#Justin Hamilton
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Halle Bailey, photographed by AB + DM and styled by Justin Hamilton for Glamour Magazine (US, Germany, Mexico & Spain), May 2023
#Halle Bailey#Justin Hamilton#AB + DM#AB & DM#fashion#fashion shoot#editorial#Glamour#Glamour Magazine#actor#actress#fashion photography
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Justine dancer!!
#ever after high#eah headcanons#eah au#eah fanfic#justine dancer#Justine dancer eah#12 dancing princesses#eah justine#eah 12 dancing princess#eah royals#eah Justine dancer#eah ballets#eah ballet#eah#hamilton musical
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NJDevils: The cellys roll on...and on…and on…and on.
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1.29.25
#and if I cried??#luke hughes#jack hughes#timo meier#dougie hamilton#justin dowling#my gifs#nj devils#if you squint you can see my agenda thriving
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If I had a nickel for every time an AMC's Interview With The Vampire cast member has played a closeted queer man who is being blackmailed at his workplace in a period drama, I would have 2 nickels etc
#interview with the vampire#the newsreader#perry mason#dale jennings#hamilton burger#justin kirk#sam reid#they look so good together they should play brat vampire pupil and selfless vampire mentor#< who said that
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🎶.....last Friday night🎶
Here's the edit to the most chaotic and funny ep all time 😌✨
#smallville#smallville edit#my edit#lois lane#clark kent#clois#tom welling#erica durance#superman#fortune#video edit#allison mack#chloe sullivan#tess mercer#lena luthor#lutessa luthor#cassidy freeman#oliver queen#justin hartley#emil hamilton#alessandro juliani#last friday night#katy perry#chollie
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doodles!!!
#hamilton musical#hamilton fanart#art#daveed diggs#artists on tumblr#artist#traditional art#thomas jefferson#:3#lin manuel miranda#alexander hamilton#hermes#epicthemusical#epic the musical fanart#epic the musical hermes#epic the musical circe saga#alexander hamilton art#alexander hamilton x thomas jefferson#thomas jefferson art#thomas jefferson x james madison#jane doe ride the cyclone#ride the cyclone fanart#Justin Laboy#21 chump street#Justin Laboy fanart#Jane Doe art#the heathers#heather mcnamara art#heather duke art#shine a light
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Justin Kirk as Hamilton Burger my beloved
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Della & Hamilton & Anita | Perry Mason 2x02 / 2x08
#perry mason#perry mason hbo#perrymasonedit#anita st. pierre#della street#hamilton burger#hboedit#lgbtedit#wlwedit#wlwsource#justin kirk#juliet rylance#jen tullock#della x anita#della and anita#della and ham#aflawedfashiongif#affperrymason#perry mason: season 2#perry mason: 2x08#perry mason: 2x02
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lol @ he being cute at photo booth
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⁎⠀┉⠀welcome to my masterlist!
disclaimers: some fics are tagged as mature containing sexual content. please do not read/interact with these works if you are under 18. i am not responsible for your media consumption, so please be sure to proceed with caution. i am a black woman and write for black women. all are welcome to read & interact but please mind yourself. when requests are open, feel free to send in your ideas but please be patient with me. please do not send in requests involving non-con/dub-con & death.
THE NATIONAL FOOTBALL LEAGUE.
JOE BURROW, the cincinnati bengals. JUSTIN HERBERT, the los angeles chargers. TEE HIGGINS, the cincinnati bengals. JALEN HURTS, the philadelphia eagles. ANDREI IOSIVAS, the cincinnati bengals.
THE NATIONAL HOCKEY LEAGUE.
MATHEW BARZAL, the new york islanders. SIDNEY CROSBY, the pittsburgh penguins. JAMIE OLEKSIAK, the seattle kraken. ANDREI SVECHNIKOV, the carolina hurricanes. MATTHEW TKACHUK, the florida panthers.
THE NATIONAL BASKETBALL LEAGUE.
LAMELO BALL, the charlotte hornets. DEVIN BOOKER, the phoenix suns.
FORMULA 1.
LEWIS HAMILTON, scuderia ferrari. CHARLES LECLERC, scuderia ferrari. LANDO NORRIS, mclaren formula 1 team. CARLOS SAINZ JR., williams racing.
FOOTBALL.
TRENT ALEXANDER-ARNOLD, liverpool fc. JUDE BELLINGHAM, real madrid cf. MASON MOUNT, manchester united fc.
SERIES COLLECTION.
NO NUT NOVEMBER, 2K24 ┉ a collection of smuts based on the concept of "no nut november". featuring: andrei svechnikov, tee higgins, lando norris, devin booker, mathew barzal, joe burrow, jude bellingham, carlos sainz jr., andrei iosivas, trent alexander-arnold, & mason mount.
#&. cassie's masterlist.#joe burrow x reader#joe burrow x black!reader#andrei iosivas x reader#lewis hamilton x reader#lewis hamilton x black!reader#carlos sainz x reader#lando norris x reader#jude bellingham x reader#trent alexander x reader#mason mount x reader#devin booker x reader#mat barzal x reader#jamie oleksiak x reader#andrei svechnikov x reader#tee higgins x reader#justin herbert x reader
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Dorian Hamilton / Justin Shier
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and I found out through the person who found out from Lewis's instagram
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Justin Kirk filmography: Perry Mason (2020 - 2023)
#hamilton burger#justin kirk#perry mason#jeryd mencken#andy botwin#jk filmography#flashing tw#flashing gif
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I see you talk a lot about historiography! What would you consider the most important development of Alexander’s historiography?
What the Hell is Historiography? (And why you should care)
This question and the next one in the queue are both going to be fun for me. 😊
First, some quick definitions for those who are new to me and/or new to reading history:
Historiography = “the history of the histories” (E.g., examination of the sources themselves rather than the subject of them…a topic that typically incites yawns among undergrads but really fires up the rest of us, ha.)
primary sources = the evidence itself—can be texts, art, records, or material evidence. For ancient history, this specifically means the evidence from the time being studied.
secondary sources = writings by historians using the primary evidence, whether meant for a “regular” audience (non-specialists) or academic discussions with citations, footnotes, and bibliography (sometimes referred to as “full scholarly apparatus”).
For ancient history, we also sometimes get a weird middle category…they’re not modern sources but also not from the time under discussion, might even be from centuries after the fact. Consider the medieval Byzantine “encyclopedia” called the Suda (sometimes Suidas), which contains information from now lost ancient sources, finalized c. 900s CE. To give a comparison, imagine some historian a thousand years from now studying Geoffry Chaucer from the 1300s, using an entry about him in some kid’s 1975 World Book Encyclopedia that contains information that had been lost by his day.
This middle category is especially important for Alexander, since even our primary sources all date hundreds of years after his death. Yes, those writers had access to contemporary accounts, but they didn’t just “cut-and-paste.” They editorialized and selected from an array of accounts. Worse, they rarely tell us who they used. FIVE surviving primary Alexander histories remain, but he’s mentioned in a wide (and I do mean wide) array of other surviving texts. Alas this represents maybe a quarter of what was actually written about him in antiquity.
OKAY, so …
The most important historiographic changes in Alexander studies!
I’m going to pick three, or really two-and-a-half, as the last is an extension of the second.
FIRST …decentering Arrian as the “good” source as opposed to the so-called “vulgate” of Diodoros-Curtius-Justin as “bad” sources.
Many earlier Alexander historians (with a few important exceptions [Fritz Schachermeyr]) considered Arrian to be trustworthy, Plutarch moderately trustworthy if short, and the rest varying degrees of junk. W. W. Tarn was especially guilty of this. The prevalence of his view over Schachermeyr’s more negative one owed to his popularity/ease of reading, and the fact he wrote on Alexander for volume 6 of the first edition (1927) of the Cambridge Ancient History, later republished in two volumes with additions (largely in vol. 2) in 1948 and 1956. Thus, and despite being a lawyer (barrister) not a professional historian, his view dominated Alexander studies in the first half of the 20th century (Burn, Rose, etc.)…and even after. Both Mary Renault and Robin Lane Fox (neither of whom were/are professional historians either), as well as N. G. L. Hammond (with qualifications), show Tarn’s more romantic impact well into the middle of the second half of the 20th century. But you could find it in high school and college textbooks into the 1980s.
The first really big shift (especially in English) came with a pair of articles in 1958 by Ernst Badian: “The Eunuch Bagoas,” Classical Quarterly 8, and “Alexander the Great and the Unity of Mankind,” Historia 7. Both demolished Tarn’s historiography. I’ve talked about especially the first before, but it really WAS that monumental, and ushered in a more source-critical approach to Alexander studies. This also happened to coincide with a shift to a more negative portrait of the conqueror in work from the aforementioned Schachermeyr (reissuing his earlier biography in 1973 as Alexander der Grosse: Das Problem seiner Persönlichtenkeit und seines Wirkens) to Peter Green’s original Alexander of Macedon from Praeger in 1970, reissued in 1991 from Univ. of California-Berkeley. J. R. Hamilton’s 1973 Alexander the Great wasn’t as hostile, but A. B. Bosworth’s 1988 Conquest and Empire: The Reign of Alexander the Great turned back towards a more negative, or at least ambivalent portrait, and his Alexander in the East: The Tragedy of Triumph (1996) was highly critical. I note the latter two, as Bosworth wrote the section on Alexander for the much-revised Cambridge Ancient History vol. 6, 1994, which really demonstrates how the narrative on Alexander had changed.
All this led to an unfortunate kick-back among Alexander fans who wanted their hero Alexander. They clung/still cling to Arrian (and Plutarch) as “good,” and the rest as varying degrees of bad. Some prefer Tarn’s view of the mighty conqueror/World unifier/Brotherhood-of-Mankind proponent, including that He Absolutely Could Not Have Been Queer. Conversely, others are all over the romance of him and Hephaistion, or Bagoas (often owing to Renault or Renault-via-Oliver Stone), but still like the squeaky-nice-chivalrous Alexander of Plutarch and Arrian.
They are very much still around. Quite a few of the former group freaked out over the recent Netflix thing, trotting out Plutarch (and Arrian) to Prove He Wasn’t Queer, and dismissing anything in, say, Curtius or Diodoros as “junk” history. But I also run into it on the other side, with those who get really caught up in all the romance and can’t stand the idea of a vicious Alexander.
It's not necessary to agree with Badian’s (or Green’s or Schachermeyr’s) highly negative Alexander to recognize the importance of looking at all the sources more carefully. Justin is unusually problematic, but each of the other four had a method, and a rationale. And weaknesses. Yes, even Arrian. Arrian clearly trusted Ptolemy to a degree Curtius didn’t. For both of them, it centered on the fact he was a king. I’m going to go with Curtius on this one, frankly.
Alexander is one of the most malleable famous figures in history. He’s portrayed more ways than you can shake a stick at—positive, negative, in-between—and used for political and moral messaging from even before his death in Babylon right up to modern Tik-Tok vids.
He might have been annoyed that Julius Caesar is better known than he is, in the West, but hands-down, he’s better known worldwide thanks to the Alexander Romance in its many permutations. And he, more than Caesar, gets replicated in other semi-mythical heroes. (Arthur, anybody?)
Alfred Heuss referred to him as a wineskin (or bottle)—schlauch, in German—into which subsequent generations poured their own ideas. (“Alexander der Große und die politische Ideologie des Altertums,” Antike und Abendland 4, 1954.) If that might be overstating it a bit, he’s not wrong.
Who Alexander was thus depends heavily on who was (and is) writing about him.
And that’s why nuanced historiography with regard to the Alexander sources is so important. It’s also why there will never be a pop presentation that doesn’t infuriate at least a portion of his fanbase. That fanbase can’t agree on who he was because the sources that tell them about him couldn’t agree either.
SECOND …scholarship has moved away from an attempt to find the “real” Alexander towards understanding the stories inside our surviving histories and their themes. A biography of Alexander is next to impossible (although it doesn’t stop most of us from trying, ha). It’s more like a “search” for Alexander, and any decent history of his career will begin with the sources. And their problems.
This also extends to events. I find myself falling in the middle between some of my colleagues who genuinely believe we can get back to “what happened,” and those who sorta throw up their hands and settle on “what story the sources are telling us, and why.” Classic Libra. 😉
As frustrating as it may sound, I’m afraid “it depends” is the order of the day, or of the instance, at least. Some things are easier to get back to than others, and we must be ready to acknowledge that even things reported in several sources may not have happened at all. Or at least, were quite radically different from how it was later reported. (Thinking of proskynesis here.) Sometimes our sources are simply irreconcilable…and we should let them be. (Thinking of the Battle of Granikos here.)
THIRD/SECOND-AND-A-HALF …a growing awareness of just how much Roman-era attitudes overlay and muddy our sources, even those writing in Greek. It would be SO nice to have just one Hellenistic-era history. I’d even take Kleitarchos! But I’d love Marsyas, or Ptolemy. Why? Both were Macedonians. Even our surviving philhellenic authors such as Plutarch impose Greek readings and morals on Macedonian society.
So, let’s add Roman views on top of Greek views on top of Macedonian realities in a period of extremely fast mutation (Philip and Alexander both). What a muddle! In fact, one of the real advantages of a source such as Curtius is that his sources seem to have known a thing or three about both Achaemenid Persia and also Macedonian custom. He sometimes says something like, “Macedonian custom was….” We don’t know if he’s right, but it’s not something we find much in other histories—even Arrian who used Ptolemy. (Curtius may also have used Ptolemy, btw.)
In any case, as a result of more care given to the themes of the historians, a growing sensitivity to Roman milieu for all of them has altered our perceptions of our sources.
These are, to me, the major and most significant shifts in Alexander historiography from the late 1800s to the early 2100s.
#asks#historiography#alexander the great#arrian#curtius#plutarch#diodorus#justin#w.w. tarn#fritz schachermeyr#a.b. bosworth#peter green#n.g.l. hammond#mary renault#robin lane fox#j.r. hamilton#ernst badian#classics#ancient history#ancient macedonia
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the grillz, the lip bite, the clear glowing skin, the outfit, gorgeous Justine Skye, the nose ring, i can’t take my eyes off this video
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