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Tentaclii

~ News & scholarship on H.P. Lovecraft

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Category Archives: Historical context

Dagon (UK zine)

27 Friday Aug 2010

Posted by asdjfdlkf in Historical context, Lovecraftian arts

≈ 1 Comment

Carl Ford on the history of the British Lovecaft ‘zine Dagon….

“The early issues of Dagon were knocked out on an old Corona typewriter as stick and paste jobs with editing courtesy of Tippex. I’d write most of the material, mainly gaming scenarios and filler that included articles on the Mythos and Lovecraft’s circle. By issue 11 I had started to attract a small cult following and word got around. At the time, Dagon was the only British ‘zine devoted to the subject, and contributors from the Lovecraftian stable soon agreed to supply me with material. Authors such as Ramsey Campbell, Neil Gaiman, T.E.D. Klein, Thomas Ligotti, and Brian Lumley began to contribute fiction, and prominent Lovecraftian scholars that included Peter Cannon, Robert M. Price and S.T. Joshi, followed suit. I was also fortunate to acquire the illustrative services of Dave Carson, Allen Koszowski, and Gahan Wilson for the despicable artwork. This collective of big names helped Dagon to garner several British Fantasy Society awards for Best Small Press, and I was fortunate to pick up an award for Most Promising Newcomer (formerly the Icarus Award) for editing/publishing.”

Old New England

26 Thursday Aug 2010

Posted by asdjfdlkf in Historical context

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To be published in September 2010 The New England Grimpendium: A Guide to Macabre and Ghastly Sites (Countryman Press). 200 sites, 100 pictures, and a nice-looking cover by Brian Weaver…

The author’s blog has previews of some of the sites visited.

Historical note on “Beast in the Cave” (1904/5)

25 Wednesday Aug 2010

Posted by asdjfdlkf in Historical context, New discoveries

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Chris Perridas is doing sterling work tracking down the young Lovecraft, and he’s currently looking at the inspiration for the juvenile story “Beast in the Cave” (circa 1904/1905). Chris writes today…

“Of the hundreds of caves in New England – including the one in Foster, RI, why did he reach out to write about Mammoth Cave in far off Kentucky?”

Possibly Lovecraft was inspired by the children’s literature of the time, such as…

* Bicard, W. “Lost in Mammoth Cave”. The Youth’s Companion, 63: 54. (1890).

* Guernsey, D. Riley. Lost in Mammoth Cave (c.1905). (This is a 315 page novel and the Lost Race Checklist annotates it as about: “Hidden tribe of Indians.”)

The cave was … “a featured attraction of the St. Louis World’s Fair” (1904). Press coverage for the Fair would have been extensive, and there was also an automobile race from New York to St. Louis to further attract the attention of the press. Although Lovecraft could have reached the Fair with relative ease — the “St. Louisan” of the Pennsylvania was a 24-hour sleeper train from New York to St. Louis — it is very unlikely that he visited the Fair. His grandfather died on 28th March 1904, and the Fair opened on 30th April 1904. Still, he no doubt read about it in the press reports.

Also, from the press of the era, possibly a confirmation for the human-ape ‘devolution’ idea…

BLIND FISH FROM MAMMOTH CAVE (November 24, 1900): “For the first time some blind fish from the Mammoth Cave of Kentucky have reached England alive and been placed in the London Zoological Gardens.”

The blind fish as seen in the children’s book Round-About Rambles in Lands of Fact and Fancy.

If it could happen to fish, why not humans? — or so the boy Lovecraft may have surmised. The fish are mentioned in the 1902 Britannica article on Mammoth Cave…

“The most interesting inhabitants of Mammoth Cave are the blind, wingless grasshoppers, with extremely long antennae ; blind, colourless crayfish (Cambarus pellucidus, Telk.) ; and the blind fish, Amblyopsis spelaeus, colourless and viviparous, from 1 inch to 6 inches long.”

“the opinion now held is that they are modified from allied species existing in the sunlight, and that their peculiarities may all be accounted for on principles of evolution,—the process being accelerated (or retarded) by their migration from the outer world to a realm of absolute silence and perpetual darkness.”

A complete history of such fish can be found “Scientists prefer them blind: the history of hypogean fish research” (PDF link).

There may also have been something in “Beast in The Cave” of an earlier, lost, story. Lovecraft writes in his Autobiography: Some Notes On A Nonentity…

“the earliest piece I can recall being a tale of a hideous cave perpetrated at the age of seven and entitled “The Noble Eavesdropper”. This does not survive”

Fan-works and religion

22 Sunday Aug 2010

Posted by asdjfdlkf in Historical context, New discoveries

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PopMatters has a long new article today by Dennis P. Quinn, surveying the half-baked fruitcakes who really believe that Lovecraft’s mythos is true.

It’s partly an inevitable side-effect of Lovecraft being a pioneer in the field of participative ‘open’ texts and fan-works. Something that was then turbo-charged thirty years later by the works falling out of copyright, just as a new wave of mass interest crashed down on his life and work. If you open up such a deeply psyche-rooted body of work to those who would create fan-works based on its ideas and themes, then inevitably the results are going to bounce off in a myriad of directions that purists are not going to like; Derleth, Lumley, religious loons and suchlike.

One interesting point made at the end of the article is that…

“Lovecraft’s mythos, in stark contrast to its creator’s own ethnocentric views and overall xenophobia, is a perfect mythology in a multicultural world. Lovecraft’s gods are not bound to any ethnicity, as are the gods of Greece, Rome, Israel, Arabia, Northern Europe, the Americas, Africa, etc. Although they were invented by a New Englander, they are by definition cosmic and out of this world. They are extra-terrestrial, extra-dimensional, and post-race.”

That’s certainly an interesting thought, but I’m coming to the realisation that nearly all his monsters are actually cloaked metaphors for perceived threats of racial invasion, for the societal and personal fear of ‘swamping’ by the alien ‘other’ at the peak of mass immigration into America. Although they are not just this, since they are also tangled up in notions of belief, rationality and the limits of scientific knowledge. Perhaps his monsters still carry a trace of the ‘post-race’ in them, precisely because Lovecraft was not simply projecting them as crude contemporary ‘racial invasion’ metaphors, but was depicting them as reflected in the mirror of his own love/hate relationship with hybridity and the liminal psychological responses surrounding it.

Of course, sometimes his monsters barely had their racist metaphor cloaked. For instance “Shub-Niggurath, The Black Goat of the Woods with a Thousand Young” (apparently inspired by Dunsany’s “Sheol Nugganoth”), for such an accomplished word-smith, cannot have been other than been an invitation to the prejudiced reader to find the phrase “nigger wrath” in the name — accompanied as the name is by the references to “black” and to abundant and promiscuous breeding.

My new book on Lovecraft

22 Sunday Aug 2010

Posted by asdjfdlkf in Historical context, Housekeeping, Lovecraftian arts, Scholarly works

≈ Leave a comment

100 pages, 18,000 words. Buy this book (PayPal accepted).

Lovecraft and Sumerian/Babylonian names

21 Saturday Aug 2010

Posted by asdjfdlkf in Historical context

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The full scanned copy of A Sumero-Babylonian sign list; to which is added an Assyrian sign list, and a catalogue of the numerals, weights and measures used at various periods (1918)…

Variants on Cthulhu, plus Dagon and Shig. Dagon predates the 1918 book, of course, and also appears in Milton and the Bible…

Dagon in Milton — “Dagon his name, sea monster, upward man And downward fish”, Milton, Paradise Lost. Milton had it from the Bible — “the Philistines took the Ark of God and … brought it into the house of Dagon, and set it by Dagon”, Samuel 5.1-7.

What if Lovecraft had lived into the 1960s?

20 Friday Aug 2010

Posted by asdjfdlkf in Historical context, Podcasts etc.

≈ 2 Comments

Will Hart (cthulhuwho1) celebrates Lovecraft’s 120th Birthday in style by releasing an ultra-rare tape-to-MP3 conversion of a 1978 World Science Fiction panel discussion…

“163 minutes with Professor Dirk W. Mosig, Professor Donald R. Burleson, J. Vernon Shea, Fritz Leiber, Jr., and S.T. Joshi”

The topic is: “What if Lovecraft had lived into the 1960s?”.

Old Ones and shoggoths

19 Thursday Aug 2010

Posted by asdjfdlkf in Historical context, Lovecraftian arts, New discoveries

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Ernst Haeckel’s prints of the small and microscopic biological specimens collected by the British HMS Challenger expedition, printed in book form in 1904, can be found on Wikimedia…

Some of the plates may have been an inspiration to Lovecraft, especially in relation to the look of the Elder Things (Old Ones) and their Shoggoths.

Cryptozoology & Science

18 Wednesday Aug 2010

Posted by asdjfdlkf in Historical context, Lovecraftian arts

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A new Monster Talk podcast: “Cryptozoology & Science, Part 1“…

“What is cryptozoology? Is it science? Is it folklore? Does it make predictions? In part 1 of a 2-part series, MonsterTalk examines cryptozoology as a field, including speculation on the cryptids most likely to turn out to be real. Guest Dr. Darren Naish, paleontologist and science blogger, makes some surprising statements about the field, its role in science and culture, and the intersection of amateur and professional science.”


Illustration: “Basilisks, Dragonelles and Dragonettes from the Neville Colmore Collection”, part of the Colmore Fatagravures.

Fantasy Fan facsimile

18 Wednesday Aug 2010

Posted by asdjfdlkf in Historical context

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The Fantasy Fan reprint…

“Pre-orders are being accepted via eBay for The Fantasy Fan, which will be published next month. This hardcover volume features the complete run of all 18 issues, dating from September 1933 to February 1935, and contains original published stories and poems by Weird Tales authors Robert E. Howard, Clark Ashton Smith, H. P. Lovecraft, and others. […] The publication was the first weird fiction fanzine.”

Lovecraft and belief

17 Tuesday Aug 2010

Posted by asdjfdlkf in Historical context

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A lively discussion has been triggered by Mike Duran’s new blog article, “On ‘Christian Horror’ and Atheist horror“. I know little of contemporary religious tensions in American fandoms, but the article seem to me to be an ideological attempt to build a sharp fence around something called “Christian horror”, a form that appears to have been incipient for about 18 months now, and to isolate it from ‘infection’. Matt Cardin chips in his article length commentary on his The Teeming Brain…

[…] what Lovecraft and the other writers working in the vein of fantastic or weird horror have done is not necessarily […] to dispense with religion or supernaturalism altogether in favor of “atheist dread,” but to find and convey something resembling, fundamentally, a true sense of Otto-esque numinosity in the very fact of their stories’ worldview-upending and -exploding conceptions […].

Lovecraft’s view seems very clear to me — worshipping believers are power-seeking degenerates or weak-minded primitives. But the springboard that takes him beyond religion or supernaturalism is that these cultists are not simply deluded zombies, such as might in other hands serve as a convenient plot device to allow a glamorous female to be rescued by a jut-jawed hero. The horror really is there, even though the cultists often worship it only indirectly via the medium of idols and chanted names — rather than truly comprehending ‘the terror of monstrous chaos’ that lies behind it. For a man of science to discover the same horrific truths of cosmic-indifferentist beings — to coldly see past the half-glimpsed cultist deities to the bigger picture, and to realise the insignificance of mankind — that is to invite madness. Lovecraft does have a touch of the human-centric in the fact that (a certain advanced part of) mankind has evolved to such a pitch that they can really ‘know of’ such things against a scientific background.

Lovecraft was in that sense almost making a sort of ‘inoculating vaccine’ for mankind — required if our insatiable scientific curiosity about the elder places of the earth or the reaches of outer space was not to risk springing the trap of civilisational madness. For Lovecraft, growing knowledge of ancient civilisations seems to have implied a twofold risk to ‘belief’. On the one hand if Western civilisation stepped beyond a surface admiration of ancient architectures to a true understanding of the minds and belief-systems of the builders, then it risked unleashing a cultural relativism into the yearning void left by the collapse of Christian belief — which would accelerate the decay of Lovecraft’s beloved rationalist Western civilization. On the other hand there was danger in the knowledge that the most sparkling and worthy ancient civilisations had been swept away by a seemingly inevitable decay and collapse. This risked infecting the fragile Western civilisation of the 1920/30s with self-doubt about its own ultimate fate, a doubt that could develop a dangerous symbiosis with cultural relativism. In all this Lovecraft was part and parcel of the Zeitgeist of the late-1920s/1930s.

I’m still a beginner at Lovecraft, but it seems to me that he cared deeply about ‘belief’, but it was not religious belief. Superstition was just a springboard which enabled him to express his fears for a more ineffable and dangerously-fragile ‘civilisational’ self-belief.

Newport Historical Society

17 Tuesday Aug 2010

Posted by asdjfdlkf in Historical context

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Rear entrance of the Newport Historical Society…

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