#george boswell
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jt1674 · 3 months ago
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swiftiesbuddie · 7 months ago
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So fun that Grey’s Anatomy flipped the ‘bisexuals are cheaters’ stereotype on its head by having Callie (the bisexual) be cheated on twice! Once by a straight man and once by a lesbian.
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art-portraits · 9 days ago
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James Boswell, 1740 - 1795. Diarist and biographer of Dr Samuel Johnson
Artist: George Willison (Scottish, 1741 - 1797)
Date: 1765
Medium: Oil on Canvas
Collection: National Galleries Scotland, Edinburg
Portrait of James Boswell
James Boswell, 9th Laird of Auchinleck (29 October 1740 - 19 May 1795), was a Scottish biographer, diarist, and lawyer, born in Edinburgh. He is best known for his biography of the English writer Samuel Johnson, Life of Samuel Johnson, which is commonly said to be the greatest biography written in the English language. A great mass of Boswell's diaries, letters, and private papers were recovered from the 1920s to the 1950s, and their publication by Yale University has transformed his reputation.
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kurgarru · 6 months ago
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Ok this is going to be the most annoying lengthy comment of all time but I simply must, I’m sorry.
One interesting aspect of this discussion is the implication that fandom’s perspective this represents the shock of the new. However, there are extensive Christian traditions on the particular intimate relationships between Jesus Christ and Judas Iscarriot, Jesus Christ and Peter, and most of all, Jesus Christ and John the Apostle.
In the case of Judas, so much has been speculated and written about the kiss he gives Jesus in the garden of Gethsemane that a “Judas kiss” is its common own phrase, an idiomatic reference to a betrayal under the guise of affection. The event has a commemorative day in both the Western and Eastern Rite liturgical calendars (Spy Wednesday, aka Great and Holy Wednesday). While the Greek word used in the Synoptic gospels (specifically Matthew and Mark) to describe the kiss, ÎșαταφÎčλέω, kataphileĂł, can be contrasted with a different word, φÎčÎ»Î”áż–Îœ, philein (typically, horny kidding), and is commonly used for a greeting, that’s not the only way it’s ever been perceived. Thank you to the Wikipedia editor who pointed and sourced that Lutheran theologian Johann Bengel claims that Judas *repeatedly kisses* Jesus, and that it is not just a singular kiss: https://biblehub.com/commentaries/bengel/matthew/26.htm
The additional reference to the use of the same word, ÎșαταφÎčλέω, kataphileĂł, to describe Alexander the Great kissing the Persian eunuch Bagaos in greeting - something the troops, with whom Bagaos was very popular, apparently demanded - might raise the odd eyebrow, and doesn’t entirely banish the ghost of the erotic from it: https://en.m.wikipedia.org/wiki/Kiss_of_Judas
The nature of the falling-out (friends to enemies to ???) between Judas and Jesus has been written on so much that I wouldn’t know where to begin or end. Flavius Josephus claimed Judas was a founder of the Zealots, a new divergent Jewish philosophy, but Josephus had also fully jumped ship to the Roman cause after his surrender and enslavement, and sought to blame the Roman War of 66–73 CE predominantly on the Zealots: https://en.m.wikipedia.org/wiki/The_Jewish_War
‘Iscarriot’ was not a surname (surnames as now used in the global north were not used by Jews in this era), but likely a reference to the Latin ‘sicarii’, a wielder of a dagger, and/or the Sicarii sub-group of the Zealots, who were well-known as political assassins. Speculation on the falling-out as being primarily political (Judas fed up that Jesus wasn’t acting against Roman rule enough) has been a long tradition, dating largely from Josephus, but it’s not the only one. Suffice it to say, Jesus/Judas and Judas/Jesus have long been implicitly and even explicitly speculated on.
Arguably the far stronger tradition, however, is about Jesus and John the Apostle (as distinct from other Biblical Johns including John the Baptist). Frequently considered to be the subject of the line referring to the “disciple Jesus most loved”, in the Gospel of John, this intimacy was so well-established that by the time James II was getting criticism for his extremely queer relationship with George Villiers, Duke of Buckingham, he famously defended their closeness as confirming to the highest ideals of friends: “as Christ had John, I have George”. More on James, George, and the criminalisation of sodomy here: https://www.port.ac.uk/news-events-and-blogs/blogs/democratic-citizenship/mary-george-homosexual-relationships-in-the-time-of-king-james-i-were-forbidden-but-not-uncommon
Rictor Norton makes reference to it, particularly in ‘Mother Clap’s Molly House’, his well/known history of C18 homosexuality: http://rictornorton.co.uk/eighteen/mother.htm
Detailed interview with Norton here (note that he has a tendency to be rather antagonistic towards bisexuality): https://notchesblog.com/2022/05/07/an-interview-with-historian-rictor-norton/
A fascinating historical coincidence maybe, but an account of a C17 same-sex marriage ceremony took place at the church of San Giovanni a Porta Latina “Saint John Before the Latin Gate". This church was dedicated to John the Evangelist, author of the Gospel of John and frequently identified as
John the Apostle. More in this book: https://notchesblog.com/2017/01/19/same-sex-marriage-in-renaissance-rome/
The Jesus/John relationship (no dynamics implied) was so well-established within the culture of early modernity that this only strengthened that reading. John Boswell made reference to it in his final and seminal (though also criticised) book, ‘The Marriage of Likeness’ : https://en.m.wikipedia.org/wiki/Same-Sex_Unions_in_Pre-Modern_Europe
More on his analysis here: https://www.independent.co.uk/news/gay-marriages-centuries-old-1570056.html
To this very day, the queer possibility of John/Jesus remains of keen interest to LGBTQIA and progressive Christians, and pops up quite frequently: https://amp.theguardian.com/commentisfree/belief/2012/apr/20/was-jesus-gay-probably
The TLDR of this interminable comment is probably: the established shipping wars of Christianity long predate us, so yeah why not make the boys of 1st century CE Judea kiss? That “Jesus FUCKS” tag isn’t blasphemy, it’s ~theology.
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sometimes i’m like ‘fanfiction can’t shock me anymore i’m numb to it’ then i find this shit
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fuckyeahmarxismleninism · 6 days ago
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TRANS DAY OF REMEMBRANCE 2024 - November 20
Say their names:
NOVEMBER 2023
Savannah Williams
Bernardo Panteleon
Pepper Mychel Peterson
Mariah Ruby Rachel Williams
F. L. “Bubba” Copeland
Lola Laperla Ebony McDaniels
Shandon Floyd
Tiesha McFarland
Kejuan Richardson
Amiri Jean Reid
Mya Finch
Travis Stimeling
DECEMBER 2023
Demita Jo Armstrong
Onteris Owens-Campbell
Jesse Viviano White
Star Possum
Jermaine Golden
Meghan Riley Lewis
Zoey Flye
Madison Montana
Care Hansen
Amber Minor
Ashlei Jasmine Colgate-Edwards
Fleetwood Mars Mozee
Shelby “Lexus” Riddick-Walker
Kimbella Blackshear
Easley Jeffcoat
Tripp Schultz
JANUARY 2024
Lady Fabian Sanchez
James Moen
Dana Randolph “Desiree A. DeMornay”
Quin Joy
Sasha Williams
Jennell Jaquays
Sarina Mihailoff
Sasha Washington-Cohen “Sasha Fierce”
Guelila “Gigi” Iyob
Videl Lombardo
Savannah Rose Rivers Amore
Kathy “Otter” Ottersten
Robin Valentina
Forrest Douglas Buckley
Giselle Stone
Tristan Michael Bustos “Tristyn St. Clair”
Kitty Monroe
FEBRUARY 2024
Natalia Skye
Teddy Reese Curran
Erick Krouse
Noah Jackson Chase
Ellie Walsh
Nex Benedict
Emma “África” Parrilla García
Blakely Hanson
Righteous TK “Chevy” Hill
Ashton Myles Clatterbuck
Madison Nicole Spann “Madison St. Claire”
Cecilia Gentili
MARCH 2024
Diamond Cherish Brigman
Elliot Ganiel
Fae Morganna Barbone
Aurelia A. Legassey
Alex Franco
Meraxes Medina
Ty Geissinger “Ty Holiday”
APRIL 2024
Andrea Doria Dos Passos “Maggie”
Yella Clark
Allister Matthews
Tiffany Azalea Monceaux
Tara Fable
Randy Dudley
River Neveah Goddard
Tee ïżœïżœïżœAce” Arnold
George A. Schappell
Starr Brown
Robbi Mecus
Basil Brown
MAY 2024
Tayy Dior Thomas
Kita Bee
Kamryn “Cantrell” Smith
Jazlynn Johnson
Daelicious O’hare Mizani
Darri C. Moore
Niomi Jenkins
Michelle Henry
Saanti Bonét Valentino
JUNE 2024
Pauly Likens
M. Tapia
Lynn Conway
Liara Kaylee Tsai
JULY 2024
Dylan Gurley
Griffin Shaun Sivret
Kenji Zemonta Spurgeon
Ev Smith
Shannon Boswell
Levi Castillo
Lily Autumn Rose
Monique Brooks
AUGUST 2024
Noelle Woolley
Indiana Grayson
Vanity Williams
Tai’Vion Lathan
Jhzara “Femmie” Williams
Baxter Zachary Hawk
SEPTEMBER 2024
Kassim Omar
Liam Johns
Mahdia Lynn
Cass Trystero
Chilli Pepper
Barbie Iceland “Redd China”
OCTOBER 2024
Honee Daniels
Serenity Birdsong
Adela VĂĄzquez
San Coleman
Zeta Muirgen Seraph Haber
Despite our best efforts, the names on our list are only those who had the privilege of recognition, the fortune of discovery, or the extraordinary courage to leave indelible proof of their true selves for us to mourn. So many unknown and uncounted people remain that even years from now we will learn the names of people in our community who died this year without the recognition they deserved.
https://www.transremembrance.org/domestic-list
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notthesomefather · 6 days ago
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Goddess Hel, divine hostess whose arms lovingly embrace all guests, Watch over those who have crossed your gates against their will. Care for those taken from us and bless them with tranquil rest.
Godx Loki, story-teller and guardian of outcasts, Give words to our sorrow so that we may honor their memories. Breathe air into our lungs so we may bellow our love over hatred.
Goddess Hel, cherisher of life and daughter of metamorphosis, Bestow in their loved ones moments of laughter, healing, and peace. May their names echo not just in sorrow but in smiling remembrance.
Godx Loki, change-bringer and waker of revolution, Spark the flames of unrelenting authenticity within us. Stoke the ember of truth until the hateful are blinded by its light.
Under the cut are the siblings, youth, and elders whose lives were taken due to hatred, bigotry, and fear. I understand it is incredibly triggering, but I believe we owe it to them to read their names.
We love you. We are unendingly sorry and we will never stop fighting until the hatred that stole you from this life has been extinguished. We love you so much.
(December 2023 - November 2024) Savannah Williams Bernardo Panteleon Pepper Mychel Peterson Mariah Ruby Rachel Williams F. L. “Bubba” Copeland Lola Laperla Ebony McDaniels Shandon Floyd Tiesha McFarland Kejuan Richardson Amiri Jean Reid Mya Finch Travis Stimeling Demita Jo Armstrong Onteris Owens-Campbell Jesse Viviano White Star Possum Jermaine Golden Meghan Riley Lewis Zoey Flye Madison Montana Care Hansen Amber Minor Ashlei Jasmine Colgate-Edwards Fleetwood Mars Mozee Shelby “Lexus” Riddick-Walker Kimbella Blackshear Easley Jeffcoat Tripp Schultz Lady Fabian Sanchez James Moen Dana Randolph “Desiree A. DeMornay” Quin Joy Sasha Williams Jennell Jaquays Sarina Mihailoff Sasha Washington-Cohen “Sasha Fierce” Guelila “Gigi” Iyob Videl Lombardo Savannah Rose Rivers Amore Kathy “Otter” Ottersten Robin Valentina Forrest Douglas Buckley Giselle Stone Tristan Michael Bustos “Tristyn St. Clair” Kitty Monroe Natalia Skye Teddy Reese Curran Erick Krouse Noah Jackson Chase Ellie Walsh Nex Benedict Emma “África” Parrilla GarcĂ­a Blakely Hanson Righteous TK “Chevy” Hill Ashton Myles Clatterbuck Madison Nicole Spann “Madison St. Claire” Cecilia Gentili Diamond Cherish Brigman Elliot Ganiel Fae Morganna Barbone Aurelia A. Legassey Alex Franco Meraxes Medina Ty Geissinger “Ty Holiday” Andrea Doria Dos Passos “Maggie” Yella Clark Allister Matthews Tiffany Azalea Monceaux Tara Fable Randy Dudley River Neveah Goddard Tee “Ace” Arnold George A. Schappell Starr Brown Robbi Mecus Basil Brown Tayy Dior Thomas Kita Bee Kamryn “Cantrell” Smith Jazlynn Johnson Daelicious O’hare Mizani Darri C. Moore Niomi Jenkins Michelle Henry Saanti BonĂ©t Valentino Pauly Likens M. Tapia Lynn Conway Liara Kaylee Tsai Dylan Gurley Griffin Shaun Sivret Kenji Zemonta Spurgeon Ev Smith Shannon Boswell Levi Castillo Lily Autumn Rose Monique Brooks Noelle Woolley Indiana Grayson Vanity Williams Tai’Vion Lathan Jhzara “Femmie” Williams Baxter Zachary Hawk Kassim Omar Liam Johns Mahdia Lynn Cass Trystero Chilli Pepper Barbie Iceland “Redd China” Honee Daniels Serenity Birdsong Adela VĂĄzquez San Coleman Zeta Muirgen Seraph Haber
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hungwy · 28 days ago
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Some facts about my birthday (October 29):
1390: First trials of witchcraft in Paris
1618: Walter Raleigh, colonialist statesman, soldier, and explorer, is tried for treason and executed
1682: The founder of Pennsylvania, William Penn, lands at what is now Chester, PA
1740: James Boswell, diarist and biographer, is born
1863: The International Red Cross is formed in Geneva
1882: Jean Giradoux, playwright and novelist, is born
1888: The Convention of Constantinople allows for free maritime passage through the Suez Canal; Li Dazhao, co-founder of the CCP and mentor of Mao, is born
1889: N.G. Chernyshevksy, author of "What is to be done?", dies
1897: Joseph Goebbels, the nazi, is born
1901: Leon Czogolsz, anarchist, is executed for the assassination of William McKinley
1910: A.J. Ayer, logical positivist, is born
1914: The Ottomans enter WWI
1923: The Ottoman Empire dissolves; Turkey becomes a republic through the efforts of AtatĂŒrk
1924: Zbigniew Herbert, poet, is born
1929: Black Tuesday, the crash of the New York Stock Exchange and the beginning of the Great Depression
1938: Ellen Johnson Sirleaf, president of Rhodesia, is born; Ralph Bakshi, animator, is born
1940: The US begins its first peacetime military draft
1948: Franz de Waal, ethologist, is born
1949: George Gurdjieff, philosopher and mystic, dies
1956: The Suez Crisis begins
1962: The Beach Boys release "Surfin' Safari"
1967: Musical "Hair" opens off Broadway
1969: The first computer-computer link established on ARPANET
1971: Ma Huateng, co-founder of Tencent, is born; Winona Ryder, actor, is born
1975: Franco's 36-year long leadership of Spain ends
1985: Evgeny Lifshitz, physicist, dies
1991: The spacecraft Galileo makes the first ever visit to an asteroid
1995: Terry Southern, screenwriter of Dr. Strangelove, dies
2004: Al-Jazeera broadcasts Osama Bin Laden taking responsibility for 9/11; European Union leaders sign the first EU constitution
It is the Christian feast day of:
Abraham of Rostov
Blessed Chiara Badano
Colman mac Duagh
The Duai Martyrs
Gaetano Erico
Michele Rua
Narcissus of Jerusalem
Theuderius
It is a public holiday in:
Cambodia (Coronation Day)
Turkey (Republic Day)
It is a private holiday in:
USA (National Cat Day)
Everywhere (my birthday)
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ollieoliveoboelo22 · 1 month ago
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The Litchfield Book of Days by George Boswell
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from-a-spiders-web · 3 months ago
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Portrait of James Boswell, 1765 George Willison 
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cemeterygrace · 5 days ago
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remembering my trans ancestors and those we’ve lost on this trans day of remembrance. they are all so loved by us, and unique in their own ways. fly high and know that you are beloved. for those not on this list, you are known and remembered.
rest in peace and in freedom.
đŸłïžâ€âš§ïžđŸłïžâ€âš§ïžđŸłïžâ€âš§ïž
NOVEMBER 2023
Savannah Williams
Bernardo Panteleon
Pepper Mychel Peterson
Mariah Ruby Rachel Williams
F. L. “Bubba” Copeland
Lola Laperla Ebony McDaniels
Shandon Floyd
Tiesha McFarland
Kejuan Richardson
Amiri Jean Reid
Mya Finch
Travis Stimeling
DECEMBER 2023
Demita Jo Armstrong
Onteris Owens-Campbell
Jesse Viviano White
Star Possum
Jermaine Golden
Meghan Riley Lewis
Zoey Flye
Madison Montana
Care Hansen
Amber Minor
Ashlei Jasmine Colgate-Edwards
Fleetwood Mars Mozee
Shelby “Lexus” Riddick-Walker
Kimbella Blackshear
Easley Jeffcoat
Tripp Schultz
JANUARY 2024
Lady Fabian Sanchez
James Moen
Dana Randolph “Desiree A. DeMornay”
Quin Joy
Sasha Williams
Jennell Jaquays
Sarina Mihailoff
Sasha Washington-Cohen “Sasha Fierce”
Guelila “Gigi” Iyob
Videl Lombardo
Savannah Rose Rivers Amore
Kathy “Otter” Ottersten
Robin Valentina
Forrest Douglas Buckley
Giselle Stone
Tristan Michael Bustos “Tristyn St. Clair”
Kitty Monroe
FEBRUARY 2024
Natalia Skye
Teddy Reese Curran
Erick Krouse
Noah Jackson Chase
Ellie Walsh
Nex Benedict
Emma “África” Parrilla García
Blakely Hanson
Righteous TK “Chevy” Hill
Ashton Myles Clatterbuck
Madison Nicole Spann “Madison St. Claire”
Cecilia Gentili
MARCH 2024
Diamond Cherish Brigman
Elliot Ganiel
Fae Morganna Barbone
Aurelia A. Legassey
Alex Franco
Meraxes Medina
Ty Geissinger “Ty Holiday”
APRIL 2024
Andrea Doria Dos Passos “Maggie”
Yella Clark
Allister Matthews
Tiffany Azalea Monceaux
Tara Fable
Randy Dudley
River Neveah Goddard
Tee “Ace” Arnold
George A. Schappell
Starr Brown
Robbi Mecus
Basil Brown
MAY 2024
Tayy Dior Thomas
Kita Bee
Kamryn “Cantrell” Smith
Jazlynn Johnson
Daelicious O’hare Mizani
Darri C. Moore
Niomi Jenkins
Michelle Henry
Saanti Bonét Valentino
JUNE 2024
Pauly Likens
M. Tapia
Lynn Conway
Liara Kaylee Tsai
JULY 2024
Dylan Gurley
Griffin Shaun Sivret
Kenji Zemonta Spurgeon
Ev Smith
Shannon Boswell
Levi Castillo
Lily Autumn Rose
Monique Brooks
AUGUST 2024
Noelle Woolley
Indiana Grayson
Vanity Williams
Tai’Vion Lathan
Jhzara “Femmie” Williams
Baxter Zachary Hawk
SEPTEMBER 2024
Kassim Omar
Liam Johns
Mahdia Lynn
Cass Trystero
Chilli Pepper
Barbie Iceland “Redd China”
OCTOBER 2024
Honee Daniels
Serenity Birdsong
Adela VĂĄzquez
San Coleman
Zeta Muirgen Seraph Haber
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uwmspeccoll · 7 months ago
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Shakespeare Weekend
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In 1803 Joseph Johnson (1738-1809) published the fifth edition of The Plays of William Shakespeare, in twenty-one volumes, with the corrections and illustrations of various commentators to which are added notes. Originally written by Samuel Johnson (1709-1784) and George Steevens (1736-1800), this fifth edition was edited by Isaac Reed (1742-1807) and became known as the first variorum edition of Shakespeare.  
Reed’s collation of previous variations of Shakespeare proved to be a massive undertaking (twenty-one volumes!) that would be reprinted in 1813 and inspire future variorums like that of James Boswell the Younger in 1821 and the New Variorum Shakespeare Project that began in the 1870s and continues to this day as an official project of the Modern Language Association of America (which, btw, was headquartered here at the UWM libraries for 20 years, and the reason we have such a strong Shakespeare collection). The edition opens with a frontispiece engraving of Shakespeare by British engraver James Neagle (d. 1822) followed by an advertisement by Reed. Reed takes this opportunity to sing Steevens praises, including a eulogy written by William Hayley that reads in part “This tomb may perish, but not so his name who shed new lustre upon Shakespeare’s fame!” 
Volume One continues with various prefaces and essays by the usual Shakespearean scholars and critics of the time, Malone, Pope, Warburton and of course Nicholas Rowe’s Life of Shakespeare. Printed by John Plymsell out of London, our edition features marble endpapers in a Stormont pattern. 
View more Shakespeare Weekend posts. 
-Jenna, Special Collections Graduate Intern
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lizbethborden · 1 year ago
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Hi again! Yeah, from your bookshelf! You seem well informed and I wanna know the type of stuff you read and might recommend. I don't even know what to tell you for my interests because I feel like I'm just begining. Sorry I'm young and dumb still haha.
#1 you're not dumb and #2 nothing to apologize for :)
Here's some books I've got on my shelves or that I've read:
Men Who Hate Women: From Incels to Pickup Artists, Laura Bates
Pro: Reclaiming Abortion Rights, Katha Pollitt
Women, Race, & Class, Angela Davis
American Girls, Nancy Jo Sales
Lesbian Culture: An Anthology, eds. Julia Penelope and Susan J Wolf
Lesbian Studies, Margaret Cavendish
Hood Feminism, Mikki Kendall
Against White Feminism, Rafia Zakaria
Sister and Brother: Lesbians and Gay Men Write About Their Lives Together, eds Joan Nestle and John Preston
Another Mother Tongue, Judy Grahn
Aimee & Jaguar, Erica Fischer
Mouths of Rain: An Anthology of Black Lesbian Thought, ed. Briona Simone Jones
Same-Sex Unions in Premodern Europe, John Boswell
The Mary Daly Reader, eds. Jennifer Rycenga and Linda Barufaldi
Hidden from History: Reclaiming the Gay and Lesbian Past, eds. Martin Duberman, Martha Vicinus, George Chauncey Jr.
Testosterone Rex: Myths of Sex, Science, and Society, Cordelia Fine
Speaking Freely: Unlearning the Lies of the Father's Tongue, Julia Penelope
The Resisting Reader, Judith Fetterley
The Double X Economy, Linda Scott
Not That Bad: Dispatches from Rape Culture, ed. Roxane Gay
Home Grown: How Domestic Violence Turns Men Into Terrorists, Joan Smith
Intercourse, Andrea Dworkin
The Trials of Nina McCall: Sex, Surveillance, and the Decades-Long Government Plan to Imprison "Promiscuous" Women, Scott Stern
The Politics of Reality: Essays in Feminist Theory, Marilyn Frye
Only Words, Catharine A. Mackinnon
Everything Below the Waist: Why Health Care Needs a Feminist Revolution, Jennifer Block
Witchcraze: A New History of the European Witch Hunts, Anne Llwellyn Barstow
Cinderella Ate My Daughter: Dispatches from the Frontlines of the New Girlie-Girl Culture, Peggy Orenstein
Invisible Women: Data Bias in a World Designed for Men, Caroline Criado-Perez
Lesbian Ethics: Toward New Values, Sarah Lucia Hoagland
We Were Feminists Once: From Riot Grrrl to CoverGirl, the Buying and Selling of a Political Movement, Andi Zeisler
Of Woman Born: Motherhood as Experience and Institution, Adrienne Rich
On Lies, Secrets, and Silence: Selected Prose, Adrienne Rich
Feminism, Animals, and Science: The Naming of the Shrew, Lynda Birke
The Female Body in Western Culture: Contemporary Perspectives, ed. Susan Rubin Suleiman
Borderlands/La Frontera: The New Mestiza, Gloria Anzaldua
Flesh Wounds: The Culture of Cosmetic Surgery, Virginia L Blum
Black Feminist Thought: Knowledge, Consciousness, and the Politics of Empowerment, Patricia Hill Collins
Pornland: How Porn has Hijacked our Sexuality, Gail Dines
Backlash: The Undeclared War Against American Women, Susan Faludi
From Eve to Dawn: A History of Women in the World, Marilyn French
This Bridge Called My Back: Writings by Radical Women of Color, eds. Cherrie Moraga and Gloria Anzaldua
Seeing Like a Feminist, Nivedita Menon
With Her Machete In Her Hand: Reading Chicana Lesbians, Catriona Reuda Esquibel
The Disappearing L: Erasure of Lesbian Spaces and Culture, Bonnie J. Morris
Foundlings: Lesbian and Gay Historical Emotion before Stonewall, Christopher Nealon
The Persistent Desire: A Butch/Femme Reader, ed. Joan Nestle
The Straight Mind and Other Essays, Monique Wittig
The Trouble Between us: An Uneasy History of White and Black Women in the Feminist Movement, Winifred Breines
Right-Wing Women, Andrea Dworkin
Woman Hating, Andrea Dworkin
Why I Am Not A Feminist, Jessica Crispin
Sapphistries: A Global History of Love Between Women, Leila J Rupp
I tried to avoid too many left turns into my specific interests although if you passionately want to know any of those, I can make you some more lists LOL
I would suggest picking a book that sounds interesting and using the footnotes and bibliography to find more to read. I've done that a lot :) a lot of my books have more sticky tabs or w/e in the bibliography than in the text so I don't lose stuff I'm interested in.
Hope this helps!
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art-portraits · 2 months ago
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Portrait of James Boswell
Artist: George Willison (Scottish, 1741 – 1797)
Title: James Boswell, 1740 - 1795. Diarist and biographer of Dr Samuel Johnson
Genre: Portrait
Date: 1765
Medium: Oil on Canvas
Collection: Scottish National Gallery, Edinburg, Scotland
Description
Boswell's father feared that his son would be a complete failure. In the summer of 1763, under threat of disinheritance, he was sent to study law in Holland. The young man could not stay put for long and was soon visiting Berlin and Paris, meeting the philosophers Rousseau and Voltaire and befriending Corsican nationalists. He was painted in Rome in 1765. The owl above his head may be a symbol of wisdom, or it may suggest his delight in night-time activities - Boswell had many sexual adventures in Italy. On his return to Britain, he began a lifelong friendship with Samuel Johnson, a relationship immortalised in his biography, the 'Life of Samuel Johnson'. He inherited the title 'Laird of Auchinleck'.
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scotianostra · 10 months ago
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On the 18th January 2009 just a few weeks before the completion of a ÂŁ4m restoration project, Raasay House was severely damaged by fire.
The history of Raasay and the house here is intermingled with The McLeod Clan, of which my own family were septs to on the Island, and quartermasters to the family. . A clan house, home to the Macleod Chief of Raasay, has stood on or near the present site from as early as the 1500's, but the original clan house was burnt to the ground, torched by government troops after Culloden. Like many families there were MacLeods on both sides that day, the Raasay branch were on the Jacobite side. Perhaps the most famous of the clan in modern times is Calum Macleod, who single handily famously built Calum's Road on the Island over ten years, with little more than a shovel, a pick and a wheelbarrow.
Anyway, back to the house. Since rebuilding started on 1747 the present Raasay House history has been recorded right through to today.
In 1773 Dr Samuel Johnson and James Boswell made their historic journey to the Western Isles and were guests of the Macleod chief at Raasay House, but by 1843 the last Laird, John Macleod, left the house and emigrated with his family to Australia, the house was old three years later to a George Rainy from London and changed hands again in 1872-4.By 1746 it was in the hands of It was sold to Henry Wood who added the ornate Georgian-style wings and frontage to the house. It changed hands twice more before being converted into a sporting hotel around 1937, very successfully at first, with many wealthy guests. It closed it's doors in 1960.
Another 3 decades passed under different owners and the house was used as an Adventure centre and Outdoor centre, during which little maintenance work was carried out and the building started to deteriorate, it was finally sold to the Raasay House Community Company in 2007. A multi-million-pound project to renovate and refurbish Raasay House commences a year later.
Fire caused damage to all but the west wing in January 2009, just as the house was about to be reopened but thanks to a lottery grant the house rose from the ashes to what it is today, the house retains many of its historical features which were painstakingly restored. Today, still owned by the community it has returned to it's use as a hotel and has a four and a half star rating out of five on Tripadvisor.
As you can see from the pics it is a beatiful building, and the views from the house over to the Isle of Skye are stunning.
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toughpaperround · 1 year ago
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911 Cast Bios
Here's a list of them in one place, in order of appearance in 9-1-1 (fox, later abc). I choose them based on characters I enjoy, or where there are interesting connections / factoids to be found in their bios.
Gavin Stenhouse (The Priest)
Mariette Hartley (Patricia Clark, Abby's mother)
Claudia Christian (LAFD Capt. Maynard)
Debra Christofferson (Sue, Dispatcher)
Grasie Mercedes (Beth, in prenatal yoga class, 1x07)
Rebecca Wisocky (Marjorie, in lift crash, 1x09)
Connor Trinneer (bomb squad, 2x01)
Bryan Safi (Josh Russo, dispatcher)
Romi Dias (Chief Miranda Williams)
Ana Mercedes (Abuela Isabel)
Terri Hoyos (Aunt Pepa)
Christine Estabrook (Gloria, Dispatcher)
Devin Kelley (Shannon Diaz)
Wes Brown (Mounted Police Officer)
Rick Chambers (Dwight, newsreader)
Tara Karsian (Ruth)
Lawrence Pressman and Francis X. McCarthy (Mitchell & Thomas)
Romy Rosemont & Daniel Roebuck (Lola & Norman Peterson)
Brian Thompson (Capt. Gerrard)
Lou Ferrigno Jr (firefighter Tommy)
Brian Hallisay (Doug Kendall)
Julie Oullette (Blair, Elf Helper)
Marsha Warfield (Toni Wilson)
Danny Nucci (LAPD detective)
Sasha Roiz (LAPD Det. Ransone)
Paula Marshall (Helena Diaz)
George DelHoyo (Ramon Diaz)
Pepi Sonuga (Athena Carter, flashback in 3x07)
Nicole Delgado (Maynard, flashback in 3x07)
Eddie McGee (Frank the therapist)
Jack McGee (Red the retired firefighter, 3x16)
Deborah May (Cindy, 3x16)
Rumer Willis (Georgia, train Vic, 3x18)
Brooke Shields (counsellor, 3x18)
Dee Wallace (Mrs Margaret Buckley)
Gregory Harrison (Mr Phillip Buckley)
Colin McCalla (Connor, Buck's friend)
Chelsea Kane (Kameron, Connor's wife)
Aaron Staton (Daniel Buckley)
Laith Wallschleger (133 medic, 6x15)
Mark Lawson (pilot, 7x01)
Kathryn Boswell & Chris Gartin (hot-tub couple, 7x01)
Mercedes Colon (Ship Captain, 7x01-3)
Rick Cosnett (cruise crew, 7x01-3)
Eddie Jemison (cruise ship doc, 7x02-3)
Jesse Palmer & Joey Graziadei (7x04)
Richard Brooks (Chief Simpson, s7)
Exie Booker (Carl, 7x06)
Malcolm-Jamal Warner (Amir, s7)
Veronica FalcĂłn (Cllr Ortiz, s7)
John Brotherton (Tim Nash, 7x08)
Tony Amendola (Herman, 7x08)
Paul Nobrega (Monty the Beekeeper, 8x01)
Hotshots group, s8: Callum Blue (Brad); Justin Taite (#1); Morgan West (director) & 1st AD
Bee-nado airplane gang: Cindy Chavez (Capt Dominguez); Devin McGee (Co-pilot); Bayley Corman (Tia); (Mr & Mrs Grandparent);
Adela Paez (Nurse Camila, 8x03 etc)
In draft ofc. Do check the updated OG post if you're looking at a reblog:
Finnigan and Silverman (divorcing couple, 8x06)
Zach Tinker (Officer Sparks, LAPD, 8x07)
Kelvin Han Yee
Glenn Plummer (Dennis Jenkins, 3x07, s8a)
Main resource is IMDb, with extra material from Wikipedia, podcasts or youtube on occasion. Where I use 911 images they are screengrabs I edited. Other images generally from imdb.
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dreams-of-mutiny · 6 months ago
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MORTIMER ADLER’S READING LIST (PART 2)
Reading list from “How To Read a Book” by Mortimer Adler (1972 edition).
Alexander Pope: Essay on Criticism; Rape of the Lock; Essay on Man
Charles de Secondat, baron de Montesquieu: Persian Letters; Spirit of Laws
Voltaire: Letters on the English; Candide; Philosophical Dictionary
Henry Fielding: Joseph Andrews; Tom Jones
Samuel Johnson: The Vanity of Human Wishes; Dictionary; Rasselas; The Lives of the Poets
David Hume: Treatise on Human Nature; Essays Moral and Political; An Enquiry Concerning Human Understanding
Jean-Jacques Rousseau: On the Origin of Inequality; On the Political Economy; Emile, The Social Contract
Laurence Sterne: Tristram Shandy; A Sentimental Journey through France and Italy
Adam Smith: The Theory of Moral Sentiments; The Wealth of Nations
Immanuel Kant: Critique of Pure Reason; Fundamental Principles of the Metaphysics of Morals; Critique of Practical Reason; The Science of Right; Critique of Judgment; Perpetual Peace
Edward Gibbon: The Decline and Fall of the Roman Empire; Autobiography
James Boswell: Journal; Life of Samuel Johnson, Ll.D.
Antoine Laurent Lavoisier: TraitĂ© ÉlĂ©mentaire de Chimie (Elements of Chemistry)
Alexander Hamilton, John Jay, and James Madison: Federalist Papers
Jeremy Bentham: Introduction to the Principles of Morals and Legislation; Theory of Fictions
Johann Wolfgang von Goethe: Faust; Poetry and Truth
Jean Baptiste Joseph Fourier: Analytical Theory of Heat
Georg Wilhelm Friedrich Hegel: Phenomenology of Spirit; Philosophy of Right; Lectures on the Philosophy of History
William Wordsworth: Poems
Samuel Taylor Coleridge: Poems; Biographia Literaria
Jane Austen: Pride and Prejudice; Emma
Carl von Clausewitz: On War
Stendhal: The Red and the Black; The Charterhouse of Parma; On Love
Lord Byron: Don Juan
Arthur Schopenhauer: Studies in Pessimism
Michael Faraday: Chemical History of a Candle; Experimental Researches in Electricity
Charles Lyell: Principles of Geology
Auguste Comte: The Positive Philosophy
Honore de Balzac: PÚre Goriot; Eugenie Grandet
Ralph Waldo Emerson: Representative Men; Essays; Journal
Nathaniel Hawthorne: The Scarlet Letter
Alexis de Tocqueville: Democracy in America
John Stuart Mill: A System of Logic; On Liberty; Representative Government; Utilitarianism; The Subjection of Women; Autobiography
Charles Darwin: The Origin of Species; The Descent of Man; Autobiography
Charles Dickens: Pickwick Papers; David Copperfield; Hard Times
Claude Bernard: Introduction to the Study of Experimental Medicine
Henry David Thoreau: Civil Disobedience; Walden
Karl Marx: Capital; Communist Manifesto
George Eliot: Adam Bede; Middlemarch
Herman Melville: Moby-Dick; Billy Budd
Fyodor Dostoevsky: Crime and Punishment; The Idiot; The Brothers Karamazov
Gustave Flaubert: Madame Bovary; Three Stories
Henrik Ibsen: Plays
Leo Tolstoy: War and Peace; Anna Karenina; What is Art?; Twenty-Three Tales
Mark Twain: The Adventures of Huckleberry Finn; The Mysterious Stranger
William James: The Principles of Psychology; The Varieties of Religious Experience; Pragmatism; Essays in Radical Empiricism
Henry James: The American; ‘The Ambassadors
Friedrich Wilhelm Nietzsche: Thus Spoke Zarathustra; Beyond Good and Evil; The Genealogy of Morals; The Will to Power
Jules Henri Poincare: Science and Hypothesis; Science and Method
Sigmund Freud: The Interpretation of Dreams; Introductory Lectures on Psychoanalysis; Civilization and Its Discontents; New Introductory Lectures on Psychoanalysis
George Bernard Shaw: Plays and Prefaces
Max Planck: Origin and Development of the Quantum Theory; Where Is Science Going?; Scientific Autobiography
Henri Bergson: Time and Free Will; Matter and Memory; Creative Evolution; The Two Sources of Morality and Religion
John Dewey: How We Think; Democracy and Education; Experience and Nature; Logic; the Theory of Inquiry
Alfred North Whitehead: An Introduction to Mathematics; Science and the Modern World; The Aims of Education and Other Essays; Adventures of Ideas
George Santayana: The Life of Reason; Skepticism and Animal Faith; Persons and Places
Lenin: The State and Revolution
Marcel Proust: Remembrance of Things Past
Bertrand Russell: The Problems of Philosophy; The Analysis of Mind; An Inquiry into Meaning and Truth; Human Knowledge, Its Scope and Limits
Thomas Mann: The Magic Mountain; Joseph and His Brothers
Albert Einstein: The Meaning of Relativity; On the Method of Theoretical Physics; The Evolution of Physics
James Joyce: ‘The Dead’ in Dubliners; A Portrait of the Artist as a Young Man; Ulysses
Jacques Maritain: Art and Scholasticism; The Degrees of Knowledge; The Rights of Man and Natural Law; True Humanism
Franz Kafka: The Trial; The Castle
Arnold J. Toynbee: A Study of History; Civilization on Trial
Jean Paul Sartre: Nausea; No Exit; Being and Nothingness
Aleksandr Solzhenitsyn: The First Circle; The Cancer Ward
Source: mortimer-adlers-reading-list
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