Unusual finds in Lovecraft mythos comics
13 Friday Jun 2014
Posted Lovecraftian arts
in13 Friday Jun 2014
Posted Lovecraftian arts
in13 Friday Jun 2014
Posted Scholarly works
inMLA 2015 Vancouver, session roundtable on “Weird Fiction, Weird Methods”. Does weird fiction have a single coherent approach and origin? Does it need to be read and studied differently than other fiction? Can it find a place in academia, or is it just too… weird?
* Kate Marshall (elements of American naturalist literature may have been co-opted by the early weird)
* S. T. Joshi (recapping Lovecraft’s theories of the weird)
* Ali Sperling (the early literary weird should be understood as part of the history of modernist literature)
* Matthew Taylor (what the new Speculative Realist philosophy has taken from the old weird, especially re: autonomous self-generating systems that have unhuman frames of reference)
* Eileen Joy (can academics develop a weird methodology for weird literature, by borrowing ideas from the philosophers of OOO Speculative Realism?)
12 Thursday Jun 2014
Posted Podcasts etc., Scholarly works
inNew 90 minute podcast from the Long Now Foundation. Stefan Kroepelin on “Civilization’s Mysterious Desert Cradle: Rediscovering the Deep Sahara” (.mp3 link. Starts at 4:10).
Kroepelin has survived every kind of desert hardship to discover the climate and cultural history of northern Africa. He found that the “Green Sahara” arrived with monsoon rains 10,500 years ago, and people quickly moved into the new fertile savannah. There they prospered as cattle pastoralists — their elaborate rock paintings show herds of rhinoceros and scenes of prehistoric life — until 7,300 years ago, when gradually increasing desiccation drove them to the Nile river, which they had previously considered too dangerous for occupation. To manage the Nile, the former pastoralists helped to invent a Pharaonic state 5,100 years ago. Its 3,000-year continuity has never been surpassed. Kroepelin, a climate scientist at the University of Cologne, is a dazzling speaker with hair-raising stories.
12 Thursday Jun 2014
Posted Lovecraftian arts
in11 Wednesday Jun 2014
I’m very pleased that the legendary Lovecraft researcher Randy Everts has chosen Tentaclii to help publish an important new essay on Lovecraft in Providence. His essay reveals, for the first time, one of Lovecraft’s previously unknown local friends — Chester Alywn Mowry (1898-1945).
With his permission I have slightly tweaked the essay, formatted it with my usual book style, and added my footnotes plus a few extra pictures. My thanks to Randy for this great opportunity.
“Yeh—keep it up [meaning, the use of new American slang and twang], & you’ll have even Mowry rolling his rrr … ’s in mid-western style yet!” (Letter from Lovecraft to James F. Morton of January 1928).
Download: Randy Everts, “Unknown Friends of H. P. Lovecraft: No.1, Chester Alwyn Mowry”. (PDF, formatted for 6″ x 9″ print, 8,000 words inc. footnotes).
11 Wednesday Jun 2014
Posted Historical context, New discoveries
inThanks to Randy Everts for telling me that an early Lovecraft revision is now scanned and online, “The Supremacy of Life” (1917)…
In one of the letters to [David V.] Bush dated 20th January 1918 HPL mentions the book he edited (re-wrote) for the Rev. W.S. Harrison of Starkville, Miss., a “long Miltonic epic in blank verse”
I wonder if the revision / ghost writing for this work may have prompted Lovecraft to muse upon the possibility of his lost “Life and Death” story (c. 1920). We know of one such instance: apparently working on a Bush revision had, in part, been a prompt for the dream that led to “Nyarlathotep”.
11 Wednesday Jun 2014
Posted Historical context, Lovecraftian arts, New books, Scholarly works
inJust published, a new scholarly history of British horror radio broadcasting, Listen in Terror: British Horror Radio from the Advent of Broadcasting to the Digital Age
Peter Till illustration from a 1975 edition of the BBC’s Radio Times schedules magazine.
11 Wednesday Jun 2014
Posted Historical context
inLovecraft had other things on his mind at the very end of 1924, having reached a pretty low point in New York City. But had he glanced at the back of the latest new edition of Popular Astronomy in the library, he might have noted a wistful poem from nearby…
THE OLD AMATEUR.
What matters it that, weary and alone,
I sit and think of things I might have done?
What matters it that wife and children shun
In me a dreamer, a mere rolling stone?
What matters it that rustic neighbors fear
In me a madman, all because I know
The motions of the comets and the flow
Of time, that travels on from year to year?
What matters it? There are far better men
To count the days and aeons, as they run,
And weigh this planet that we dwell upon.
But yet, I feel it matters somewhat, when——
What matters it?——I see, across the wire,
The transit of the star of my desire.
R. BURNSIDE POTTER.
Smithtown, Long Island.
10 Tuesday Jun 2014
Posted Scholarly works
inI’m told the Gothic Studies academics at universities mostly don’t much care for Lovecraft, feeling he doesn’t fit in with their canon or their leftist politics. But if you were considering starting an academic journal a touch more friendly to the old gent, then note there’s to be a Gothic Networking Day for postgraduates and academics. It’s in Manchester in the north-west of England, on the 12th July 2014. It will including an afternoon of sessions on publishing academic journals in Gothic Studies, so you’ll get to meet some of the people who are already editing such journals — of which the UK now has quite a few.
10 Tuesday Jun 2014
Posted Odd scratchings
inA nice bit of techno-hauntology from the UK…
“Shadowing, a project developed [in the old port city of Bristol, England] by Jonathan Chomko and Matthew Rosier, uses infrared tracking and triggered projections to replay the shadow of a previous passerby to the next person who walks under a modified streetlight. The design duo hopes that the reanimation of the city streets with ghostly time-travellers will be a playful experience for everyone, but also recognises the potentially darker side of the shadows.”
10 Tuesday Jun 2014
Posted Historical context
inHere’s a picture of the man who kept Lovecraft in steady revision work through the mid 1920s. Lovecraft revised a whole lot of Bush’s poetry, and sometimes also wrote whole chapters of Bush’s homespun popular psychology pamphlets and books — such as two or three chapters for Applied Psychology and Scientific Living.
Ad in the front pages ads section of Popular Science, Jan 1924.
Presumably Lovecraft wasn’t invited to ghost Bush’s sex manuals such as Psychology of Sex: How to Make Love and Marry (c.1924), with chapters such as “What To Do On The Wedding Night, And Why Not To Be Ashamed Of One’s Sexual Urges”. One does, though, wonder if Bush may have felt Lovecraft eminently suited to ghost-write his pamphlet Spunk (How to Lick Fear) (c. early 1924). Here it is noted that it is “declared to be the masterpiece” of Bush’s work. Hyperbolic sales talk, perhaps, but if Lovecraft had tackled it — writing on a subject he was expert on — then it might indeed have been rather a good read…
09 Monday Jun 2014
Posted Lovecraftian arts
inI found the new feature film Edge of Tomorrow to be excellent entertainment, and the best sci-fi film of the year so far. Admittedly in the first 25 minutes there’s some clunky setup to wade through, and a difficult scenario for a Brit audience to get used to. That naff ‘dropships over the White Cliffs of Dover’ scene was perhaps the low point in the setup. It probably works best if you just tell yourself: “ok, so we’re in an alternative future-past”, rather than trying to reconcile the starting scenario with actual history. But after the setup the film just keeps on getting better, and does so right through to the end.
Edge of Tomorrow borrows a few Lovecraftian elements, which I don’t think I’m spoiling the plot by mentioning: aliens arrive on a meteorite and creep outward from there (“Colour out of Space”); the aliens send location-based ‘visions’ to those who are ‘sensitive’ (“Call of Cthulhu”). Then there’s the very cool visual style of the aliens, which riffs off Lovecraft (with friendly nods to H.G. Wells and H.R. Giger). But then Lovecraft gets neatly mashed into other highly entertaining elements (such as an alternative future-past London, done in a cool big-budget Doctor Who / James Bond / WWII ish sort of way; Starship Troopers; and the time-looping movies Source Code and Looper). It’s highly recommended, and is probably best seen without watching a trailer or reading up on the plot on Wikipedia.
Admittedly the competition for “best sci-fi film of the year” is currently very light, with only the good-in-parts X-Men: Days of Future Past as any real competition. Depp’s AI takeover movie Transcendence was dire, like a pot-poiling romantic novelist’s version of what a sci-fi thriller should be.
Of course Edge of Tomorrow is going to face some competition for Best Sci-fi of 2014:
* Dawn of the Planet of the Apes (In its post-apocalyptic ape-human war setting. Post-apocalypse earth seems a very tired-out idea these days);
* Luc Besson’s Lucy (Luc Besson’s over-the-top take on Limitless with Scarlett Johansson, ’nuff said);
* Monsters: Dark Continent (Seems to be a Heart of Darkness meets Starship Troopers bug-hunt, which sounds very easy to do badly);
* I Origins (Apparently an explosions-free serious drama on scientific discovery vs. faith. I’d guess at a ‘we were created by aliens and I can prove it…’ theme?);
* Jupiter Ascending (The Wachowskis do Space Opera, apparently in a wildly kitsch style. Sounds fun, in a kind of Japanese anime ‘it makes no sense at all, but looks great’ way);
* Marvel’s Guardians of the Galaxy (Seems to be a feel-good space opera romp, aimed at a younger audience and their merchandise-buying moms);
* There’s also the forthcoming The Maze Runner, the premise of which (‘boy trapped in a massive alien maze’) seems a touch similar to the Lovecraft/Sterling story “In the Walls of Eryx”.