Tumgik
#Cathy Jamison
mistikfir · 1 year
Photo
Tumblr media Tumblr media Tumblr media Tumblr media Tumblr media Tumblr media Tumblr media Tumblr media Tumblr media
The Big C - 2X05 - “Cats and Dogs” (2011)
And now it's gone, and I want more.
102 notes · View notes
misskittyspuffy · 5 months
Text
Just finished a rewatch of The Big C.
Saying goodbye to Cathy Jamison is always both bittersweet & heartbreaking.
Tumblr media
0 notes
kwebtv · 5 months
Photo
Tumblr media
Character Actress
Vivi Janiss (born Vivian Audrey Jamison; May 29, 1911 – September 7, 1988) Film and television actress.
From 1952 to 1955, Janiss appeared in five episodes of Jack Webb's original version of the Dragnet police drama television series. From 1953 to 1957, she was cast in four episodes of the Schlitz Playhouse of Stars anthology series. From 1954 to 1959, Janiss appeared as Myrtle Davis in 11 episodes of Robert Young's Father Knows Best situation comedy series. From 1959 to 1962, she was cast in six episodes, none in the starring role, of the NBC Western series Wagon Train with Ward Bond and John McIntire.
In 1955, she played the historical Mary Todd Lincoln in "How Chance Made Lincoln President" in the anthology series TV Reader's Digest.
In 1957, Janiss joined Frank Ferguson as guest stars in the roles of Mabel and Frank Cliff in the episode "No Blaze of Glory" of Rod Cameron's syndicated series State Trooper. In 1959, Janiss was cast the role of Ella Westover in a second State Trooper episode, "Excitement at Milltown”. On December 4, 1959, Janiss was cast in the CBS anthology series Westinghouse Desilu Playhouse, hosted by Desi Arnaz in the episode "The Hanging Judge".  
In its first season on the air, Janiss was cast with Everett Sloane in Rod Serling's The Twilight Zone episode "The Fever". Then on October 7, 1960, cast as Edna Castle, she joined Luther Adler in the role of her husband, pawnbroker Arthur Castle, in "The Man in the Bottle" episode of The Twilight Zone.  Years later in 1977, Janiss played a minor role as a pawnshop proprietor in the episode "Second Chance" of James Garner's NBC detective series The Rockford Files.
Janiss appeared in many other series, too, three times on The F.B.I., starring Efrem Zimbalist Jr., and twice each on The Virginian and Ben Casey. She was cast once on Dick Powell's Zane Grey Theater, Lawman, Trackdown, Cimarron City, Route 66, Have Gun – Will Travel, Follow the Sun, Hennesey, Outlaws, Laramie, 87th Precinct, Perry Mason, Mannix, and The Streets of San Francisco.
After she and Bob Cummings divorced, Janiss wed actor John Larch. The couple appeared together on four television series, including the series premiere, "No Fat Cops", on October 3, 1961, of ABC's The New Breed, starring Leslie Nielsen. In this episode, Larch and Janiss were cast as John and Mary Clark. Earlier, the two had co-starred on November 23, 1959, as Johnny and Elsie in the episode "End of an Era" of NBC's Western series, Tales of Wells Fargo, starring Dale Robertson, and on May 23, 1960, as Isaiah and Rebecca Macabee in the episode "The Proud Earth" of the half-hour NBC anthology series Goodyear Theatre. On November 9, 1960, Larch and Janiss appeared as Ben and Sarah Harness in the episode "The Cathy Eckhart Story" of Wagon Train, with Susan Oliver in the starring role. Later, on December 19, 1968, the couple appeared again together in the 10th episode "Yesterday Died and Tomorrow Won't Be Born" of Jack Lord's CBS crime drama Hawaii Five-O.
Janiss' last roles were in the 1978 CBS television film First, You Cry, a story about breast cancer starring Mary Tyler Moore, and in two 1979 CBS series appearances on Barnaby Jones with Buddy Ebsen  and House Calls, starring Wayne Rogers.  (Wikipedia)
7 notes · View notes
mappingthemoon · 4 months
Text
Books Read 2023
Good Talk: A Memoir in Conversations / Mira Jacob
A Grief Observed / C. S. Lewis
Grit Lit: A Rough South Reader / ed. Brian Carpenter & Tom Franklin
Two or Three Things I Know for Sure / Dorothy Allison
Weather: Air Masses, Clouds, Rainfall, Storms, Weather Maps, Climate (A Golden Nature Guide) / Paul E. Lehr, R. Will Burnett, Herbert S. Zim ; Harry McNaught (ill.)
Improbable Memories / Sarah Moon
Endless Endless: A Lo-Fi History of the Elephant 6 Mystery / Adam Clair
The Difference Between / Billy McCall
The Submissive (The Submissive #1) / Tara Sue Me
Last Night at the Casino [v. 1] / Billy McCall
The Life-Changing Magic of Tidying Up: The Japanese Art of Decluttering and Organizing / Marie Kondo ; Cathy Hirano (tr.)
Pnin / Vladimir Nabokov
My Heart Is a Chainsaw / Stephen Graham Jones
"Waltz of the Body Snatchers" / Alfred Bester, in Andromeda I: An original SF anthology / ed. Peter Weston
Blue Highways: A Journey Into America / William Least Heat-Moon
The Stars My Destination (The Gregg Press Science Fiction Series) / Alfred Bester
Laughter in the Dark / Vladimir Nabokov
Man and His Symbols / Carl G. Jung
Mysteries of the Unexplained / ed. Carroll C. Calkins
The Westing Game / Ellen Raskin
The Seven Ages / Louise Glück
The Wild Iris / Louise Glück
Vita Nova / Louise Glück
Doctor Who: Impossible Worlds: A 50-Year Treasury of Art and Design / Stephen Nicholas & Mike Tucker
Where's Waldo? (Where's Waldo #1) / Martin Handford
Where's Waldo? The Fantastic Journey (Where's Waldo #3) / Martin Handford
Doctor Who 50 Years #3: The Doctors / ed. Marcus Hearn
Rabbit, Run / John Updike
Mother Night / Kurt Vonnegut
Descriptive Cataloging of Rare Materials (Books) / Bibliographic Standards Committee, Rare Books and Manuscripts Section, Association of College and Research Libraries, in collaboration with The Policy Standards Office of the Library of Congress
"Descriptive Bibliography" / Terry Belanger, in Book Collecting: A Modern Guide / ed. Jean Peters
The Essential Doctor Who #2: The TARDIS / ed. Marcus Hearn
Speak, Memory: An Autobiography Revisited / Vladimir Nabokov
Chicago: City on the Make / Nelson Algren
Gustav Klimt, 1862-1918 / Gilles Néret
American Gods: A Novel / Neil Gaiman
Marcel Duchamp, 1887-1968: Art as Anti-Art / Janis Mink
The Empathy Exams: Essays / Leslie Jamison
Let Us Now Praise Famous Men: Three Tenant Families / James Agee & Walker Evans
Hallucination Orbit: Psychology in Science Fiction / ed. Isaac Asimov, Charles G. Waugh, Martin H. Greenberg
Dream Street: W. Eugene Smith's Pittsburgh Project / W. Eugene Smith ; ed. Sam Stephenson
Twilight / Gregory Crewdson ; Rick Moody
Magic Eye: A New Way of Looking at the World / N.E. Thing Enterprises
Bowie: Stardust, Rayguns & Moonage Daydreams / Steve Horton & Michael Allred ; Laura Allred (ill.)
After the Ecstasy, the Laundry: How the Heart Grows Wise on the Spiritual Path / Jack Kornfield
The Gin Closet: A Novel / Leslie Jamison
The New Kid on the Block / Jack Prelutsky ; James Stevenson (ill.)
A Book of Common Prayer / Joan Didion
Mariette in Ecstasy / Ron Hansen
Camp Damascus / Chuck Tingle
The Mass Production of Memory: Travel and Personal Archiving in the Age of the Kodak (Public History in Historical Perspective) / Tammy S. Gordon
Unfathomable City: A New Orleans Atlas / Rebecca Solnit & Rebecca Snedeker
Other Voices, Other Rooms / Truman Capote
Fabulous New Orleans / Lyle Saxon ; E.H. Suydam (ill.)
Weird Pennsylvania: Your Travel Guide to Pennsylvania's Local Legends and Best Kept Secrets / Matt Lake
Griffin & Sabine: An Extraordinary Correspondence (Griffin & Sabine #1) / Nick Bantock
Sabine's Notebook: In Which The Extraordinary Correspondence of Griffin & Sabine Continues (Griffin & Sabine #2) / Nick Bantock
The Golden Mean: In Which The Extraordinary Correspondence of Griffin & Sabine Concludes (Griffin & Sabine #3) / Nick Bantock
Breath, Eyes, Memory / Edwidge Danticat
Last Night at the Casino, v. 2 / Billy McCall
What If? Serious Scientific Answers to Absurd Hypothetical Questions / Randall Munroe
Collection-Level Cataloging: Bound-with Books (Third Millennium Cataloging) / Jain Fletcher
Speaking Pittsburghese: The Story of a Dialect (Oxford Studies in Sociolinguistics) / Barbara Johnstone
My Misspent Youth: Essays / Meghan Daum
Slender Intuition: Essays on Artist's Block / Brian Hitselberger
The Mister / E L James
Crapalachia: A Biography of a Place / Scott McClanahan
The Transcriptionist: A Novel / Amy Rowland
Explanations/Opinions below the cut:
Ok so I have several reading lists/stacks that I rotate through: my to-read spreadsheet (which has almost 300 titles listed in chronological order by date added, with the oldest being from 8/22/2014), my to-read bookcase/nightstand (which holds ~50 books I’ve acquired over the past few years but haven’t yet read), a stack of oversized unreads that don’t fit on the nightstand shelves (this gets its own list bc I need to read them and find a permanent home for them before the stack gets too tall), and “interruptions” (books that override the list order bc I didn’t want to wait to read them, for whatever reason).
Maybe it’s weird that I’m so attached to reading things “in order”? Idk. I’ve always been like this. It’s only a mild compulsion – obviously, I am perfectly capable of ignoring what’s supposed to be next on the list, in favor of reading something that catches my interest more strongly in the moment, but in general, I like to read things either in the order I added them to the list, or the order I personally acquired a physical copy (if I went by the list only, I’d be drowning in unread books [yay, college town thrift stores], so I gotta stay on top of that pile pretty regularly). So that is why I am often reading things that I first became aware of/added to my list nearly 10 years ago. Sometimes this practice results in feelings like, “Dang, I wish I would’ve actually read this 10 years ago,” but also sometimes, “WOW, I’m so glad I’m reading this RIGHT NOW, as opposed to 10 years ago when I first heard about it!”
I think my favorites this year were Mariette in Ecstasy; Other Voices, Other Rooms; Crapalachia; and Speak, Memory.
Mild disappointments were the essay collections by Leslie Jamison and Meghan Daum, two authors I’m pretty sure I discovered via popular and relateable quotes reblogged on tumblr ca. 2014, but the collections taken as a whole just had too many moments of cringe – casual classism, arrogant self-absorption, and other annoying and unrelateable qualities typical of privileged 20-something writers (this tone definitely appealed to me when I was a naïve and melodramatic snotty 20-something, so there’s that).
As a kind of memorial, Rachael and I read David’s three favorite books: The Stars My Destination, Mother Night, and American Gods. In all the time I knew him, including all the times we used to sit on the porch together, reading quietly while he drank whiskey, I never thought to ask him his favorites. I kept looking for pieces of him in the stories, wondering what lines stood out, what made a book memorable, what did it say about him that these were his favorites.
Being an elder Millennial, I’m in the stage of nostalgically re-acquiring important artifacts from my childhood, so that’s why there are some children’s books on my list. Where’s Waldo? was one of the most coveted books in my grade-school library! There was always a list of people waiting to check it out, but usually, whoever actually had the book that week would let the other kids gather around and look together.
My Heart Is a Chainsaw was a recommendation from my goth teenaged birthdaughter <3 which I probably read too much personal symbolism into but maybe not!
I thought John Updike was overrated, lol.
Favorite photography book: W. Eugene Smith’s Dream Street. His pictures made me so homesick, and it was wild because he took them from 1955-1957 but they still really, REALLY, to me, looked like the Pittsburgh of my ‘80s/’90s memories (bc Pittsburgh doesn’t change, and also the “idea” or “brand” of Pittsburgh in the ‘80s/’90s was ofc consciously referencing its industrial working-class past). He took over 10,000 photos but was never able to “finish” the project to his intense, obsessive standards of perfection (I KNOW THAT FEEL) and felt it failed to capture the multifaceted essence of the city. WELL, not in my opinion at least!
PS I'm moonmoth on LibraryThing.
6 notes · View notes
hannahmabook · 2 years
Text
(Download) What My Mother and I Don't Talk About: Fifteen Writers Break the Silence - Michele Filgate
Download Or Read PDF What My Mother and I Don't Talk About: Fifteen Writers Break the Silence - Michele Filgate Free Full Pages Online With Audiobook.
Tumblr media
  [*] Download PDF Visit Here => https://forsharedpdf.site/42201997
[*] Read PDF Visit Here => https://forsharedpdf.site/42201997
ONE OF NPR?S BEST BOOKS OF 2019 *Most Anticipated Reads of 2019 by Publishers Weekly, BuzzFeed, The Rumpus, Lit Hub, The Week, and Elle.com* Fifteen brilliant writers explore what we don?t talk to our mothers about, and how it affects us, for better or for worse.As an undergraduate, Michele Filgate started writing an essay about being abused by her stepfather. It took her more than a decade to realize what she was actually trying to write: how this affected her relationship with her mother. When it was finally published, the essay went viral, shared on social media by Anne Lamott, Rebecca Solnit, and many others. The outpouring of responses gave Filgate an idea, and the resulting anthology offers a candid look at our relationships with our mothers. While some of the writers in this book are estranged from their mothers, others are extremely close. Leslie Jamison writes about trying to discover who her seemingly perfect mother was before ever becoming a mom. In Cathi Hanauer?s
0 notes
livingthegifs · 5 years
Photo
Tumblr media Tumblr media Tumblr media Tumblr media Tumblr media Tumblr media Tumblr media Tumblr media Tumblr media Tumblr media
The Big C: Crossing the Line
By: thejennire
Check the Tags!!! [x]
70 notes · View notes
rxndomsicons · 7 years
Photo
Tumblr media Tumblr media Tumblr media Tumblr media Tumblr media Tumblr media Tumblr media Tumblr media Tumblr media
cathy jamison / like or @theblindsided
36 notes · View notes
heartmagician · 3 years
Text
ok here’s a list of every book I read in 2020
Her Body & Other Parties by Carmen Maria Machado
Hard Damage by Aria Aber
Bluets by Maggie Nelson 
The Lifting Dress by Lauren Berry
Reconstructions by Bradley Trumpfheller
The Tradition by Jericho Brown^
Space Struck by Paige Lewis
The Burgermeister’s Daughter: Scandal in a Sixteenth Century German Town by Steven E. Ozment^
Blood Dazzler by Patricia Smith^
Aeneid Book VI by Virgil, translated by Seamus Heaney^
Engine Empire by Cathy Park Hong^
Holy the Firm by Annie Dillard^
Disappearing Earth by Julia Phillips
The Descent of Alette by Alice Notley^
Idaho by Emily Ruskovich*
The Maid and The Queen: The Secret History of Joan of Arc by Nancy Goldstone^
Housekeeping by Marilynne Robinson^
Bright Dead Things by Ada Limón*^
Homie by Danez Smith
Little Fires Everywhere by Celeste Ng
Drift by Caroline Bergvall^
There There by Tommy Orange
Nox by Anne Carson^
Never Let Me Go by Kazuo Ishiguro*^
A Bestiary by Lily Hoang^
The Fact of a Body by Alex Marzano-Lesnevich
Odes to Lithium by Shira Erlichman
The Roxy Letters by Mary Pauline Lowry
Good Boys by Megan Fernandes
Don’t Be Afraid, Gringo by Elvia Alvarado, translated by Medea Benjamin^
Testimony: Death of a Guatemalan Village by Victor Montejo^
One Day of Life by Manlio Argueta, translated by Bill Brow^
Bandit by Molly Brodak
The Tattooed Soldier by Héctor Tobar^
An American Marriage by Tayari Jones
Thief in the Interior by Phillip B. Williams
Eyes Bottle Dark With a Mouthful of Flowers by Jake Skeets
Under the Banner of Heaven by Jon Krakauer
The Light of the World by Elizabeth Alexander
A Burning by Megha Majumdar
When Death Takes Something From You Give it Back: Carl’s Book by Naja Marie Aidt, translated by Denise Newman
Mostly Dead Things by Kristen Arnett
I Can’t Talk About the Trees Without the Blood by Tiana Clark
A Nail the Evening Hangs On by Monica Sok
Without Protection by Gala Mukomolova
Birthright by George Abraham
monster house. by Mia S. Willis
Stay, Illusion by Lucie Brock-Broido
The Book of Delights by Ross Gay
Luster by Raven Leilani
Guillotine by Eduardo C. Corral
Sana Sana by Ariana Brown
The Crying Book by Heather Christle
Crown Noble by Bianca Phipps
The Song of Achilles by Madeline Miller
Dispatch by Cameron Awkward-Rich
Cold Alchemy by Amrita Chakraborty
You Ask Me to Talk About the Interior by Carolina Ebeid
The Carrying by Ada Limón
Runaway by Alice Munro
My Year of Rest & Relaxation by Ottessa Moshfegh
Cut Woman by Dena Igusti
Giovanni’s Room by James Baldwin
Trash by Dorothy Allison
Fuck Your Darlings by Devin Devine
Set to Music a Wildfire by Ruth Awad
Daddy by Emma Cline
The Empathy Exams by Leslie Jamison
The Seven Husbands of Evelyn Hugo by Taylor Jenkins Reid
Portrait of the Alcoholic by Kaveh Akbar
Daisy Jones & the Six by Taylor Jenkins Reid
How to Write an Autobiographical Novel by Alexander Chee
The Isle of Youth by Laura van den Berg
The Art of Memoir by Mary Karr^
Take Me Apart by Sara Sligar
Heavier Than Wait by Ilyus Evander
The Best American Essays 2019, edited by Rebecca Solnit^
Look by Solmaz Sharif
The Death of Vivek Oji by Akwaeke Emezi
The Office of Historical Corrections by Danielle Evans
Anodyne by Khadijah Queen
Shuggie Bain by Douglas Stuart * = reread ^ = read for a class
28 notes · View notes
mistikfir · 1 year
Photo
Tumblr media Tumblr media Tumblr media Tumblr media
The Big C - 2X05 - “Cats and Dogs” (2011)  
The perfect red.
37 notes · View notes
misskittyspuffy · 3 years
Text
10 of my favourite fictional women for women’s history month
I was tagged by @travllingbunny​, thank you!! :D 
1) Buffy Summers (Buffyverse)
Tumblr media
2) Faith Lehane (Buffyverse)
Tumblr media
3) Lorelai Gilmore (Gilmore Girls)
Tumblr media
4) Cordelia Chase (Buffyverse)
Tumblr media
5) Katniss Everdeen (Hunger Games)
Tumblr media
6) Charlie Bradbury (Supernatural)
Tumblr media
7) Mulan
Tumblr media
8) Claire Fisher (Six Feet Under)
Tumblr media
9) Eileen Leahy (Supernatural)
Tumblr media
10) Krissy Chambers (Supernatural)
Tumblr media
Special mentions: Dawn Summers (BtVS), Winifred Burkle (Angel), Hermione Granger (Harry Potter), Donna Hanscum (Supernatural), Claire Novak (Supernatural), Lily Aldrin (How I Met Your Mother), Cathy Jamison (The Big C), Daenerys Targaryen (Game of Thrones).
Tagging:  @frimoussette88 @assbuttboyfriends @clipse23  @myed89  @bluestar81 @tinkdw @feelsandotps​ @darthmarion​ @amwritingmeta @mylittlegoldilocks @jenmdixon @rustling-pages​ @omgjay1988 @dimples-of-discontent​ and anyone who wants to do it :)
7 notes · View notes
kwebtv · 3 years
Photo
Tumblr media Tumblr media Tumblr media Tumblr media Tumblr media Tumblr media
The Big C  -  Showtime  -  August 16, 2010 – May 20, 2013
Comedy / Drama (40 episodes)
Running Time:  30 minutes (season 1-3) / 60 minutes (season 4)
Stars:
Laura Linney as Cathy Jamison
Oliver Platt as Paul Jamison
John Benjamin Hickey as Sean Tolkey
Gabriel Basso as Adam Jamison
Gabourey Sidibe as Andrea Jackson (Season 3-4, recurring previously),
Phyllis Somerville as Marlene (Season 1, recurring afterward)
5 notes · View notes
lesbianmuppet · 4 years
Text
i think about bop for more than three seconds and my whole body is drowning in serotonin. because art is real and art by women is real and its beautiful and so meticulously and finely crafted. the way cathy and christina crafted this narrative of hurting and healing is so perfectly summed up by one of my fav jamison quotes “There is a way of representing female consciousness that can witness pain but also witness a larger self around that pain” 
27 notes · View notes
skippyv20 · 4 years
Text
From the Los Angeles County Library catalog.  They have 10 of Mio’s books on pre-order but nothing on LCC’s latest book even though I submitted a purchase request.  They have LCC’s other books so she is a well renowned author in the library system.  Anyway, here is a listing for juvenile literature with 18 copies in paperback version. 
Tumblr media
A black woman did that! : 42 boundary-breaking, bar-raising, world-changing women Author:  Adero, Malaika, 1957- author. ISBN:  9781941367513
Subject Term: 
African American women – Juvenile literature.
African American women. (OCoLC)fst00799438
Genre: 
Juvenile works. (OCoLC)fst01411637
Biographies.
Contents:  Jesmyn Ward – Stacey Abrams – Misty Copeland – Alice Coltrane – Mada C.J. Walker – Patricia Bath – Lorraine Hansberry – Mo'ne Davis – Harriet Tubman – Debbie Allen – Angela Davis – Meghan Markle – Barbara Harris – Ava DuVernay – Xenobia Bailey – Bethann Hardison – Alice Walker – Serena Williams – Coretta Scott King – Whoopi Goldberg – Hadiyah-Nicole Green – Amy Sherald – Mary Fields – Cathy Hughes – Mae Jemison – Nina Simone – Ida B. Wells – Zora Neale Hurston – Sister Rosetta Tharpe – Shirley Chisholm – Bessie Coleman – Gwendolyn Brooks – Faith Ringgold – MIchelle Obama – Glory Edim – Abbey Lincoln – Shonda Rhimes – Shirley Ann Jackson – Simone Biles – Ella Baker. Summary:  A Black Woman Did That! spotlights vibrant, inspiring black women whose accomplishments have changed the world for the better. A Black Woman Did That! is a celebration of strong, resilient, innovative, and inspiring women of color. With a vibrant mixture of photography, illustration, biography, and storytelling, author Malaika Adero will spotlight well-known historical figures and women who are pushing boundaries today–including Ida B. Wells, Madam CJ Walker, Shirley Chisholm, Althea Gibson, Mae Jamison, Maxine Waters, Jesmyn Ward, Ava DuVernay, and Amy Sherald. Readers will recognize some names in the book, but will also be introduced to many important black women who have changed history or who are reshaping the cultural landscape. They’ll learn: *how the activism of Bree Newsome resulted in the removal of the Confederate flag from the South Carolina State House. *how Barbara Harris became the first female bishop of the Episcopal Church *how mathematician Katherine Johnson’s work at NASA was key to getting American astronauts to the moon *how Alicia Garza, Patrisse Collins, and Opal Tometi launched the Black Lives Matter movement *how Mary Fields crisscrossed the country on horseback in the 1890s as the first woman to drive a mail coach *how the work and inventions of Dr. Patricia Bath have saved or restored the eyesight of people around the world Entries on each woman or group will highlight their accomplishments, their world-changing words, and the ways in which their lives and actions have made the world a better place. The book will also include a robust resource list of books, audio and visual recordings, and links, inviting readers, parents, and teachers to learn even more about the amazing black women featured in the book.
Author Notes
Malaika Adero , author of Up South: Stories, Studies and Letters of This Century’s African American Migrations (The New Press, 1993) and co-author of Speak, So You Can Speak Again: The Life of Zora Neale Hurston (Doubleday, 2003) with Dr. Lucy Hurston. Shorter published works have appeared in many anthologies and periodicals including Mending the World , edited by Rosemary Robotham, Black Southern Voices by edited by James Early & John O. Killens, Essence magazine, AOL Black Voices, and Black Enterprise . She’s based in New York City and Atlanta, Georgia. Chanté Timothy is a freelance illustrator based in London, England. Her work focuses on children’s illustration with an ever-growing passion for representation of minorities. Her drawings are bubbly, bright, and colorful, with lots of movement and energy. She uses eye-catching, contrasting colors to draw in the viewer.
 Wow! What the hell is her name doing there?  This is disgusting.  Her name doesn’t belong with some of those amazing women!  She is trash!  She has done nothing for the world….I’m disgusted!.😔���️❤️❤️❤️❤️
11 notes · View notes
intimatum · 5 years
Text
intertextuality
desire / eating disorder / hunger: «to be the girl who lunges at people−wants to eat them» (letissier) / «a way to take all hungers and boil them down to their essence–one appetite to manage–just one» (knapp)
trauma / trauma theory / visceralities of trauma
writers
ada limón, adrienne rich, agnès varda, alana massey, alejandra pizarnik, alice notley, ana božičević, anaïs nin, andrea dworkin, andrew solomon, angela carter, angélica freitas, angélica liddell, ann cvetkovich, anna akhmatova, anna gien, anne boyer, anne carson, anne sexton, anne waldman, antonella anedda, aracelis girmay, ariana reines, audre lorde, aurora linnea
barbara ehrenreich, bell hooks, bessel van der kolk
carmen maria machado, caroline knapp, carrie lorig, cat marnell, catharine mackinnon, catherynne m. valente, cathy caruth, césar vallejo, chris kraus, christa wolf, clarice lispector, claudia rankine, czesław miłosz
daniel borzutzky, daphne du maurier, daphne gottlieb, david foster wallace, david wojnarowicz, dawn lundy martin, deirdre english, denise levertov, detlev claussen, dodie bellamy, don paterson, donna tartt, dora gabe, dorothea lasky, durs grünbein
��douard levé, eike geisel, eileen myles, elaine kahn, elena ferrante, elisabeth rank, elyn r. saks, emily dickinson, erica jong, esther perel, etty hillesum, eve kosofsky sedgwick
fanny howe, félix guattari, fernando pessoa, fiona duncan, frank bidart, franz kafka
gabriele schwab, gail dines, georg büchner, georges bataille, gertrude stein, gilles deleuze, gillian flynn, gretchen felker-martin
hannah arendt, hannah black, heather christle, heather o'neill, heiner müller, hélène cixous, héloïse letissier, henryk m. broder, herbert hindringer, herbert marcuse
ingeborg bachmann, iris murdoch
jacques derrida, jacques lacan, jade sharma, jamaica kincaid, jean améry, jean baudrillard, jean rhys, jeanann verlee, jeanette winterson, jenny slatman, jenny zhang, jerold j. kreisman, jess zimmerman, jia tolentino, joachim bruhn, joan didion, joanna russ, joanna walsh, johanna hedva, john berger, jörg fauser, joy harjo, joyce carol oates, judith butler, judith herman, julia kristeva, june jordan, junot díaz
karen barad, kate zambreno, katherine mansfield, kathrin weßling, kathy acker, katy waldman, kay redfield jamison, kim addonizio
lacy m. johnson, larissa pham, lauren berlant, le comité invisible, leslie jamison, lidia yuknavitch, linda gregg, lisa diedrich, louise glück, luce irigaray, lynn melnick
maggie nelson, margaret atwood, marguerite duras, marie howe, marina tsvetaeva, mark fisher, martha gellhorn, mary karr, mary oliver, mary ruefle, marya hornbacher, max horkheimer, melissa broder, michael ondaatje, michel foucault, miranda july, miya tokumitsu, monique wittig, muriel rukeyser
naomi wolf, natalie eilbert, natasha lennard, nelly arcan
ocean vuong, olivia laing, ottessa moshfegh
paisley rekdal, patricia lockwood, paul b. preciado, paul celan, peggy phelan
rachel aviv, rainald goetz, rainer maria rilke, rebecca solnit, richard moskovitz, richard siken, robert jensen, roland barthes, ronald d. laing
sady doyle, sally rooney, salma deera, samuel beckett, samuel salzborn, sandra cisneros, sara ahmed, sara sutterlin, sarah kane, sarah manguso, scherezade siobhan, sean bonney, sheila jeffreys, shoshana felman, shulamith firestone, sibylle berg, silvia federici, simone de beauvoir, simone weil, siri hustvedt, solmaz sharif, sophinette becker, soraya chemaly, stephan grigat, susan bordo, susan sontag, suzanne scanlon, sylvia plath
theodor w. adorno, thomas brasch, tiqqun, toni morrison
ursula k. le guin
valerie solanas, virginia l. blum, virginia woolf, virginie despentes
walter benjamin, wisława szymborska, wolfgang herrndorf, wolfgang pohrt
zadie smith, zan romanoff, zoë lianne, zora neale hurston
151 notes · View notes
farseerburrow · 5 years
Text
Currently watching.... The Big C
Along with reading, watching TV shows is a passion of mine. With this segment I aim to introduce a show I’m currently watching, with the hopes of writing a review of the whole show after I’ve finished it.
The Big C is a dramedy show that ran for four seasons from 2010-2013. It stars Laura Linney as schoolteacher Cathy Jamison as she deals with the fact that she has got terminal cancer.
I’m currently on episode 9/40 and I’m really enjoying, it does an excellent job at balancing comedy and seriousness, so far it is extremely compelling.
I did watch a few episodes of this show with my mother when it first aired in the UK (in 2011 I think?), but didn’t carry on watching it. Coincidentally at the time, my mum was also fighting cancer and I was one year younger than the son of Laura Linney’s character in the show. This made it quite a raw show for me to watch at that age and I found it rather uncomfortable to sit through.
Fortunately, my mother survived cancer and we are actually watching this together again now.
I have no clue what this show has in store for me, but I’m sure it’s going to be entertaining and emotional.
4 notes · View notes
cuteandfatal · 6 years
Text
I get a lot of people are super emotional after the ending of the big c and saying how people should not watch it because it’s too sad but it honestly represented what it’s like for someone struggling, we have a right to be upset but we also need to swallow the information we receive from this show, the soul crushing, sad and unfortunate truth.
Reality.
Its raw and it’s real. Sometimes you never get the chance to say goodbye. Sometimes you react in different ways to someone you love suffering from cancer. Not everyone gets a happy ending, but we all have an end, don’t we?
Life is filled with so much regrets and sadness, it’s the realisation that she won’t be cured, she won’t be saved and she will most definetly die.
My uncle recently passed from cancer and watching the last episode felt so real, it was as though I was living in the moment I heard I had lost him. It was as though I had seen him laying there lifeless all over again. It’s sad, but it’s truth. And that is what this show portrayed so well, the absolute truth.
It will feel shit to watch it, but you will miss out on something truly remarkable and learn so much along the way.
I love the big c so much, will continue to rewatch each year and I highly recommend.
0 notes