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Tentaclii

~ News & scholarship on H.P. Lovecraft

Tentaclii

Category Archives: Historical context

The Revised Adolphe Danziger de Castro

14 Saturday Jan 2012

Posted by asdjfdlkf in Historical context, Scholarly works

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Chris Powell’s “The Revised Adolphe Danziger de Castro“, free…

“The following article was published in the Spring 1997 (Number 36) edition of Lovecraft Studies, a small, academic journal for devotees of H.P. Lovecraft and fiction of the weird. It describes a phase of Danziger’s writing career where he used ghostwriters to revise and improve his writing. Most notable among those ghostwriters was horror writer H.P. Lovecraft.”

Lovecraft and tentacles in racial propaganda

06 Friday Jan 2012

Posted by asdjfdlkf in Historical context

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Grady Hendrix has a couple of interesting examples that point to one way in which the young Lovecraft’s fear of the Asiatic races might have become intertwined (literally) with tentacles…

The first is said to be from 1881, the second is undated but looks like it might be early 1920s? One wonders if this specific type of tentacular depiction was more widespread between the 1880s and the 1920s?

Panel on Lovecraft at the Seattle Art Museum

03 Tuesday Jan 2012

Posted by asdjfdlkf in Historical context, Podcasts etc., Scholarly works

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A video of the panel on Lovecraft at the Seattle Art Museum in 2011. Sound is rather rough, so if anyone wants to do subtitles then it would be appreciated.

As If: Modern Enchantment and the Literary Prehistory of Virtual Reality

10 Saturday Dec 2011

Posted by asdjfdlkf in Historical context, New books, Scholarly works

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Interesting-sounding new book coming from Oxford University Press… As If: Modern Enchantment and the Literary Prehistory of Virtual Reality by Michael Saler. Out in January 2012, but there’s a Kindle edition already available in the USA (published 3rd Dec, not available the UK). Looks very interesting, although OUP have saddled it with an unappealing front cover which has dreadfully bad typography.

Edward Castronova says of the book… “This is the best cultural study of fantasy I have ever read. A powerful, liberating argument, woven together from an impressive array of sources, all treated well and fairly. Saler routs the assumption that enchantment and reason oppose one another”. Here’s some of the offical blurb…

“Many people throughout the world inhabit fantastic imaginary worlds [online, in videogames or in fan communities]. These activities are often dismissed as harmless escapism or bemoaned as pernicious wish-fulfillments that distract from the serious business of life. Saler challenges such claims by excavating the history of imaginary worlds in the West since the late nineteenth century, when the communal and long-term immersion in such worlds first began with Sherlock Holmes. The book contends that imaginary worlds emerged at this time as sites of rational and secular enchantments for the modern age. They continue to represent distinct social practices informing political, social, and spiritual life. Individuals often use imaginary worlds as a playful space to debate serious issues in the real world; they also use them to hone their understandings of the interplay of reason and imagination and the provisional nature of all representations. Saler provides an overview of how imaginary worlds went from being feared by the Victorians to being inhabited by the Edwardians, and discusses in detail the creation and reception of the worlds of A.C. Doyle’s Sherlock Holmes, H.P. Lovecraft’s Cthulhu Mythos, and J.R.R. Tolkien’s Middle-earth, among many others. […] Saler’s book contributes the historical back-story of those deeply engaging imaginary universes, highlighting their vital lessons for how we can remain enchanted but not deluded in an age that privileges the imagination as much as reason.”

Of course there were also many other technical precusors of virtual reality in the Victorian and Edwardian eras — such as giant panoramas, fraudulent spiritualist seances, grand Wagnerian ‘immersive’ theater, fairground ‘haunted houses’, etc. A number of history books on these have appeared in recent years. And literature was not without its own technologies that were both individuating and communal at the same time, such as techniques of coded layering such as that found the ‘reserved’ forms used by the likes of Christina Rossetti or the secret codes of queer poetry. One of the interesting changes in genre fiction is that this ‘depth coding’ was no longer available as a literary technology for such writers, since everything had to be “out in the open” in terms of readability. In this respect, what’s interesting about Lovecraft is that his best work finds some potent ways to slip a little ambiguity and ‘difficulty’ back into genre fiction.

Flatbush Dutch Reformed

01 Thursday Dec 2011

Posted by asdjfdlkf in Historical context

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The Newtown Pentangle has fine photographs of the Flatbush Dutch Reformed churchyard and graves in Brooklyn…


Photo: Mitch Waxman

The churchyard is the location for Lovecraft’s “The Hound”. Also a key site of his nocturnal investigations…

“That evening Kleiner and I investigated the principal antiquity of this section — the old Dutch Reformed Church — and were well repaid for our quest.”

   [ Hat-tip: Danny Callaghan ]

In Our Time: Gothic

15 Tuesday Nov 2011

Posted by asdjfdlkf in Historical context, Podcasts etc.

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A blast from the past: a 45-minute BBC radio discussion on The Gothic (2001). Covers the history of the literary and architectural gothic in the British Isles. May only be available from the online “listen again…” service for those in the UK (others might try here). Part of the BBC’s outstanding “In Our Time” series.

Finding Lovecraft – new documentary feature

14 Monday Nov 2011

Posted by asdjfdlkf in Historical context, Lovecraftian arts

≈ 2 Comments

I found a new Lovecraft documentary, or at least new to me. Sponsored by the Rhode Island Council for the Humanities (“major grant awarded in the Spring of 2011”) and the Center for Independent Documentary. The directors of Finding Lovecraft only have this trailer at present, released June 2011…

[youtube http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=5N438T1Wylk&w=560&h=315]

“a feature-length documentary fantasy, now in production in Providence, RI. We explore the life and unique style of horror writer H.P. Lovecraft, and illustrate his unique legacy using an innovative mix of narrative and documentary storytelling. A Lovecraft-inspired story unfolds for the filmmakers as we delve into the life of this extraordinary character through archival research and expert interviews.”

I was disconcerted to hear the director say in the trailer that he’s one of those who simply dislikes all of Lovecraft’s fiction. Seriously, does he really mean to say he couldn’t find anything to like, not even “The Cats of Ulthar”? But it seems the documentary is to focus instead on the the life and letters, and the various ‘Lovecraft’ places in Rhode Island. I think Finding Lovecraft will be the fourth substantial documentary:— it will follow the workmanlike but flawed The Eldritch Influence: The Life, Vision, and Phenomenon of H.P. Lovecraft (2004); the excellent Lovecraft: Fear of the Unknown (2009); and the 45-minute BBC Radio documentaries The Young Man of Providence (BBC Radio 4, 1983), and Weird Tales: the Strange Life of H.P. Lovecraft (BBC Radio 3, 2006). I’d love to see someone make a proper Ken Burns-style Lovecraft documentary about his time in New York City.

New York City before TV

09 Wednesday Nov 2011

Posted by asdjfdlkf in Historical context

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SF author William Gibson interviewed in The Paris Review…

“It’s harder to imagine the past that went away than it is to imagine the future. What we were prior to our latest batch of technology is, in a way, unknowable. It would be harder to accurately imagine what New York City was like the day before the advent of broadcast television than to imagine what it will be like after life-size broadcast holography comes online. But actually the New York without the television is more mysterious, because we’ve already been there and nobody paid any attention. That world is gone.”

Actually… H.P. Lovecraft was there, he paid attention. So did Helen Levitt and many other artists and writers. There had also been a wave of recent academic books on many aspects of the culture and times of New York City in the 1910-1930 period.

Ernst Haeckel

04 Friday Nov 2011

Posted by asdjfdlkf in Historical context, Lovecraftian arts, REH

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Genius British comics artist Hunt Emerson provides a lovely new portrait of Ernst Haeckel, Zoologist and Painter, on the Steampunk and Phenomena profile of Haeckel.

Haeckel’s full set of Kunstformen der Natur plates are available on Wikimedia. These are likely to have visually influenced Lovecraft and Giger, and Haeckel is cited as one of Lovecraft’s “chief philosophical influences” via Haeckel’s The Riddle of the Universe (1899). He was also an influence on R.E. Howard (circa 9th August 1932, Howard told Lovecraft that he… “used to be a violent admirer of Haekal”). There’s also a 60 minute documentary on Haeckel, Proteus (2004).

Inside the Ladd Observatory

20 Thursday Oct 2011

Posted by asdjfdlkf in Astronomy, Historical context

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The Brown Herald steps inside the Ladd Observatory…

“A multitude of eyes have peered through the 15-foot telescope in the past 120 years, including those of H.P. Lovecraft — who had his own key to the observatory — local teachers, students and professors.”

ePics has a nice Creative Commons Flickr set of the interior…

James and Lovecraft on NYC

16 Sunday Oct 2011

Posted by asdjfdlkf in Historical context

≈ 2 Comments

Where The Wild Boys Are has an interesting new essay comparing the predjudiced responses to New York made by Henry James and Lovecraft.

I Am cheap

28 Wednesday Sep 2011

Posted by asdjfdlkf in Historical context, New books, Scholarly works

≈ 1 Comment

The two-volume I Am Providence, currently direct from Amazon with free shipping, for just $63. I doubt it’ll ever get much lower than this?

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