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mydaylight · 2 months
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THE GILDED AGE (2022- ) | 1.02 "Money Isn't Everything"
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weirdlookindog · 7 months
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Beginning of the End (1957)
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droughtofapathy · 5 months
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The Gilded Age's Broadway Divas MASTERPOST
Welcome to my passion project. It has come to my attention that some viewers of HBO's The Gilded Age are unfamiliar with the extensive theatre credits, alcoates, and vocal talents many of the actors possess. As the resident Broadway Diva expert, it is my responsibility to fix that.
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Pictured: 20 Tony Awards and 52 nominations. Audra McDonald...well, she kind of inflates the numbers a little. Edit: Justice for Tony winner Debra Monk. She's main cast.
Introducing my new series of blog posts where I will be highlighting two theatre veterans per day in the lead-up to our much-anticipated season two finale episode.
This series will heavily focus on a select few musical performances that are widely available for viewing, in addition to a brief career rundown. I will be limiting myself to no more than five videos per Diva, otherwise we'd be here for a lifetime. These performances will include popular songs and hidden gems alike, all curated to specifically show off the actress's considerable range in the theatre, especially juxtaposed against their roles in the show.
With respect to Michael Cerveris, Nathan Lane, and the other theatre gentlemen, I will be focusing this series on the women because I am a lesbian and this show is about the women, dammit. But fear not, they will most certainly be making appearances throughout because everyone has worked with everyone on stage.
The Divas:
Christine Baranski (Agnes van Rhijn) Donna Murphy (Caroline "Lina" Astor) Kelli O'Hara (Aurora Fane) Katie Finneran (Anne Morris) Debra Monk (Armstrong) Celia Keenan-Bolger (Mrs. Bruce) Laura Benanti (Susan Blane) Linda Emond (Clara Barton) Amber Gray (Bea) Denee Benton (Peggy Scott) Audra McDonald (Dorothy Scott) Jeanne Tripplehorn (Sylvia Chamberlain) Bonus: Duets, Trios, and Other Crossovers
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bizarreauhavre · 2 years
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Hermann Landshoff, Leonora Carrington, Andre Breton, Max Ernst and Marcel Duchamp, New York, with Morris Hirshfield’s painting nude at the window (1941) at Peggy Guggenheim’s town-house, 1942.
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Another way to phrase it is that the following House reps. voted to make it harder for 10-year-old rape victims to get abortions:
David Abbott, R-Rome City
Brad Barrett, R-Richmond
Stephen Bartels, R-Eckerty
Bruce Borders, R-Jasonville
Martin Carbaugh, R-Fort Wayne
Michelle Davis, R-Whiteland
J. Michael Davisson, R-Salem
Dale DeVon, R-Granger
Jeff Ellington, R-Bloomfield
Karen Engleman, R-Georgetown
Douglas Gutwein, R-Francesville
Dave Heine, R-New Haven
Matt Hostettler, R-Patoka
John Jacob, R-Indianapolis
Chris Jeter, R-Fishers
Jack Jordan, R-Bremen
Chris Judy, R-Fort Wayne
Joanna King, R-Middlebury
Ryan Lauer, R-Columbus
Cindy Ledbetter, R-Newburgh
Don Lehe, R-Brookston
Matt Lehman, R-Berne
Dan Leonard, R-Huntington
Shane Lindauer, R-Jasper
Chris May, R-Bedford
Peggy Mayfield, R-Martinsville
Doug Miller, R-Elkhart
Bob Morris, R-Fort Wayne
Curt Nisly, R-Milford
Tim O’Brien, R-Evansville
Zach Payne, R-Charlestown
J.D. Prescott, R-Union City
Ben Smaltz, R-Auburn
Craig Snow, R-Warsaw
Mike Speedy, R-Indianapolis
Jake Teshka, R-South Bend
Jeff Thompson, R-Lizton
Heath VanNatter, R-Kokomo
Timothy Wesco, R-Osceola
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Herman Landshoff ~ André Breton, Marcel Duchamp, Max Ernst (behind Morris Hirshfield’s 'Nude at a Window'), and Leonora Carrington at Peggy Guggenheim's, 1942. | Münchner Stadtmuseum bkp & The Guardian
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Morris Hirshfield ~ Nude at the Window (Hot Night in July), 1941 | MIT Press
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federer7 · 1 year
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André Breton, Marcel Duchamp, Max Ernst (standing behind Morris Hirshfield’s “Nude at a Window (Hot Night in July)”), and Leonora Carrington (seated) at Peggy Guggenheim’s townhouse, Fall 1942, New York
Photo: Herman Landshoff
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lizbethborden · 5 months
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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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thevibraniumveterans · 4 months
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S2 of WHAT IF…
Ep1- “…Nebula joined the Nova Corps?”
Love the bleak opening sequence
Fascinating how Nebula narrates the context. Her “five years of isolation” hits hard.
Nova Prime siding with Ronan was a surprise
Ep2- “…Peter Quill Attacked Earth’s Mightiest Heroes?”
Cool intro; Peter leaning into his inherent powers is interesting…
The Winter Soldier being Gorbachev’s tool to contain Peter is surprising, but not unexpected…
“Does anyone have a plan?”/“I have a plan; retreat.” 😂
Thor announcing that Peter killed off all the Nine Realms except Earth; Peter needed containment to prevent him being too powerful.
Hope breaking Peter out is unexpected.
But Peter defeating his dad is a great ending.
Ep3- “…Happy Hogan Saved Christmas?”
Cool X’mas riff in the beginning music
Avengers Tower… looking festive.
Happy getting accidentally injected with Banner blood is unexpected.
Beethoven’s 9th riff playing when Darcy discovers a whole collection!
“Time for the Hammer to get nailed” 🤣
Overall, great X’mas episode.
Ep4- “…Iron Man Crashed into the Grandmaster?”
Cool that the Guardians of the Multiverse (from S1) are back!
Gamora’s origin story is a Tony Stark episode that looks to focus a bit on Valkyrie? Interesting…
Wonder what Gamora is doing there.
The little Chinchilla is adorable.
Tony with the nicknames (“Technicolor Dream Coat” is a Andrew Lloyd Webber musical reference) is hilarious
Also, Tony building a suit that reforms into a race car on command, and back, is AWESOME
Turns out, Tony inspired Gamora to be a hero.
Gamora melting Thanos, did not see that coming.
Ep5- “…Captain Carter Fought the Hydra Stomper?”
Cool Avengers team; with Carter and Janet instead of Steve and Banner.
It’s kind of what if 2012’s Battle of New York went differently. Then we pick up kind of CATWS but it’s Peggy and Nat.
Peggy’s spin-twist was really cool.
The whole reverse-CATWS but instead of Bucky gone bad and Steve finding out, it’s Steve gone bad and Peggy finding out.
Bucky as a Secretary of State? Did NOT see that coming. But makes sense that Bucky would be the one to try to bring Steve back. Truly a reverse CATWS.
The Stomper Suit keeping Steve alive, I wonder how.
Carter’s hilarious Star Wars reference to carbonite.
Also, the camera panning around Steve and Peggy, is a mirror of the Tony/Pepper one in Endgame.
Melina being part robot is also kind of creepy.
Captain Carter having a musical is hilarious too
Also, the emotional vibes kind of veering into CACW and “Black Widow” territory is quite fascinating.
Peggy disappears thru a portal, only to be greeted by Wanda.
Ep6- “…Kahhori Reshaped the World?”
Ragnarok comes early…
Also, this episode isn’t the first time we see the horrors of Spanish conquistadors invading on native land; we last saw that in Wakanda Forever a few years ago.
But when the Watcher narrates the context, it mirrors the Black Panther movie’s narrative about how the Vibranium came to Earth and ended with the peacemaking between various tribes.
Also great to note that this is the first MCU entry where nobody, except the Watcher (and Stephen Strange at the end) speaks English.
It’s really awesome that the Space Stone energy gives the people from the Sky World (who are formerly Mohawk natives from Earth) and Kahhori very, VERY interesting powers.
KAHHORI MOVED THE PORTAL TO THE LAND!! That is an insane amount of power and strength! That’s wonderful!
Kahhori and her people sinking the Spanish Armada is a sight to behold.
Ep7- “…Hela Found the Ten Rings?”
Hela suddenly being able to speak Putonghua was a surprise.
Odin says that the bearer of Hela’s crown be merciful, which explains why Hela is at first unable to lift it. Just like the first Thor movie.
I kind of wonder why Wenwu would invite Hela to wear a traditional dress; but more importantly, why does he have one ready?
MORRIS RETURNS!! Best fuzzy thing.
Hela visits Talo.
Folding paper. That’s basically Origami. IRL history has it that China has its own paper folding traditions long ago, just like Japan, but separately.
Hela being upset that Fenrir as a puppy was taken from her, is something interesting too.
Asgard, a realm of Norse legend, and Ta Lo, a fictitious Chinese fantasy realm, coming together to free the cosmos, is something I did not see coming.
Ep8- “…the Avengers Assembled in 1602?”
Tom Hiddleston as Loki narrating Hamlet? Not surprising.
Wanda summoned Carter from three episodes ago, and turns out Thor knew about this here.
But what are those portals? Wanda warns to stop them.
Wanda speaks of a lost traveler…
Tony says “Forerunner” but the caption says “person”.
Loki speaking of William Shakespeare writing about Iago in the play Othello.
Rogers Hood. Hilarious combo of Steve Rogers and Robin Hood.
Rogers and Carter double-teaming with the shield is really cool.
Where did the Destroyer come from?
Hogan throwing out all manner of old fashioned insults is hilarious 😆
Also, why is Hogan a hulk in this episode? He was one in the Christmas episode but this one?
Turns out the Forerunner is mainMCU!Steve?
The main effect is that Carter is alone again.
Strange Supreme makes an appearance. Which we leave on a “TBC” for next episode. The fact that he went to fetch Kahhori in Ep6 must mean something big is in the finale…
Ep9- “…Strange Supreme Intervened?”
Interesting; we get the full MCU theme for the title card. We never got the full theme in previous episodes.
Peggy speaks with Strange, who keeps dangerous beings inside their own little crystals.
If the Watcher is a metaphor for us, and Strange implying that the Watcher may not always be right, that means that we might not also always be right about certain things.
Peggy enters South Dakota… where Red Skull (HYDRA) exploded the Tesseract. But why would Kahhori be a danger to the Multiverse, considering Strange net with her last episode? Why is she considered a danger in this one?
Also, Kahhori now speaks English. Not odd, per se, but it helps. She says Strange is “a universe killer.” Which, in some way, he is.
Also, a dragon from Ta Lo, which kinda sells the point.
Hela being insulted that Kahhori sent the swords back is hilarious 😆
Peggy gets an Infinity Armor is pretty to cool. Also, Peggy and Kahhori vs Strange? That’s also really cool.
Peggy gets sent back to her home, but it’s an illusion, and she sees right through it.
Though, playing with the lives of so many people to face Strange, that’s a weird effect, perhaps meant to be “comedic” in a way, but comes off as cruel, which might have been the more intended effect.
Also, the characters falling to the portal just basically overpowering Peggy with their weapons? It’s very interesting because it’s not overpowering her for no reason, she NEEDS to be overpowered to stop an already over-powered Strange. She needs to be MORE than him to win.She gets Hela’s crown, a large sword, and multiple other weapons, while Kahhori uses her powers to lift Thor’s hammers and also uses the Ten Rings. Both Peggy and Kahhori MUST be overpowered to overpower Strange and stop him.
Strange becomes a huge devil monster and falls into the Forge.
Peggy goes to the Watcher.
S2E9 ending exactly as Loki S2E6 did, that’s interesting.
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mybeingthere · 1 year
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"Morris Hirshfield (1872–1946), who was born in Poland and immigrated to the United States around 1890, had wanted to be an artist all his life, but was perhaps too conventional and impoverished. He married, had four children and two successful careers, first as a tailor of women’s cloaks and dresses and then as a shoe designer whose biggest hit was his patented designs for wool felt boudoir slippers, produced by his company, E-Z Walk. He did not turn to painting full time until well after 1935 when, in his early 60s, ill health forced him to retire. His art emerged almost fully formed in nearly 80 paintings created in the last seven years of his life.
The prime mover behind Hirshfield’s career was the well-connected collector (and later art dealer) Sidney Janis, who, in 1939, stumbled upon the only two paintings Hirshfield had yet made (they’re hanging at the start of this show). Janis was instantly smitten, transformed into the artist’s ardent advocate. He drummed up interest in his work among cultural heavies in New York (Peggy Guggenheim, Marcel Duchamp, Piet Mondrian) and Europe (Picasso, Giacometti, André Breton and the Surrealists)."
Read the whole article https://www.nytimes.com/.../morris-hirshfield-american...
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lacangri21 · 2 years
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The Feminist Library
-7000 Years of Patriarchy by Petra Ioana
-A Deafening Silence by Patrizia Romito
-Against Our Will by Susan Brownmiller
-Against Pornography by Diana E.H. Russell
-Against Sadomasochism by Robin Linden
-Ain’t I a Woman by Bell Hooks
-All Women Are Healers by Diane Stein
-Anti-Porn by Julia Long
-Anticlimax by Sheila Jeffreys
-Are Women Human by Catharine MacKinnon
-Backlash by Susan Faludi
-Bad Feminist by Roxane Gay
-Beauty and Misogyny by Sheila Jeffreys
-Beauty Sick by Renee Engeln
-Beauty Under the Knife by Holly Brubach
-Being and Being Bought by Kasja Ekis Ekman
-Beyond God the Father by Mary Daly
-Big Porn Inc by Melinda Tankard Reist and Abigail Bray
-Blood, Bread, and Roses by Judy Graham
-The Book of Women’s Mysteries by Z Budapest
-Borderlands by Gloria Anzaldua
-Burn it Down by Lilly Dancyger
-Butterfly Politics by Catharine MacKinnon
-Caliban and the Witch by Silvia Federici
-Choosing to Conform by Avelie Stuart
-The Church and the Second Sex by Mary Daly
-Cinderella Ate My Daughter by Peggy Orenstein
-Close to Home by Christine Delphy
-Compulsory Heterosexuality and Lesbian Existence by Adrienne Rich
-Conquest by Andrea Lee Smith
-Damned Whores and God’s Police by Anne Summers
-Daring to Be Bad by Alice Echols
-Dead Blondes and Bad Mothers by Sady Doyle
-Defending Battered Women on Trial by Elizabeth A. Sheehy
-Deliver Us from Love by Brogger
-Delusions of Gender by Cordelia Fine
-Detransition by Max Robinson
-The Disappearing L by Bonnie J. Morris
-Does God Hate Women by Ophelia Benson
-Doing Harm by Maya Dusenbery
-The End of Gender by Debra W. Soh
-The End of Patriarchy by Robert Jensen?
-Female Chauvinist Pigs by Ariel Levy
-Female Erasure by Ruth Barrett
-Female Sexual Slavery by Kathleen Barry
-Femicide by Jill Radford and Diane EH Russell
-Femininity by Susan Brownmiller
-Femininity and Domination by Sandra Lee Bartky
-Feminism Unmodified by Catharine MacKinnon
-Feminist Theory by Bell Hooks
-Firebrand Feminism by Breanne Fahs
-Flesh Wounds by Blum
-Flow by Elissa Stein and Susan Kim
-For Her Own Good by Barbara Ehrenreich
-For Lesbians Only by Sarah Lucia Hoagland
-Freedom Fallacy by Miranda Kiraly
-Gender Hurts by Sheila Jeffreys
-Getting Off by Robert Jensen?
-Global Woman by Barbara Ehrenreich
-Going Out of Our Minds by Sonia Johnson
-Going Too Far by Robin Morgan
-The Great Cosmic Mother by Monica Sjoo and Barbara Mor
-Gyn/Ecology by Mary Daly
-Gynocide by Mariarosa Dalta Costa
-Handbook of Feminist Therapy by Lynne Bravo Rosewater and Leonore E.A. Walker
-Heartbreak by Andrea Dworkin
-Her Body and Other Parties by Carmen Maria Machado
-The Hidden Malpractice by Gena Corea
-How to Suppress Women’s Writing by Joanna Russ
-I Am Your Sister by Audre Lorde
-I Hate Men by Pauline Harmange
-Ice and Fire by Andrea Dworkin
-In Defense of Separatism by Susan Hawthorne
-In Harm’s Way by Catharine MacKinnon
-In Search of Our Mothers’ Gardens by Alice Walker
-The Industrial Vagina by Sheila Jeffreys
-Inferior by Angela Saini
-Intercourse by Andrea Dworkin
-Invisible No More by Andrea J. Ritchie
-Invisible Women by Caroline Criado Perez
-Jewish Radical Feminism by Joyce Antler
-Kill All Normies by Angela Nagle
-The Laugh of Medusa by Helene Cixous
-Laughing with Medusa by Vanda Zajko and Miriam Leonard
-The Lesbian Heresy by Sheila Jeffreys
-Lesbian Nation by Jill Johnston
-Letters from a War Zone by Andrea Dworkin
-Love and Politics by Carol Anne Douglas
-Loving to Survive by Dee Graham
-Making Violence Sexy by Diana E.H. Russell
-Man Made Language by Dale Spender
-Man’s Dominion by Sheila Jeffreys
-Medical Bondage by Deirdre Cooper Owens
-Men Explain Things to Me by Rebecca Solnit
-Men Who Buy Sex by Melissa Farley
-Men Who Hate Women by Laura Bates
-Men Who Hate Women and the Women Who Love Them by Susan Forward
-Milk and Honey by Rupi Kaur
-Misogyny by Jack Holland?
-The New Handbook for a Post-Roe America by Robin Marty
-Nobody’s Victim by Carrie Goldberg
-Not a Job, Not a Choice by Janice Raymond
-Not for Sale by Rebecca Whisnant
-Nothing Matters by Somer Brodribb
-Objectification Theory by Barbara I. Fredrickson
-Of Woman Born by Adrienne Rich
-Only Words by Catharine MacKinnon
-Our Blood by Andrea Dworkin
-Our Bodies, Ourselves by Boston Women’s Health Book Collective
-Overcoming Violence Against Women and Girls by Michael L. Penn and Rahel Nardos?
-Paid For by Rachel Moran
-The Pimping of Prostitution by Julie Bindel
-Pimp State by Kat Banyard
-Policing the Womb by Michelle Goodwin
-Pornified by Pamela Paul
-Pornland by Gail Dines
-Pornography by Gail Dines
-Pornography: Men Possessing Women by Andrea Dworkin
-Pornography and Civil Rights by Andrea Dworkin and Catharine MacKinnon
-Pornography and Violence by Susan Griffith
-Pornography Values by Robert Jensen?
-Pure Lust by Mary Daly
-The Purify Myth by Jessica Valenti
-Quiverfull by Kathryn Joyce
-Radical Feminism Today by Denise Thompson
-Radical Feminist Therapy by Bonnie Burstow
-Radical Reckonings by Renate Klein
-Radically Speaking by Diane Bell...
-Rape by Susan Griffiths
-Rape in Marriage by Diana E.H. Russell
-Rape of the Wild by Ann Jones
-Refusing to Be a Man by John Stoltenberg?
-Right-Wing Woman by Andrea Dworkin
-A Room of One’s Own by Virginia Woolf
-Runaway Wives and Rogue Feminists by Margo Goodhand
-SCUM Manifesto by Valerie Solanas
-Selling Feminism by Amanda M. Gengler
-Sex Matters by Alyson J. McGregor
-Sexual Harassment of Working Women by Catharine MacKinnon
-Sexual Politics by Kate Millett
-Sexy but Psycho by Jessica Taylor
-She Dreams When She Bleeds by Nikki Taraji
-Sister Outrider by Audre Lorde
-Sisterhood is Forever by Robin Morgan
-Sisterhood is Global by Robin Morgan
-Sisterhood is Powerful by Robin Morgan
-Slavery Inc by Lydia Cacho
-Spinning and Weaving by Elizabeth Miller
-Surrogacy by Renate Klein
-Sweetening the Pill by Holly Grigg-Spall
-Taking Back the Night by Laura Lederer
-Talking Back by Bell Hooks
-Testosterone Rex by Cordelia Fine
-The Beauty Myth by Naomi Wolf
-The Creation of Patriarchy by Gerda Lerner
-The Dialectic of Sex by Shulamith Firestone
-The Feminine Mystique by Betty Friedan
-The First Sex by Elizabeth Gould
-The Legacy of Mothers: Matriarchies and the Gift Economy as Post-Capitalist Alternatives by Erella Shadmi
-The Lolita Effect by Gigi Durham
-The Man-Made World by Charlotte Perkins Gilman
The Porn Trap by Wendy Maltz
-The Prostitution of Sexuality by Kathleen Barry
-The Second Sex by Simone de Beauvoir
-The Sexual Liberals and the Attack on Feminism by Janice Raymond...
-The Spinster and Her Enemies by Sheila Jeffreys
-The Transsexual Empire by Janice Raymond
-The Women’s History of the World by Rosalind Miles
-This Bridge Called My Back by Gloria Anzaldua
-This is Your Brain on Birth Control by Sarah Hill
-Toward a Feminist Theory of the State by Catharine MacKinnon
-The Traffic in Women and Other Essays by Emma Goldman
-Trans by Helen Joyce
-Unbearable Weight by Susan Bordo
-Unpacking Queer Politics by Sheila Jeffreys
-Unscrewed by Jaclyn Friedman
-Unwell Women by Elinor Cleghorn
-The Unwomanly Face of War by Svetlana Alexievich
-The Vagina Bible by Jennifer Gunter
-A Vindication of the Rights of Woman by Mary Wollstonecraft
-The War Against Women by Marilyn French
-We Were Feminists Once by Andi Zeisler
-What Do We Need Men For by E. Jean Carroll
-When God was a Woman by Merlin Stone
-Who Cooked the Last Supper by Rosalind Miles
-Why Does He Do That by Lundy Bancroft
-Why Women Are Blamed for Everything by Jessica Taylor
-Why Women Need the Goddess by Carol P. Christ
-Wildfire by Sonia Johnson
-Witches, Midwives, and Nurses by Barbara Ehrenreich
-Witches, Witch Hunting, and Women by Silvia Federici
-Woman and Nature by Susan Griffith
-Woman Hating by Andrea Dworkin
-Woman-Identified Woman by Trudy Darty
-Women v. Religion by Karen L. Garst
-Women’s Lives, Men’s Laws by Catharine MacKinnon
-The Women’s Room by Marilyn French
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periwinkle-the-11th · 4 months
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Intro post!
i'm Peri!
I spend my time writing, reading, crocheting, embroidering, drawing, sewing, procrastinating my school work and complaining about everything under the sun.
Heres my pronoun page!
If you know me irl, i am begging you to leave. you know who you are. I know who you are. go away.
I post all my writing and various creations over on @pericreatesstuff and my ao3 is Peri_Writes
I don't post works on ao3 until they're finished and gone over by my beta, but my writing blog is mostly unedited snippets!
I'm in way way way to many fandoms so heres an incomplete list:
dc (specifically batfam and yj98)
pjo/hoo (I haven't read toa yet but its on my list)
kotlc
Voltron (ik, i'm judging me too.)
bridge to terabithea
Atla
Daylight Shooting Star (if you know dss I am begging you to be my friend I have literally never met anyone else who's read it)
Marauders
Sk8 the infinity
Ohshc
The Sky Fall Trilogy by shannon messenger (once again if you've read it (and liked it) I am begging you to be my friend its so so underrated)
The Lost Books: Scroll of Kings (SO SO SO UNDERRATED)
I listen to way to much music way to often, heres some artists/bands i like: Set it off, pierce the veil, taylor swift, Fin (steffan argus), conan gray, PEGGY, olivia rodrigo, alec benjamin, one direction, Natalie jane, sadie jean, my chemical romance, fall out boy, NF, MARINA, Maren Morris, Dove cameron, girl in red, sabrina carpenter, melanie martinez, Avril Lavigne, Madonna, Ke$ha, little mix, Queen, Billy joel, Zara Larsson, Maisie Peters, Lauren spencer smith, ABBA, and literally so many more
and my tags:
#peri personal - just about everything not fandom related/interactions w people/my life
#peri complains - self explanatory really
#music rambles - rambling about music, mostly when new songs/albums come out
#allis adventures - various stuff about my sourdough! her full name is Allison Breadorthy and she is ALIVE
#baking Breadorthy - actually baking her
#my memes - crappy memes i make, mostly reblogged from my writing blog
#writing related - self explanatory but its mostly me complaining about my fics, plot holes i find, and polls bc i'm indecisive
#friends <3 - my actual conversation style interaction with my mutuals
#wtf dc - for whenever i find out that something that sounds just a bit to out of pocket to be cannon in dc, is cannon in dc. (ex: bruce's grandmother killing her husband, the candle ritual, dick shaving his hair and going by rick, etc)
#janet's life - my self indulgent canon compliant backstory for Janet Drake
#lena and tim - my even more self indulgent au where Lena Luthor adopts Tim Drake after his parents die, the fic is being plotted currently. THE FIC IS CANCELED!!! LEX IS LENA'S BROTHER! LENA IS KON'S AUNT!! THE PLANNED TIMKON IS LEGAL INCEST! (why does this keep happening??? TvT)
#bravery points game - I've started playing a points game with my anxiety, where every time I do something that scares me/my anxiety told me would end in disaster I get a point! It's stupid but it's motivating, I'm being brave! (Even tho it's terrifying) I do really have a points goal but I wanna try to get to 100 before the end of the year!
Thats all for now!! I'll probably update this once i realize i forgot smth tho
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honestlydarkprincess · 3 months
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let your spotify predict your 2024! shuffle your on repeat playlist, and the first twelve songs represent your 2024
tagged by @barbiediaz mwah<3
jan - half of forever by henrik
feb - careless by mahalo, milkwish, lena leon
march - the door by teddy swims
april - corazón vacío by maria becerra
may - burnin' up by the jonas brothers (listen it was a phase)
june - wrong way by dead lakes
july - DNA by jared benjamin
aug - SIREN by lilyisthatyou
sept - ALICE by PEGGY
oct - ya'burnee by halsey
nov - 42 by diplo, maren morris
dec - scatterbrain by emei
tagging: @bigfootsmom, @bucksbackwardcap, @maygrantgf, @lovebuck, @usersiren, @morganofthefairies, @swiftietartt, @arthursdent, @bichimney, @hoodie-buck, @jeeyuns, @spagheddiediaz, @moonlightperseus, @paranoidbean, and @vaporizedpercy
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deadpresidents · 4 months
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RONALD REAGAN •Dutch: A Memoir of Ronald Reagan by Edmund Morris (BOOK | KINDLE | AUDIO) •Reagan: The Life by H.W. Brands (BOOK | KINDLE | AUDIO) •The Reagan Diaries by Ronald Reagan and Edited by Douglas Brinkley (BOOK | KINDLE) •When Character Was King: A Story of Ronald Reagan by Peggy Noonan (BOOK | AUDIO) •Governor Reagan: His Rise to Power by Lou Cannon (BOOK | KINDLE) •President Reagan: The Role of a Lifetime by Lou Cannon (BOOK | KINDLE) •Reagan: An American Journey by Bob Spitz (BOOK | KINDLE) •Rawhide Down: The Near Assassination of Ronald Reagan by Del Quentin Wilber (BOOK | KINDLE) •Reaganland: America's Right Turn, 1976-1980 by Rick Perlstein (BOOK | KINDLE | AUDIO) •The President Will See You Now: My Stories and Lessons from Ronald Reagan's Final Years by Peggy Grande (BOOK | KINDLE)
GEORGE H.W. BUSH •Destiny and Power: The American Odyssey of George Herbert Walker Bush by Jon Meacham (BOOK | KINDLE | AUDIO) •41: A Portrait of My Father by George W. Bush (BOOK | KINDLE | AUDIO) •All the Best, George Bush: My Life in Letters and Other Writings by George H.W. Bush (BOOK | KINDLE | AUDIO) •The Last Republicans: Inside the Extraordinary Relationship Between George H.W. Bush and George W. Bush by Mark K. Updegrove (BOOK | KINDLE | AUDIO) •The Man I Knew: The Amazing Story of George H.W. Bush's Post-Presidency by Jean Becker (BOOK | KINDLE | AUDIO)
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polizwrites · 7 months
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PoliZ's Stuffed Marvels - September 2023
As I sign up for this year’s  @marveltrumpshate​ charity auction, I wanted to provide an updated list of characters as well as photos of my  Stuffed Marvels/Stuffed With Character designs.   Full list is below the cut and I will be accepting custom requests for characters not on the list as well.  
These are hand-sewn soft stuffed figures, roughly 8-10 inches/20-25 cm tall, basically two-dimensional, but finished on both sides.   They are made of fleece and felt with embroidered elements, produced in a smoke and cat (but not dog) free home.
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My latest design - as of 4 October - Daredevil (comics version)
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Marvel/MCU Designs -  63 as of September 2023
Iron Man - classic
Iron Man - Mark IV (Tony with no helmet)
Iron Man - Infinity War Armor
Tony Stark - Black Tank Top and jeans
Tony Stark - Tom Ford suit (vest, no jacket)
Tony Stark - blue Stark Racing firesuit
Pepper Potts - white business suit
Pepper Potts - Rescue
War Machine
Rhodey - IM3/Green Polo
Dum-E 
Captain America - classic uniform
Captain America - WWII Uniform
Captain America - Stealth Suit
Captain America - Infinity War Uniform
Captain America - Sam Wilson 
Peggy Carter - WWII Uniform
Peggy Carter - Agent Carter outfit (blue suit & red hat)
Captain Carter  (What If? Disney + series)
Bucky Barnes - classic comics uniform
Bucky Barnes -  Sergeant Barnes army uniform
Bucky Barnes - POW outfit (Green shirt & tan pants)
Bucky Barnes - WWII Howling Commandos uniform
Bucky Barnes - Red Henley and ball cap (Captain America: Civil War)
Bucky Barnes - Infinity War uniform
Bucky Barnes - The Falcon and Winter Soldier outfit
Winter Soldier
Falcon/Sam Wilson (original MCU)
Falcon/Sam Wilson (The Falcon and the Winter Soldier)
Brock Rumlow/Crossbones
Jack Rollins
Black Widow
Hawkeye
Thor (Ragnarok hair/outfit)
Bruce Banner (Thor: Ragnarok outfit) 
Hulk 
Star-Lord
Rocket Raccoon
Baby Groot  
Spider-Man (Miles Morales) - masked
Spider-Man (Miles Morales) - unmasked
Peter B. Parker 
Spider-Man (Peter Parker) - masked (blue & red suit)
Spider-Man (Peter Parker) - unmasked (blue & red suit)
Spider-Man (Peter Parker) - unmasked (black & red suit - EDITH glasses optional)
Michelle “MJ” Jones
Spider-Gwen
Captain Marvel
Goose the Cat/ Alpine the Cat
Minn-Erva
Ms. Marvel 
She-Hulk: Attorney At Law
Ghost Rider - Johnny Blaze
Daredevil (comics version)
Deadpool
Gwenpool - pink & white PJ outfit 
Venom
Black Panther
T’Challa (UN outfit) 
Loki - shirt and slacks  (Loki Disney+ series)
Logan (Wolverine:Origins outfit) 
Miss Minutes  (Loki Disney+ series)  
Lokigator  (Loki Disney+ Series) 
Morris (Shang-Chi)
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Arnold Newman ~ Max Ernst (at Peggy Guggenheim's), 1942 [upper right corner : Morris Hirshfield's Nude at the Window] | src MIT Press
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Morris Hirshfield ~ Nude at the Window (Hot Night in July), 1941
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