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#nelly stein
fishymom-art · 9 days
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Continuation starting in May :))
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waruihoshi · 2 years
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@fishymom-art​ hi sorry im in a shitpost doodle phase *throws this in your face*
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mutatedleemon · 2 years
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The incredible Inky Rats duo by @fishymom-art
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arrowverse-next-gen · 2 years
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Arrow on Facebook: The debate has started
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frankiew33n · 1 month
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New additions to my frankenstein collection
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the-bi-library · 7 months
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Here is the final part of the bi4bi books posts!
I'd appreciate it if you let me know if there are any more bi4bi books that I didn't include here 💕
Books listed: They Never Learn by Layne Fargo If We Were Villains by M.L. Rio Silver Nitrate by Silvia Moreno-Garcia The Drowning Summer by C.L. Herman Case Sensitive by A.K. Turner Missing, Presumed Dead by Emma Berquist Her Soul to Take by Harley Laroux Iron Widow by Xiran Jay Zhao City of Shattered Light by Claire Winn City of Vicious Night by Claire Winn The Light Years by R.W.W. Greener The Apocalypse of Elena Mendoza by Shaun David Hutchinson Tell Me Anything by Skye Kilaen Her Scarlet Letters by Cat Giraldo Break Free by Raleigh Ruebins Modern Divination by Isabel Agajanian Caroline's Heart by Austin Chant The Door Into Fire by Diane Duane The Stone Prince by Fiona Patton Swordspoint by Ellen Kushner Wolf, Willow, Witch by Freydís Moon When the Stars Alight by Camilla Andrew Love at First Set by Jennifer Dugan Cleans Up Nice by Margo Phelps Educated by Nellie Wilson Queried Sick by Dallas Smith Chance Agreement by Margo Phelps Sirens & Muses by Antonia Angress Release by Suzanne Clay Orphia and Eurydicius by Elyse John Crown of Starlight by Cait Corrain To Beg or Not to Beg by Cat Giraldo Two Winters by Lauren Emily Whalen Electric Idol by Katee Robert Neon Gods by Katee Robert The Scandalous Letters of V and J by Felicia Davin The Spinster's Swindle by Catherine Stein Rocky Mountain Freedom by Vivian Arend Um traço até você by Olívia Pilar Biforia by Rebecca Romero Escalando Você by Rebecca Romero Entre estantes by Olívia Pilar → translated Between Bookshelves by Olívia Pilar Honor Among Thieves by Rachel Caine Victories Greater Than Death by Charlie Jane Anders The Stars Undying by Emery Robin Legend of Korra: Graphic Novels Harley Quinn: The Eat. Bang! Kill. Tour Novels Seven Days: Monday–Sunday by Venio Tachiban Brimstones and Roses It Would Be Great If You Didn't Exist My Werewolf Girlfriend The Fiancée Farce by Alexandria Bellefleur Xeni by Rebekah Weather
Part 1
Part 2
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knifeeater · 1 year
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Touki Bouki (1973) Djibril Diop Mambéty | “She looks at the void,” Stein says. “That's the only thing she looks at, but she does it well.” Destroy, She Said Marguerite Duras
California King Glass Coffin | existential malaise at the Dubai penthouse
Si2Y Poppy Ajudha / You And Your Sister This Mortal Coil / Don’t Wish Me Well Solange / Roses ABRA / For You I Hold My Breath Lalleshwari / Turn Off The Light Nelly Furtado / King of Sorrow Sade / High Alone Sevdaliza / In Time FKA twigs / Only Seeing God When I Come Sega Bodega / Babylon Oneohtrix Point Never, Alex G / Marble House The Knife / World That’s Not Real Gloria Ann Taylor / Touch Red Chromatics / Concrete Walls Fever Ray / Siamese Twins The Cure / Dissolved Girl Massive Attack /  Divorce Kelela / Simulation Swarm Big Thief / Hardly Wait Juliette Lewis / California King Bed Rihanna / Bizzare Love Triangle New Order / Les Fleurs Minnie Riperton
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(017) Die drei ??? und die gefährliche Erbschaft
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Klappentext
Der geheimnisvolle Einsiedler Marcus Towne, genannt Dingo, hinterläßt ein mysteriöses Testament. Es ist in Form einer mehrteiligen Rätselaufgabe abgefaßt - das Vermögen soll demjenigen zufallen, der das Rätsel um diesen seltsamen >letzten Willen< löst. Warum setzte Dingo so ein verrücktes Testament auf? Wollte er damit eventuellen Erbschleichern einen Stein in den Weg legen? Die rechtmäßigen Erben wenden sich zusammen mit dem Rechtsanwalt an die drei ??? und bitten um Hilfe beim Rätsellösen…
Veröffentlichungshistorie
Buch (Random House): 022, 1974, William Arden, The Mystery of the Dead Man’s Riddle Buch (Kosmos): 020, 1978, Leonore Puschert (aus dem Amerikanischen übertragen) Hörspiel (Europa): 017, 1980
⁉️ Allgemein
Handlungsort
Rocky Beach
Kategorie
Schatzsuche, Diebstahl, Rätsel
Figuren
Justus Jonas
Peter Shaw
Bob Andrews
Bobs Vater
Alfred Hitchcock
Billy Towne, Enkel Marcus Towne, Sohn von Nelly Towne
Nelly Towne, (Schwieger-)tochter von Marcus Towne
Roger Callow, von der Anwaltskanzlei Sink & Waters, Verlobter von Nelly Towne (😈)
Lopez, Hilfssheriff
Skinny Norris, lebensgefährlich
Cecil Percival, Neffe von Marcus Towne
Emily Percival, Nichte von Marcus Towne
John "Jack" Dillon, Freund von Marcus Towne und Testamentsvollstrecker
Hauptkommissar Reynolds
🏖 Rocky Beach Universum
Orte
Grundstück von Marcus Towne
Altes Reservoire, ein Stausee mit Staudamm
Sal si puedes, Straße
Hafen
Einrichtungen
Schrottplatz der Firma Titus Jonas Gebrauchtwarenhandel
Zentrale 
Sonstiges
Marcus „Dingo“ Towne, ein verstorbener Einsiedler
Mrs. Sadie Jingle, gute Bekannte von Marcus Towne
"Sal si puedes" bedeutet eigentlich "Raus wenn du kannst" und nicht "Geh wenn du kannst" ("vete si puedes").
🛼 Sonstiges
Lustige Dialoge
Justus: „Als Hilfe für die einigermaßen Intelligenten hinterlasse ich diese Folge von Rätseln. Wer kann, löse sie, er wird den Schatz finden!“ Peter: „Mit den intelligenten kann er eigentlich nur uns meinen!“
Nelly Towne: „Billy? Billy? Billy, sofort nach Haus mit dir!“ Justus: „Da hörst du’s, Billy.“ Nelly Towne: “Ich bin Nelly Towne, mein Mann lebt nicht mehr.“
Skinny Norris: "Nochmal heißen Dank für die richtige Antwort! Ich habe alles gehört und ich weiß wo die Treppe ist. Diesmal kläre ich den Fall auf. Gute Reise ihr drei Ekel!"
Justus: "Hinter der Staumauer geht es mindestens 30 Meter nach unten!" Peter: "Noch mehr!"
Justus: "Dieser Skinny Norris ist ja lebensgefährlich!"
Bob: "So sollen die Teestuben in England auch sein. Mit Wildtierköpfen und Fotos an den Wänden." Kellnerin: "Was darf es sein, die Herren?" Justus: "Bringen Sie uns Tee, bitte. Das heißt ... kannten Sie Marcus Towne?"
Phrasenschwein
Mitgehört! Verstärker wird eingeschaltet"
🏳️‍🌈 Queer/diversity read
Shippy moments
Peter: "Ruhig Bob, ganz ruhig Bob! Ich werf das Tau noch einmal!"
Diversity, Political Correctness and Feminism
Hilfssheriff Lopez hat einen fragwürdigen Akzent ... "Ja, Diablo!"
"Ich wäre der Mann einer reichen Frau gewesen, der um jedes Taschengeld betteln muss."
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yes-bernie-stuff · 6 months
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Cette réflextion est rrés intéressante.
Ce qui suit est une copie d'un article écrit par l'écrivain espagnol Sebastián Rodríguez Vilar et publiée dans un journal espagnol . Il ne faut pas beaucoup d'imagination pour extrapoler le message au reste de l'Europe - et éventuellement, au reste du monde. Ce n'est guère de la propagande, les faits parlent d'eux-mêmes. A méditer ....
Par Sébastien Vilar Rodrigez
Je marchais dans la rue à Barcelone, et soudain je découvrais une terrible vérité - L'Europe est morte à Auschwitz... Nous avons tué six millions de Juifs et nous les avons remplacés par 20 millions de musulmans.
À Auschwitz, nous avons brûlé une culture, la pensée, la créativité, le talent. Nous avons détruit le peuple élu, véritablement choisi, car ils ont produit des gens formidables et merveilleux qui ont changé le monde.
La contribution de ce peuple se fait sentir dans tous les domaines de la vie : science, art, commerce international, et surtout, comme la conscience du monde. Ce sont les gens que nous avons brûlés.
Sous prétexte de tolérance et parce que nous voulions prouver à nous-mêmes que nous avons été guéris de la maladie du racisme, nous avons ouvert nos portes à 20 millions de musulmans qui nous ont apporté la stupidité et l'ignorance, l'extrémisme religieux et le manque de tolérance, la criminalité et la pauvreté, due à un manque de volonté de travailler et de soutenir leurs familles avec fierté.
Ils ont fait sauter nos trains et ont transformé nos belles villes espagnoles dans le tiers monde, noyé tout dans la crasse et la criminalité.
Enfermés dans les appartements qu'ils reçoivent gratuitement du gouvernement, ils planifient d'assassiner et de détruire leurs hôtes naïfs.
Ainsi, dans notre misère, nous avons échangé la culture pour de la haine fanatique; le savoir-faire créatif pour des compétences destructrices; l'intelligence pour le retour en arrière et la superstition.
Quelle terrible erreur a été faite par la misérable Europe.. .
La population mondiale comprend 1,2 milliards d'islamiques ou 20% de la population mondiale
Ils ont reçu les Prix Nobel suivants :
Littérature :
1988 - Najib Mahfouz
Paix :
1978 - Mohamed Anwar El-Sadat
1990 - Elias James Corey
1994 - Yasser Arafat:
1999 - Ahmed Zewai
Économie :
(Zéro)
Physique :
(Zéro)
Médecine :
1960 - Peter Medawar Brian
1998 - Ferid Mourad
TOTAL : 7 (sept)
La population juive mondiale est approximativement de 14.000.000, soit environ 0,02% de la population mondiale.
Ils ont reçu les Prix Nobel suivant :
Littérature :
1910 - Paul Heyse
1927 - Henri Bergson
1958 - Boris Pasternak
1966 - Shmuel Yosef Agnon
1966 - Nelly Sachs
1976 - Saul Bellow
1978 - Isaac Bashevis Singer
1981 - Elias Canetti
1987 - Joseph Brodsky
1991 - Nadine Gordimer mondiale
Paix :
1911 - Alfred Fried
1911 - Tobias Michael Carel Asser
1968 - René Cassin
1973 - Henry Kissinger
1978 - Menahem Begin
1986 - Elie Wiesel
1994 - Shimon Pérès
1994 - Yitzhak Rabin
Physique :
1905 - Adolph von Baeyer
1906 - Henri Moissan
1907 - Albert Abraham Michelson
1908 - Gabriel Lippmann
1910 - Otto Wallach
1915 - Richard Willstaetter
1918 - Fritz Haber
1921 - Albert Einstein
1922 - Niels Bohr
1925 - James Franck
1925 - Gustav Hertz
1943 - Gustav Stern
1943 - George Charles de Hevesy
1944 - Isidor Rabi Issac
1952 - Felix Bloch
1954 - Max Born
1958 - Igor Tamm
1959 - Emilio Segre
1960 - Donald A. Glaser
1961 - Robert Hofstadter
1961 - Melvin Calvin
1962 - Lev Davidovich Landau
1962 - Max Ferdinand Perutz
1965 - Richard Phillips Feynman
1965 - Julian Schwinger
1969 - Murray Gell-Mann
1971 - Dennis Gabor
1972 - William Howard Stein
1973 - Brian David Josephson
1975 - Benjamin Mottleson
1976 - Burton Richter
1977 - Ilya Prigogine
1978 - Arno Allan Penzias
1978 - Peter L Kapitza
1979 - Stephen Weinberg
1979 - Sheldon Glashow
1979 - Herbert Charles Brown
1980 - Paul Berg
Sellam Mickael Elie, [23-Oct-22 8:18 AM]
1980 - Walter Gilbert
1981 - Roald Hoffmann
1982 - Aaron Klug
1985 - Albert A. Hauptman
1985 - Jerome Karle
1986 - Dudley R. Herschbach
1988 - Robert Huber
1988 - Leon Lederman
1988 - Melvin Schwartz
1988 - Jack Steinberger
1989 - Sidney Altman
1990 - Jerome Friedman
1992 - Rudolph Marcus
1995 - Martin Perl
2000 - Alan J. Heeger
Économie :
1970 - Paul Anthony Samuelson
1971 - Simon Kuznets
1972 - Kenneth Joseph Flèche
1975 - Leonid Kantorovitch
1976 - Milton Friedman
1978 - Herbert A. Simon
1980 - Laurent Robert Klein
1985 - Franco Modigliani
1987 - Robert M. Solow
1990 - Harry Markowitz
1990 - Merton Miller
1992 - Gary Becker
1993 - Robert Fogel
Médecine :
1908 - Elie Metchnikoff
1908 - Paul Erlich
1914 - Robert Barany
1922 - Otto Meyerhof
1930 - Karl Landsteiner
1931 - Otto Warburg
1936 - Otto Loewi
1944 - Joseph Erlanger
1944 - Herbert Spencer Gasser
1945 - Ernst Boris Chain
1946 - Hermann Joseph Muller
1950 - Tadeus Reichstein
1952 - Selman Abraham Waksman
1953 - Hans Krebs
1953 - Fritz Albert Lipmann
1958 - Joshua Lederberg
1959 - Arthur Kornberg
1964 - Konrad Bloch
1965 - François Jacob
1965 - André Lwoff
1967 - George Wald
1968 - Marshall W. Nirenberg
1970 - Julius Axelrod
1970 - Sir Bernard Katz
1972 - Gerald Maurice Edelman
1975 - Howard Martin Temin
1976 - Baruch S. Blumberg
1977 - Roselyn Sussman Yalow
1978 - Daniel Nathans
1980 - Baruj Benacerraf
1984 - Cesar Milstein
1985 - Michael Stuart Brown
1985 - Joseph L. Goldstein
1986 - Stanley Cohen [& Rita Levi-Montalcini]
1988 - Gertrude Elion
1989 - Harold Varmus
1991 - Erwin Neher
1991 - Bert Sakmann
1993 - Richard J. Roberts
1993 - Phillip Sharp
1994 - Alfred Gilman
1995 - Edward B. Lewis
1996 - Lu RoseIacovino
TOTAL : 129
Les Juifs ne font pas la promotion du lavage de cerveau des enfants dans les camps de formation militaire.
Ils ne leur apprennent pas à se faire exploser et à causer le maximum de mort de Juifs et d'autres non-musulmans.
Les Juifs ne détournent pas des avions, ne tuent pas les athlètes lors des Jeux olympiques, et ne se font pas exploser dans un restaurant allemand.
Il n'y a pas un seul Juif qui a détruit une église.
Il n'y a pas un seul Juif qui proteste en tuant des gens.Les Juifs ne font pas de trafic d'esclaves, n'ont pas de dirigeants qui appellent au Jihad et à la mort
de tous les infidèles.
Peut-être les musulmans du monde devraient considérer à investir plus dans l'enseignement ordinaire et moins à blâmer les Juifs pour tous leurs problèmes.
Les musulmans doivent demander «ce qu'ils peuvent faire pour l'humanité » avant d'exiger que l'humanité les respecte.
Indépendamment de vos sentiments à propos de la crise entre Israël et les Palestiniens et les voisins arabes; même si vous croyez qu'il y a plus de culpabilité de la part d 'Israël, les deux phrases suivantes disent vraiment tout :
«Si les Arabes déposaient les armes aujourd'hui, il n'y aurait plus de violence. Si les Juifs déposaient leurs armes aujourd'hui, il n’y aurait plus d' Israël.»
Benjamin Netanyahu
Le général Eisenhower nous a averti : c'est un fait historique.
Lorsque le commandant suprême des Forces alliées, le général Dwight Eisenhower a trouvé les victimes des camps de la mort, il a ordonné de prendre toutes les photographies possibles du peuple allemand, des villages environnants; de leur faire visiter les camps et même enterrer les morts.
Il a fait cela parce qu'il a dit des mots à cet effet :
«Rassemblez tous les dossiers et documents maintenant - saisissez les films - faites parler les témoins - parce que quelque part sur la route de l'histoire quelques bâtards vont se lever et dire que cela n'est jamais arrivé..»
Récemment, le Royaume-Uni a débattu pour savoir s'il fallait supprimer la Shoah dans son cursus scolaire, car il «offense» la population musulmane qui affirme que cela n'a jamais eu lieu.
Sellam Mickael Elie, [23-Oct-22 8:18 AM]
Ce n'est pas encore supprimé... Cependant, c'est un signe effrayant de la peur qui paralyse le monde et combien il est facile pour chaque pays d'être paralysé par elle.
Cela fait plus de 60 ans après que la Seconde Guerre mondiale a pris fin en Europe..
Ce courriel est envoyé comme une chaîne commémorative, en souvenir des 6 millions de juifs, 20 millions de Russes, 10 millions de chrétiens, et 1900 prêtres catholiques «assassinés, violés, brûlés, affamés, battus, humiliés et ont servi de cobayes, tandis que le peuple allemand a regardé ailleur.
Maintenant, plus que jamais, avec l'Iran, entre autres, revendiquant que l'Holocauste est «un mythe», il est impératif de s'assurer que le monde n'oublie jamais.
Ce courriel est destiné à atteindre 400 millions de personnes... Soyez un maillon dans la chaîne de mémoire et aidez à distribuer ce message à travers le monde.
Combien d'années faudra-il avant que l'attaque du World Trade Center «n'ait jamais eu lieu» parce qu'elle offense les musulmans des États-Unis?
Ne vous contentez pas de supprimer ce message...... cela ne prendra que quelques minutes pour le faire passer.
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lendubsofficial · 4 years
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Let's see if we can find what you wanted me to see...
Nelly Stein, Audrey: Me Henry Stein: @phoenixvitae
Follow the Artist!: @fishymom-art
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fishymom-art · 1 year
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HAPPY 3 YEARS OF METAL AND INK!
You could say my artstyle improved a little :^)
anyway, here’s something I’ve been drawing the whole day and I am very proud and tired cause it’s 2am :”D
SO YOU BETTER LIKE IT AEUGHLAIUEGH
Good night and thamk you for sticking around ^^
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randomrecordreview · 4 years
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#988 Phranc – Positively Phranc This album has a one-sentence review on Allmusic.com. A travesty, but sadly not surprising, for a lesbian folksinger.
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horselover107 · 3 years
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Torchwood Outbreak: A Fanmix
https://open.spotify.com/playlist/2DosSgh7EXXgw3urijpXoe?si=yTLqbaIFR7KYRfONBmK_yg&dl_branch=1
Warnings for mentions of viruses/pandemics and violence as it is Outbreak. Some Outbreak spoilers in the song descriptions
Relevant lyrics/explanations
Virus by Andrew Stein
Pretty much every lyric of this vibes with how the virus from Outbreak works but especially:
Everybody that I thought
I used to know
Changed overnight
And now they're getting into fights
Reality is broken
Scattered pieces on the floor
This isn't just a game
Any more
You're like a virus
Slowly infecting me
Pretty poison rushing
Through my heart
You're just a virus
I can't delete
I was falling for you
Now I'm falling apart
And it was all over from the moment that I pressed start
Fighting in the Street by Cockney Rejects
Exactly what it says on the tin. POV Gwen and Ianto trying to get back to hub in the chaos of people fighting each other
Locked In by Judas Priest
Literally Ianto being locked in the hub—but also the lyrics about attraction and wanting
I Still Taste Fire by Stephanie Mabie
POV Jack remembers the original trial victims being burned alive, and Norton’s role in the burnings
Hologram by Katie Herzig
A song for Norton. Both because he’s literally a hologram and because he’s teasing Jack and Ianto by changing sides
I am taking up space I'm right out of place
I'm holding a half-hearted smile to your face
It's pretty enough but watch out it fades away
Time is ticking so fast
Does anything last
Soon I will be just apart of your past
I'll leave you with this
You hold on in blissful memories
I'm in a love affair without a love song
I'm in the habit of having what I don't want
I'm just a hologram
You can see but don't touch me baby
I Love You by Billie Eilish
POV Jack says I love you as he’s trying to kill Ianto. “It’s just the virus talking”. This is such a Janto song honestly, just like in general
It's not true
Tell me I've been lied to
Cryin' isn't like you
Ooh
What the hell did I do?
Never been the type to
Let someone see right through
Ooh
Maybe won't you take it back?
Say you were tryna make me laugh
And nothin' has to change today
You didn't mean to say, "I love you"
I love you and I don't want to
Go Get Your Gun by The Dear Hunter
How I’m justifying the weapons square
POV Jack and Ianto chasing each other around the hub trying to shoot each other because of the virus
The Killing Kind by Marianas Trench
POV they’re still trying to kill each other
I roam these halls
Search the night
In hopes that I may see
A remnant trace, a glimpse of you
I stare into the deep
Singing, "I know, I know, I know, I know, I know
I know my love can be"
But deep stares back, speaks to me
"I know my love can be
The killing kind"
...
If madness overtakes us both
Then nobody would be alone
The ghost of us can linger here
Forever not to disappear
Stay, stay near
Oh, stay
We could be together here
Carnival Games by Nelly Furtado
POV Gwen’s flashback to the carnival thinking about Rhys
Truck Driver by The Archies
A song for Rhys.
Note the thread in the song about trying to find/get to a girl
Andy You’re A Star by the Killers
A song for Andy. POV Andy is trying to make it through the streets
Experiment on Me by Halsey
POV Jack’s blood is experimented on to make an antidote. Also works for Dr. Godalming and the experiments unknowingly be done on her.
Government Conspiracy by Chimby Kimble
POV the conspiracy that there’s no cure/they plan on spying on people is discovered
Fatal Attraction by Reality Club
What the virus does to everyone. The “thought you were the only one, you thought you were second to one but romance came for you” lyric can apply to Goldaming
My Hero by Foo Fighters
Jack and Ianto’s “quiet heroism” conversation/Jack calling Ianto his hero (yes I know chronically this comes later, I wanted to end on a song called Outbreak)
Revolution by The Score
Gwen charges the castle with the citizens of Cardiff
Body aches, I'm bound in chains
Well there's a fire in my veins and
Can you hear the drumming?
There's a revolution coming
Like every king who lost a crown
And all those years are history now
Can you hear the drumming?
There's a revolution coming
Outbreak by the Catalyst
Torchwood takes control of the situation, Gwen’s speech about how the government is going to lie about what happened and what the people of Cardiff have seen.
Your control of people
Is ill-mannered, coldhearted
You interrogate different, discriminate bold, and segregate minds
We, will not, conform any longer
We, will not, be oppressed any further
We, will not, commit any longer
We, will not, be oppressed by you
Fills the “Weapons” space on my bingo card
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northernstories · 4 years
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African American Literature Suggestions from NMU English Department
The English Department at Northern Michigan University has prepared this list of several dozen suggested readings in African American literature, with some materials also addressing Native American history and culture. The first section contains books that will help provide a context for the Black Lives Matter movement. It includes books that will help readers examine their own privilege and act more effectively for the greater good. Following that list is another featuring many African American authors and books. This list is by no means comprehensive, but it does provide readers a place to start. Almost all of these books are readily available in bookstores and public and university libraries.
Northern Michigan University’s English Department offers at least one course on African American literature every semester, at least one course on Native American literature every semester, and at least one additional course on non-western world literatures every semester. Department faculty also incorporate diverse material in many other courses. For more information, contact the department at [email protected]. Nonfiction, primarily addressing current events, along with some classic texts: Joni Adamson, Mei Mei Evans, and Rachel Stein, editors. The Environmental Justice Reader: Politics, Poetics, and Pedagogy. This classic collection of scholarly articles, essays, and interviews explores the links between social inequalities and unequal distribution of environmental risk. Attention is focused on the US context, but authors also consider global impacts. Michelle Alexander, The New Jim Crow: Mass Incarceration in the Age of Colorblindness. A clear-eyed explication of how mass incarceration has created a new racial caste system obscured by the ideology of color-blindness. Essential reading for understanding our criminal justice system in relation to the histories of slavery and segregation. Carol Anderson, White Rage: The Unspoken Truth of Our Racial Divide. A very well-written but disturbing and direct analysis of the history of structural and institutionalized racism in the United States. Gloria Anzaldua, Borderlands/La Frontera: The New Mestiza. Anzaldua writes about the complexity of life on multiple borders, both literal (the border between the US/Mexico) and conceptual (the borders among languages, sexual identity, and gender). Anzaldua also crosses generic borders, moving among essay, story, history, and poetry. James Baldwin, The Fire Next Time. A classic indictment of white supremacy expressed in a searing, prophetic voice that is, simply, unmatched. Ta-Nehisi Coates, Between the World and Me. A combination of personal narrative in the form of the author’s letter to his son, historical analysis, and contemporary reportage. Angela Davis, Are Prisons Obsolete? In this succinct and carefully researched book, Davis exposes the racist and sexist underpinnings of the American prison system. This is a must-read for folks new to conversations about prison (and police) abolition. Robin DiAngelo, What Does It Mean To Be White? The author facilitates white people unpacking their biases around race, privilege, and oppression through a variety of methods and extensive research. Ejeris Dixon and Leah Lakshmi Piepzna-Samarshnha, editors. Beyond Survival: Strategies and Stories From the Transformative Justice Movement. The book attempts to solve problems of violence at a grassroots level in minority communities, without relying on punishment, incarceration, or policing. Frederick Douglass, Narrative of the Life of Frederick Douglass. The most well-known narrative written by one of the most well-known and accomplished enslaved persons in the United States. First published in 1845 when Douglass was approximately 28 years old. W.E.B. DuBois, The Souls of Black Folk. Collection of essays in which Dubois famously prophesied that “the problem of the twentieth century is the problem of the color line.” Henry Louis Gates, Stony the Road: Reconstruction, White Supremacy, and the Rise of Jim Crow. Must reading, a beautifully written, scholarly, and accessible discussion of American history from Reconstruction to the beginnings of the Jim Crow era. Saidiya Hartman, Lose your Mother: A Journey Along the Atlantic Slave Route. In an attempt to locate relatives in Ghana, the author journeyed along the route her ancestors would have taken as they became enslaved in the United States. bell hooks, Black Looks: Race and Representation. A collection of essays that analyze how white supremacy is systemically maintained through, among other activities, popular culture. Harriet Jacobs, Incidents in the Life of a Slave Girl. Narrative of a woman who escaped slavery by hiding in an attic for seven years. This book offers unique insights into the sexually predatory behavior of slave masters. Ibram X. Kendi, Stamped from the Beginning: The Definitive History of Racist Ideas in America. A detailed history not only of racist events in American history, but of the racist thinking that permitted and continues to permit these events. This excellent and readable book traces this thinking from the colonial period through the presidency of Barack Obama. Winona LaDuke, All Our Relations: Native Struggles for Land and Life Any of LaDuke's works belong on this list. This particular text explores the stories of several Indigenous communities as they struggle with environmental and cultural degradation. An incredible resource. Kiese Laymon, Heavy: An American Memoir. An intense book that questions American myths of individual success written by a man who is able to situate his own life within a much larger whole. Cherrie Moraga and Gloria Anzaldua, This Bridge Called My Back: Writings by Radical Women of Color This foundational text brings together work by writers, scholars, and activists such as Audre Lorde, Chrystos, Barbara Smith, Norma Alarcon, Nellie Wong, and many others. The book has been called a manifesto and a call to action and remains just as important and relevant as when it was published nearly 40 years ago. Toni Morrison, The Source of Self-Regard. An invaluable collection of essays and speeches from the only black woman to win a Nobel Prize in literature. Throughout her oeuvre, Morrison calls us to take "personal responsibility for alleviating social harm," an ethic she identified with Martin Luther King. Ersula J. Ore, Lynching: Violence, Rhetoric, and American Identity. Ore scrutinizes the history of lynching in America and contemporary manifestations of lynching, drawing upon the murder of Trayvon Martin and other contemporary manifestations of police brutality. Drawing upon newspapers, official records, and memoirs, as well as critical race theory, Ore outlines the connections between what was said and written, the material practices of lynching in the past, and the forms these rhetorics and practices assume now. Claudia Rankine, Citizen: An American Lyric. A description and discussion of racial aggression and micro-aggression in contemporary America. The book was selected for NMU’s Diversity Common Reader Program in 2016. Layla F. Saad, Me and White Supremacy. The author facilitates white people in unpacking their biases around race, privilege, and oppression, while also helping them understand key critical social justice terminology. Maya Schenwar, Joe Macaré, Alana Yu-lan Price, editors. Who do you Serve, Who Do You Protect? Police Violence and Resistance in the United States. The essays examine "police violence against black, brown, indigenous and other marginalized communities, miscarriages of justice, and failures of token accountability and reform measures." What are alternative measures to keep marginalized communities safe? Ozlem Sensoy and Robin DiAngelo, Is Everyone Really Equal? The authors, in very easy to read and engaging language, facilitate readers in understanding the ---isms (racism, sexism, ableism etc.) and how they intersect, helping readers see their positionality and how privilege and oppression work to perpetuate the status quo. Bryan Stevenson, Just Mercy: A Story of Justice and Redemption. An analysis of America’s criminal justice system by the lawyer who founded the Equal Justice Initiative. While upsetting, the book is also hopeful. Wendy S. Walters, Multiply / Divide: On the American Real and Surreal. In this collection of essays, Walters analyzes the racial psyche of several major American cities, emphasizing the ways bias can endanger entire communities. Booker T. Washington, Up from Slavery. Autobiography of the founder of Tuskegee Institute. Harriet Washington, Medical Apartheid. From the surgical experiments performed on enslaved black women to the contemporary recruitment of prison populations for medical research, Washington illuminates how American medicine has been--and continues to be shaped--by anti-black racism. Malcolm X, The Autobiography of Malcolm X. Autobiography of civil rights leader that traces his evolution as a thinker, speaker, and writer.
If you would like to enhance your knowledge of the rich tradition of African American literature, here are several of the most popular books and authors within that tradition, focused especially on the 20thand 21st centuries. Novels and Short Stories James Baldwin, Go Tell It on the Mountain James Baldwin, Giovanni’s Room Octavia Butler, Parable of the Sower Ralph Ellison, Invisible Man Langston Hughes, The Ways of White Folks Zora Neale Hurston, Their Eyes Were Watching God James Weldon Johnson, The Autobiography of an Ex-Colored Man Nella Larsen, Passing Nella Larsen, Quicksand Toni Morrison, The Bluest Eye Toni Morrison, Beloved Richard Wright, Native Son Drama Lorraine Hansberry, A Raisin in the Sun Ntozake Shange, For Colored Girls Who Have Considered Suicide / When the Rainbow Is Enuf August Wilson, Fences August Wilson, The Piano Lesson Poetry A good place to begin is an anthology, The Vintage Book of African American Poetry, edited by Michael S. Harper and Anthony Walton. It includes work by poets from the 18th century to the present, including Gwendolyn Brooks, Lucille Clifton, Countee Cullen, Rita Dove, Robert Hayden, Langston Hughes, Yusef Komunyakaa, Claude McKay, Phillis Wheatley, and many others. Here are some more recent collections: Reginald Dwayne Betts, Felon Wanda Coleman, Wicked Enchantment: Selected Poems Honorée Fanonne Jeffers, The Age of Phillis Tyehimba Jess, Olio Jamaal May, The Big Book of Exit Strategies Danez Smith, Don’t Call Us Dead
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intimatum · 5 years
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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
édouard 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
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cinnalock · 4 years
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Benny-Marie full profile
((Like my previous OC profiles, this will be edited/added to as time goes on, though I’ll always put a timestamp with the most recent update!))
Tumblr media
(picture by Amber Jin)
full name: Benny-Marie Liliveau
age: 19
birthday: September 10
height: 160cm
dorm: ???
grade/year: 3
likes: eating/food (particularly soul food), traveling, playing the trombone, shiny gemstones
dislikes: that she can't fully control her magic, mean people, cold weather, getting lost (which happens far too often)
TRIVIA
Benny's good at most magic categories, but she primarily excels in transformation/glamour and teleportation. She hasn't realized how proficient she is at the latter, though, as she often travels to different dimensions or universes without realizing she's left her world entirely.
Due to her lack of control, she has a reputation for being dim-witted. Although quite intelligent, she's often dismissed due to her short comings and few realize just how powerful she actually is.
As a norm, in her human form, Benny cannot swim. She can only swim when she transforms into something aquatic like a frog or a cat fish. Any attempt to traverse water in her human form has to contain inner tubes and arm floats; anything less is met with a lot of flailing and screaming on her part.
Benny is very kind-natured which is another factor in her not being taken seriously among her classmates. However, if she feels truly slighted by someone she's not afraid to get her hands dirty (both figuratively and literally). Only most 3rd years remember her being bullied in her first year before the top 5 offenders mysteriously disappeared with nothing but bloody scratch marks left over their dorm rooms. Since then, although dismissed and teased, none of the older students think of actually crossing her in fear of getting a visit from her "friends on the other side"; younger students are unaware of this past event, but most tend to listen to the others when they’re told not to mess with Benny too much.
Benny’s frequently seen with animal features. Although she’s never seen without raccoon ears, firefly antennae, and sharp buck teeth, it’s not unusual for her to occasionally sport something like an possum tail, moth wings, or be covered head to toe in reptile scales, though those usually disappear after a day or two. She’d also rather die than be seen without her alligator skull mask, though she might relent if she knows and likes the person well enough.
Benny’s favorite foods are beignets, fried okra, and jambalaya with big pieces of bell peppers. She’s also a bit of a coffee snob, only liking strong roasts; she likes blended coffee drinks well enough, but only if they’re advertised as a “granita” or “velvet ice” over ones from a certain big chain shop that she deems as “glorified milkshakes”.
((more to come))
PLAYLIST
"Kill the Lights"-The Birthday Massacre
"Honey"-Moby
"Wonderland"-Angela Via
"Pretty Little Psycho"-Porcelain Black
"Enjoy the Show (feat. Jacksepticeye)"-Nathan Sharp
"A New Way to Bleed (Photek Remix)"-Evanescence
"A Conversation with Death"-Khemmis
"Voodoo"-Godsmack
"Pit of Vipers"-Simon Curtis
"Nightmare"-Avenged Sevenfold
"Nothing Remains"-Andrew Stein
"Lose Control"-Evanescence
"Sweet Dreams"-Marilyn Manson
"Heathens"-twenty one pilots
"Fake It"-Seether
"Renegade"-Styx
"Crazy"-Gnarls Barkley
"Amaranth"-Nightwish
"Where is My Mind"-Yoav feat. Emily Browning
"Get Ur Freak On"-Missy Elliot feat. Nelly Furtado
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