset – Deandra Eaglin, Sonia Vidrine;
Talihina, Oklahoma – Heidi Couch;
Taylor, Texas – Jake English;
Texarkana, Texas – Sydney Cowgill, Cody Hambly, Jasmine Neal;
Texarkana, Arkansas – Monique Walker, Kenneth Williams;
Thibodaux – Beth Olin, Cierra Winch;
Tobyhanna, Pennsylvania – Brianna Morosco;
Trout – Harley Lisenby, Kalee McGuffee;
Tupelo, Mississippi – Bailey Griffin;
Vidalia – Charles Johnson, Brittany Kennedy;
Ville Platte – Regan Hazelton;
Vinton – Shae Cramer, Kelsie Rayon, Madison Zaunbrecher;
Vivian – Jaylon Berry, Hannah Campbell, Chase Lewis;
Warrenton, Virginia – Melissa Martinez;
Washington – Madelyn Dupont, Ambrieanna Lazard;
Waskom, Texas – Mary Alexander, Blakely Canfield;
Waynesboro, Mississippi – David Hodo;
Welsh – Edna Hofmann, Daniel Menard;
West, Texas – Nathan Nors;
West Monroe – Abigail Beck, Brandy Chapman, Alexandra Clack, Kirstin Elrod, Brianna Fife, Evelyn Maguire, Cassandra Phillips, Candyce Steele, Melissa Taylor, Syroi Webb, Christopher Wynn;
Westwego – Tja’h Edwards;
Wills Point, Texas – Rebekah Clark;
Winnfield – Jermesia Anderson, Taylor Burnett, Mia County, Ashlyn Duck, Rhonda Duff, Jourdan Fitzgerald, Hunter Johnson, Kayla Jones, Caitlyn Martin, Tenisha Phillips, Avonna Wilson;
Winnsboro – Samantha Browning, Hunter Cooper, Darrel Doyle, A’Lexus Johnson;
Winter Springs, Florida – Justin Garretson;
Youngsville – Blair Fontenot, Charli Fontenot, Brette Reaux, Isabelle Vivien;
Zachary – Lydia Johnson, Chasity Matthews, Demetriona Goudeau;
Zwolle – Kierstyn Cartinez, Hillary Charles, Michantwana Lacey, Courtney McDaniel, Holly Laroux, Konner Parrie, Treveon Perrty, Marcelina Remedies;
2 notes
·
View notes
Text
0 notes
Text
Morgan Freeman Joins Taylor Sheridan Series For Paramount+ – Deadline
Morgan Freeman Joins Taylor Sheridan Series For Paramount+ – Deadline
EXCLUSIVE: Oscar winner Morgan Freeman has joined the cast of Paramount+’s original series Lioness, headlined and executive produced by Zoe Saldaña and also starring Nicole Kidman, who executive produces, and Laysla De Oliveira. Freeman will play Edwin Mullins, the United States Secretary of State in the show, from Taylor Sheridan, MTV Entertainment Studios and 101 Studios. Lioness is based on…
View On WordPress
0 notes
Text
Exploration into understanding of guilt
(Firstly I find it an interesting coincidence that an image of a statue I know resnobally well, that is located in the Kibble Palace in Glasgow's botanical gardens) Edwin Roscoe Mullins-Cain or My Punishment is Greater than I can Bear (1899) (genesis 4:13)
I Plan to go sit by this statue and read Genesis 4:13, perhaps this will Improve understanding.
Having read this page, I wish to look more into the connection between Guilt and religion, do these go hand in hand, was guilt used as a method of control. I found it of interest that that in the christian Bible Guilt is considered a legal state deserving of punishment.
Also of interest -The Psychology of Guilt
Within this section Freud, Miller, Buber and Fenichel are mentioned and in some ways their understanding and research on Guilt is somewhat supportive yet also in some ways contradictory. I believe I will look into this further. as Within this wikipedia page I don't feel it has gone enough in depth, therefor i don't feel my understanding of knowledge has been significantly improved This may also support my understanding regarding our Psychoanalysis lecture as part of the Critical practice module.
The section On collective Guilt is also of interest to me and is fairly brief so I will look into this further. is perhaps collective empathy more prominent than collective guilt?
Yet having lived in Germany, collective guilt/shame is something I am reasonably aware off. once again perhaps overlapping.
0 notes
Text
NYPD Officer Says His Support for Colin Kaepernick Cost Him a Promotion

A Black officer of the New York Police Department said he was denied a promotion because of his support for former San Francisco 49ers quarterback Colin Kaepernick.
Sergeant Edwin Raymond was set to be promoted on Friday to lieutenant, the New York Daily News reported. However, his promotion was thrown out of the window after officers allegedly received complaints about Raymond’s handling of a domestic violence incident.
The sergeant who scored No. 26 out of 1,325 sergeants on a lieutenant’s test called the NYPD on their bluff and said “it is unfortunate.”
“I did a press conference in support of Colin Kaepernick, using his status to put a spotlight on issues in policing that need to be fixed,” Raymond, 33, told the news outlet. “Because of the controversy a lot of cops criticized him. Me being aligned with him was seen as standing with the enemy.”
Sergeant Raymond and other law enforcement officials held a rally on August 19, 2017, at Pier 1, Brooklyn Bridge Park in Brooklyn in support of Kaepernick’s stance on social injustice.
A senior police official said they’re looking into the complaints made against Raymond’s claiming that he failed to enforce orders of protection during a domestic dispute.
“The department takes domestic violence very seriously and is obligated to look at these incidents,” the official stated.
The allegations stemmed from a Sept. 2017 incident where a woman saw her ex-boyfriend and called 911. She reportedly had an order of protection against him and the cops saw the order, but Raymond made the call to let the man go.
“That’s nonsense,” said Raymond. “They (the cops) completely manipulated the situation…They turned the woman into the victim.”
The officers reported the incident of Raymond’s alleged misconduct to Internal Affairs.
“These cops went thinking the numbers would give their claims more plausibility, and unfortunately the department is choosing to entertain this and use it as a dagger to end my promotion,” Raymond noted. “They are not happy with me. I don’t enjoy having to speak out, but it’s historically what makes the department budge.”
The president of the Sergeants Benevolent Association, Ed Mullins told the news publication that the NYPD has a history of selective bias against certain officers when it comes to their disciplinary system.
“Decisions are made on the sly, and there are people who have pending charges and still get promoted, and others whose promotions are held back for reasons that are never explained,” said Mullins. “If this doesn’t appear to be retaliation, then I don’t know what is.”
The NYPD, on the other hand, has declined to comment on the matter.
3 notes
·
View notes
Text
Horse racing notes: California racing suffers new blow in decision on summer fairs
SANTA ANITA LEADERS (Through Sunday) Jockeys / Wins Flavien Prat / 24 Juan Hernandez / 21 Umberto Rispoli / 15 Hector Berrios / 11 Edwin Maldonado / 10 Trainers / Wins Mark Glatt / 12 Jeff Mullins / 10 Bob Baffert / 10 Doug O’Neill / 10 Philip D’ Amato / 7 George Papaprodromou / 7 UPCOMING STAKES SANTA ANITA Saturday • $200,000, Grade II Santa Monica Stakes, fillies and mares, 4-year-olds and up,…
0 notes
Text
A List of All of the Characters that I Use In My Fics/Drawings
Okay, as a precursor to this list, this includes canon characters who’s names/ages I’ve altered, though it should be fairly obvious who’s who. OCs will be bolded, canon character will be italicised, and characters who I’m not even sure are canon are not have both. Numbers in (these) are how old they are in D1, in [these] are in D2, and in {these} are old they are in D3. Also I’m going to be suffering as I make individual tags for all of these kids. And I’ll reblog this post with updates about certain as they happen.
Peyton Armstrong (Son of Peter Armstrong [One of Clayton’s Men]) (14 [15] {16})
Merle Ambrosius (Son of Merlin Ambrosius) (10 [11] {12})
Jacob “Jackie” Alvey (Child of Prince James [Sofia the First]) (13 [14] {15})
Reza Baddour (Son of Raem Baddour [Former Astronomer of Agrabah]) (16 [17] {18})
Harold “Harry” Badun (Son of Horace) (16 [17] {18})
Jason “Jace” Badun (Son of Jasper) (16 [17] {18})
Edward “Eddie” Balthazar (Son of Edgar Balthazar) (15 [16] {17})
Aria Barnes (Daughter of Eric and Ariel) (16 [17] {18})
Melody Barnes (Daughter of Eric and Ariel) (22 [23] {24})
Léon Bartlett (Son of Lawrence Bartlett) (14 [15] {16})
Hermione “Hermie” Bing (Daughter of the Ringmaster) (15 [16] {17})
Byrn Bones (Child of Brom Bones) (13 [14] {15})
Amour Bonfamille (Child of Adelaide Bonfamille) (10 [11] {12})
Ghufran Bousaid (Child of Gazeem) (13 [14] {15})
Ale Bosco (Child of Stromboli) (13 [14] {15})
Opal Bourgeois (Child of Mama Odie) (15 [16] {17})
Nadine Campos (Daughter of Tiana and Naveen) (16 [17] {18})
Timothy “Tim” Campos (Son of Tiana and Naveen)] (22 [23] {24})
Chad Charming (Son of Cinderella) (16 [17] {18})
Lilith Chaykovsky (Child of Chernabog) (14 [15] {16})
Wesley “Clay” Clayton (Son of Clayton) (16 [17] {18})
Whitney Clayton (Daughter of Waltham Clayton) (8 [9] {10})
Pierino “Pin” Collodi (Son of Pinocchio) (13 [14] {15})
Elizabeth “Eliza” Darling (Daughter of Daniel and Margarita, Granddaughter of Edwin and Edward, Great-Granddaughter of Kilian and Jane, Great-Great-Granddaughter of Wendy and Edward) (16 [17] {18})
Morgan Darling (Child of Daniel and Margarita, Grandchild of Edwin and Edward, Great-Grandchild of Kilian and Jane, Great-Great-Grandchild of Wendy and Edward) (15 [16] {17})
Danielle d'Arque (Daughter of Monsieur d’Arque) (8 [9] {10})
Thalassis “Thalia” d’Châteaupers (Daughter of Esmeralda and Phoebus) (16 [17] {18})
Zephyr d’Châteaupers (Son of Esmeralda and Phoebus) (20 [21) {22})
Étiennette “Étienne” Delacroix (Child of the Enchantress) (17 [18] {19})
Amber Dearly [101 Dalmatians] (21 [22] {23})
Cande de Vil (Daughter of Cecil B. de Vil) (14 [15] {16})
Carlos de Vil (Son of Cruella de Vil) (14 [15] {16})
Diego de Vil (Son of David de Vil [Cruella de Vil’s brother]) (16 [17] {16})
Ivy de Vil (Daughter of Ida de Vil) (21 [22] {23})
Pauline Harriet de Vil (Child of P.H. de Vil) (13 [14] {15})
Heracles “Herkie” Dióspoulos (Son of Hercules and Megara) (14 [15] {16})
Mallory “Mal” Bertha Dragmire (Daughter of Maleficent) (16 [17] {18})
Malcolm O’DunBroch (Son of Harris [Brave]) (13 [14] {19})
Carina Everhart-Potts (Daughter of Mrs.Potts) (16 [17] {18})
Charles “Chip” Everhart-Potts (Step-son of Mrs.Potts and Maurice, Step-brother of Belle) (23 [24] {25})
Celia Facilier (Daughter of Dr. Facilier) (11[12]{13})
Freddie Facilier (Daughter of Dr. Facilier) (16 [17] {18})
Jade Fadel (Daughter of Johi Fadel [Sister of Jafar]) (16 [17] {18})
Lanying “Lonnie” Fa-Li (Daughter of Mulan) (16 [17] {18})
Shui “Shang” Fa-Li (Son of Mulan) (18 [19] {18})
Lafayette “LeFou Deux” Faucher (Son of LeFou) (15 [16] {17})
Anxelin Fitzherbert (Daughter of Rapunzel and Eugene Fitzherbert) (16 [17] {18})
Ruby Fitzherbert (Daughter of Rapunzel and Eugene Fitzherbert) (16 [17] {18})
Angel Fonzerelli (Child of Kuzco and Malina) (16 [17] {18})
Catherine “Claudine” Frollo (Daughter of Claude Frollo) (16 [17] {18})
Winston Garnier (Adopted Son of William “Wiggins” Garnier”) (12 [13] {14})
Chiōn “Chelsey” Glücksburg-Krónosopoulos-Sadik (Child of Elsa, Hestia, and Marisol) (16 [17] {18})
Evren “Evelyn” Glücksburg-Krónosopoulos-Sadik (Child of Elsa, Hestia, and Marisol) (14 [15] {16})
Varme “Vanessa” Glücksburg-Krónosopoulos-Sadik (Daughter of Elsa, Hestia, and Marisol) (17 [18] {19})
Benjamin Florian “Ben” Gold (Son of Adam and Belle) (16 [17] {18})
Ginerva “Ginny” Gothel (Daughter of Mother Gothel) (16 [17] {18})
Edward Hamilton (Son of Hamilton [Clayton’s Men]) (13 [14] {15})
Connor Hartz (Child of the King and Queen of Hearts) (17 [18] {19})
Coraline Hartz (Daughter of the King and Queen of Hearts) (17 [18] {19})
Harriet Hook (Daughter of Captain Hook) (17 [18] {19})
Callista Jane “CJ” Hook (Daughter of Captain Hook) (15 [16] {17})
Harry Hook (Son of Captain Hook) (16 [17] {18})
Javed “Jay” Khalaf (Son of Jafar) (16 [17] {18})
Nassim Khalaf (Child of Nasira [Jafar’s Sister]) (14 [15] {16})
Boris “Bashful” King (Son of Bashful) (16 [17] {18})
Dimitri King (Son of Doc) (16 [17] {18})
Doug King (Son of Dopey) (16 [17] {18})
David King (Son of Dopey) (9 [10] {11})
Gordon King (Son of Grumpy) (16 [17] {18})
Henry King (Son of Happy) (16 [17] {18})
Sylvester “Sleepy” King (Son of Sleepy) (16 [17] {18})
Samuel “Sammy” King (Son of Sneezy) (16 [17 {18}]
Gaston Jr. “Gerrard” Legume (Son of Gaston) (17 [18] {19})
Gaston III “Geoffrey” Legume (Son of Gaston) (17 [18] {19})
Gaston IV “Gil” “Gilbert” Legume (Son of Gaston) (16 [17] {18})
Alison “Ally” Liddell (Daughter of Alice) (16 [17] {18})
Alexis Metaxas (Child of Madame Medusa) (18 [19] {20})
Blazing Star “Tiger Peony” of the Miccosukee (Daughter of Canna Lily [Tiger Lily]) (14 [15] {16})
Edith Mim (Granddaughter of Madam Mim; Daughter of Hilda and Edwin Mim) (17 [18] {16})
Eileen Mim (Granddaughter of Madam Mim; Daughter of Hilda and Edwin Mim) (15 [16] {17})
Elizabeth “Eliza” Mim (Granddaughter of Madam Mim; Daughter of Hilda and Edwin Mim) (13 [14] {15})
Hailey Mim (Granddaughter of Madam Mim; Daughter of Heather and Martin Mim) (14 [15]{16})
Hannah Mim (Granddaughter Madam Mim; Daughter of Heather and Martin Mim) (16 [17] {18})
Mabel Mim (Granddaughter of Madam Mim; Daughter of Heather and Martin Mim) (13 [14] {15})
Mackenzie “Macy” Mim (Granddaughter of Madam Mim; Daughter of Heather and Martin Mim) (15 [16] {17})
Madeline “Mad Maddy” Mim (Granddaughter of Madam Mim; Daughter of Hilda and Edwin Mim) (16 [17] {18})
Maria Mim (Granddaughter of Madam Mim; Daughter of Hilda and Edwin Mim) (14 [15] {16})
Mildred “Millie” Mim (Granddaughter of Madam Mim; Daughter of Heather and Martin Mim) (17 [18] {19})
Martin “Big Murph” Murphy (Son of Mullins [Captain Hook’s Pirate Crew]) (15 [16] {17})
Mosi Nereuspoulos (Child of Morgana) (18 [19] {20})
Florence Noel (Child of Forte [Beauty and the Beast Christmas Special]) (13 [14] {15})
Dion Papaáïdēs (Child of Hades and Persephone) (17 [18] {19})
Hector Papaáïdēs (Child of Hades and Persephone) (17 [18] {19})
Phoenix “Hadie” Papaáïdēs (Child of Hades and Persephone) (14 [15] {16})
Pyrros Papaáïdēs (Child of Hades and Persephone) (16 [17] {18})
Sokanon of the Powhatan (Daughter of Amonute [Pocahontas] and Nakoma) (17 [18] {19})
Aethelnoth “Artie” Pendragon (Son of King Arthur) (14 [15] {16})
Richard “Rick” Ratcliffe (Son of Governor Ratcliffe) (16 [17] {18})
Evelyn “Evie” Regine (Daughter of the Evil Queen [Grimhilde]) (16 [17] {18})
Audrey Rose (Daughter of Sleeping Beauty) (16 [17] {18})
Jonathan Rourke (Son of Lyle Rourke) (11 [12] {13})
Jamilah “Jordan” Samara (Daughter of the Genie [Aladdin]) (16 [17] {18})
Uma Saraki (Daughter of Ursula) (16 [17] {18})
Sophie Sid (Apprentice/Protege/Adopted Daughter of Yen Sid) (16 [17] {18})
Samuel “Sammy” Smee (Son of Mr.Smee) (15 [16] {17})
Sebastian “Sebby” “Squeaky” Smee (Son of Mr. Smee) (6 [7] {8})
Stephen “Steve” “Squirmy” Smee (Son of Mr. Smee) (9 [10] {11})
Aziz Sultan (Son of Aladdin and Jasmine) (16 [17] {18})
Kudu Sultan (Child of Aladdin and Jasmine) (22 [23] {24})
Yzla Sumac (Daughter of Yzma) (15 [16] {17})
Zevon Sumac (Son of Yzma) (16 [17] {18})
Whitney Sykes (Son of Bill Sykes) (14 [15] {16})
Kyriakos “Kyle” Nedakh-Thatch (Son of Kida and Milo) (17 [18] {20}) (this is technically my sibling, @shinjutori‘s OC but I’m just putting them here because I might use them? sorry shin)
Jaclyn “Jackie” Topper (Daughter of Jackson [Mad Hatter]) (17 [18] {19})
Anthony Tremaine (Son of Anastasia Tremaine) (16 [17] {18})
Danielle “Danny” Tremaine (Daughter of Drizella Tremaine) (18 [19] {20})
Darya Tremaine (Daughter of Drizella Tremaine) (17 [18] {19})
David Tremaine (Son of Drizella Tremaine) (8 [9] {10})
Débora “Debbie” Tremaine (Daughter of Drizella Tremaine) (16 [17] {18})
Denis Tremaine (Son of Drizella Tremaine) (14 [15] {16})
Diana “Dizzy” Tremaine (Daughter of Drizella Tremaine) (13 [14] {15})
Diodore “Dio” Tremaine (Son of Drizella Tremaine) (6 [7] {8})
Dmitriy Tremaine (Son of Drizella Tremaine) (11 [12] {13})
Dominik “Dom” Tremaine (Son of Drizella Tremaine) (15 [16] {17})
Domitille “Tillie” Tremaine (Daughter of Drizella Tremaine) (9 [10] {11})
Doraine “Rainie” Tremaine (Daughter of Drizella Tremaine) (7 [8] {9})
Arabella Tritonpoulos (Daughter of Andrina, Granddaughter of King Triton, Niece of Ariel) (16 [17] {18})
Yi-Min Wang (Daughter of Yao and Su) (16 [17] {18})
Avens White (Son of Snow White and Florian) (16 [17] {18})
Lorraine “Rainy” White (Daughter of Snow White and Florian) (15 [16] {17})
Jacopo Worthington (Son of Honest John) (7 [8] {9})
Lin Yu (Daughter of Shan Yu) (7 [8] {9})
Ming Yu (Daughter of Shan Yu) (9 [10] {11})
Nuan Yu (Daughter of Shan Yu) (11 [12] {13})
Qui Yu (Son of Shan Yu) (13 [14] {15})
Qiang Yu (Son of Shan Yu) (13 [14] {15})
Ru Yu (Son of Shan Yu) (15 [16] {17})
Shi Yu (Child of Shan Yu) (18 [19] {20})
T-That’s all folks!
#my ocs#disney descendants#descendants#descendants 2#descendants 3#masterpost#isle kids#auradon kids
7 notes
·
View notes