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Tentaclii

~ News & scholarship on H.P. Lovecraft

Tentaclii

Category Archives: Scholarly works

Book: Underground Rivers

27 Saturday Jun 2020

Posted by asdjfdlkf in New books, Scholarly works

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Underground Rivers by Richard Heggen. A 1,500 page PDF book kindly placed online for free by the author in its latest summer 2018 draft, under Creative Commons Attribution NC. Effectively it’s a chronological and thematic encyclopedia with comprehensive coverage of British and American popular culture, and abundant illustrations. It also has many rich dips into ancient mythology on the topic. It’s evidently a years-long side-project and the author, Professor Emeritus of Civil Engineering at The University of New Mexico, asks to be informed of anything he may have missed over the decades.

While many of the illustration are in the public domain, some are likely not. It would probably be safer to assume that the Creative Commons Attribution NC licence applies to the text only.

Digest Enthusiast #12

25 Thursday Jun 2020

Posted by asdjfdlkf in New books, Odd scratchings, Scholarly works

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The Digest Enthusiast #12 is now available, with Mike Chomko and William Lampkin, who “untangle the fate of PulpFest 2020 and The Pulpster“.

Dracula in Sweden

22 Monday Jun 2020

Posted by asdjfdlkf in New books, Scholarly works

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S.T. Joshi’s blog has updated. He has a book-sale on now and, among other new book news, has details of: two late novels by Frank Belknap Long set to be reprinted by Centipede; his abridged Lovecraft biography A Dreamer and a Visionary: H.P. Lovecraft in His Time, now available in translation in Brazil; a forthcoming 300,000-word English translation of the Swedish version of Bram Stoker’s Dracula — possibly… “from an early version of the novel that found its way to Sweden in the 1890s. This version does not survive in English”. The Dracula translation has been edited by Joshi.

2021 Peter Lang Competition in Science Fiction Studies

22 Monday Jun 2020

Posted by asdjfdlkf in Scholarly works

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Publisher Peter Lang is running a 2021 Peter Lang Young Scholars Competition in Science Fiction Studies…

Proposals are invited from early career scholars in Science Fiction Studies [planning to write] academic monographs [and to qualify you must] have been awarded a PhD between 2015 and 2020 or expect to be awarded a PhD in 2021.

The deadline is 30th November 2020.

Also of interest is the $500 John A. Lent Scholarship in Comics Studies, which should open summer 2020 and which will then be seeking…

a current student who has authored, or is in the process of authoring, a substantial research-based writing project about comics.

Refreshingly, you don’t have to have a thesis in hand, as… “all students of comics are encouraged to apply.”

Call: The Medial Afterlives of H.P. Lovecraft

20 Saturday Jun 2020

Posted by asdjfdlkf in New books, Scholarly works

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Call for Papers: The Medial Afterlives of H.P. Lovecraft. Deadline: 31st August 2020.

The book editors appears to be looking for studies of recent (post-2008) media adaptations in “comics, film, podcasts, TV, videogames”, rather than something trawled from the vast squishy hinterlands of earlier Lovecraft adaptation and Lovecraftian media.

An interview with Brian Murphy

18 Thursday Jun 2020

Posted by asdjfdlkf in Podcasts etc., REH, Scholarly works

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A new podcast, Literary Wonder & Adventure Show #15: The History of Sword and Sorcery: A conversation with author Brian Murphy. [Link removed – dead]

I see Murphy’s book now has a handy £5 Kindle ebook edition.

And… what better excuse to post here the three classic Chris Achilleos covers for Panther UK’s three-part Skull-face paperback re-issue, which introduced many to Robert E. Howard.

I’m fairly sure I also had these, also from Panther…

NLP with Lovecraft

17 Wednesday Jun 2020

Posted by asdjfdlkf in Scholarly works

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Lovecraft with NLP. No, not the dodgy cultic ‘neuro linguistic programming’. NLP as in proper hardcore computer programming, in the form of ‘Natural Language Processing’ for digital humanities work. Towards Data Science currently has long articles showing exactly how to have a computer crunch the Lovecraft fiction corpus and thus help to answer questions such as…

Are the stories as negative as we thought? What are the most used adjectives, are they “horrible” and “unknown” and “ancient”?

Ideally the corpus would first be carefully chunked, split into distinct sections relating to his phases and places. Each would be probed separately. It’s probably big enough to chunk. Otherwise you’d get a bit of a smushy answer to such questions. “The Quest of Iranon” (1921) is not the same beastie as “The Shadow out of Time” (1935) etc.

Lovecraft with NLP: Part 1: Rule-Based Sentiment Analysis

Lovecraft with NLP: Part 2: Tokenisation and Word Counts

It looks like more parts are planned.

Update: Lovecraft with NLP: Part 3: TF-IDF and K-Means Clustering. At which point, having seen two articles, you hit the paywall.

Update: Lovecraft with NLP: Part 4: Latent Semantic Analysis.

Joshi’s new ‘Advance of the Weird Tale’ and ‘Varieties of Crime Fiction’

03 Wednesday Jun 2020

Posted by asdjfdlkf in New books, Scholarly works

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S.T. Joshi’s blog has updated and he has news of another new book, his The Advance of the Weird Tale. This being his “miscellaneous essays on weird fiction”, and available now in Kindle. It anticipates another collection, as yet unpublished, to be titled The Progression of the Weird Tale.

He also notes another new survey book, his Varieties of Crime Fiction (April 2020), which his blog states he spent “a good three years writing”. It’s also available now on Kindle via Amazon.

Mythcon 51

01 Monday Jun 2020

Posted by asdjfdlkf in Scholarly works

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Mythcon 51: The Mythopoeic Society conference will be in Albuquerque, New Mexico. Re-scheduled dates have been announced as 30th July – 2nd August 2021. The theme is very wide, but with a bit of a swerve toward ‘Area 51’-type UFO lore… “The Mythic, the Fantastic, and the Alien”. The call for papers was being pushed in a 19th May blog post, even though the call currently still carries a date of 15th May. Which implies there might be a chance the call is still effectively open, given the transfer to the new date in 2021.

Protected: 10,000-word essay: Three possible inspirations for Lovecraft’s “The Shadow out of Time”

30 Saturday May 2020

Posted by asdjfdlkf in Historical context, Scholarly works

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Now available for Patreon patrons

29 Friday May 2020

Posted by asdjfdlkf in Historical context, Scholarly works

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A peek at a new 10,000-word essay, now available for my Patreon patrons in PDF, over at my posts on the Patreon site. It’ll also be posted here at Tentaclii, as a patron-only post, tomorrow…

The Fireside Sphinx

26 Tuesday May 2020

Posted by asdjfdlkf in Historical context, Kittee Tuesday, Scholarly works

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In 1932 Lovecraft wrote to his friend Moe, recalling once again the lost-lost days of 1900 when he had been ten years old. One of the items recalled in his stream-of-consciousness flow was… “the new cat book by Agnes Rapplier”.

Rapplier was a conservative Catholic essayist and reviewer, who also wrote popular books. The “new cat book” must be her The Fireside Sphinx: A Cultural History of Cats which appeared in 1901. Thus Lovecraft mis-placed it a little amid the tumble of memories, as a book of 1900.

It is just the sort of erudite yet breezy book that would have delighted a precocious lad who doted on cats, with chapters on Egypt, Dark Ages hysteria, and cats in his beloved British Isles. It is full of little stories and brisk histories. The book is simply footnoted as The Fireside Sphinx (without its subtitle indicating its non-fiction nature) in the Moe letters, and does not appear in my edition of Joshi’s Lovecraft’s Library. But, as a formative childhood book, it should probably be listed in a future edition of the Library.

Being out-of-copyright it could also make the basis of various new media productions, trimmed down a bit, from dramatized audiobook to graphic novel. Although note that archaeology is starting to dramatically change the story of ancient domestic cats in Europe — that bit would need to be added/updated.

When did Lovecraft have it and read it? A quick search suggests The Fireside Sphinx was probably issued October 1901 with an eye to the Christmas market. Thus it was perhaps a family gift, possibly to his mother or more likely to the young Lovecraft himself at Christmas 1901 when he was aged 11. By my calculations Lovecraft would then have been a doting cat-owner for several years and the kitten Trigger-ban, that had been presented to him as a “tiny black handful” at about age seven, would have fully grown into an adult pet cat by Christmas 1901.

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