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Tentaclii

~ News & scholarship on H.P. Lovecraft

Tentaclii

Category Archives: Scholarly works

The Fossil #380 – July 2019

15 Monday Jul 2019

Posted by asdjfdlkf in Historical context, Scholarly works

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Out now, The Fossil #380 (July 2019), free in PDF.

The issue contains items of Lovecraft interest…

1) an essay by Ken Faig, looking in detail at Lovecraft’s acceptance of the NAPA silver ‘honorable mention’ medal for “The Street”. He solves a decade-long puzzle on the matter, with the aid of access to a previously inaccessible January 1922 amateur publication.

2) in a following note, Faig also briefly considers the assertion that in 1937 there was a lost ‘primary’ Lovecraft publication…

a “small booklet of poems” by Lovecraft entitled Science Fiction Bard, published by Donald Wollheim

3) a bibiographic and biographical follow-up to a Wilson Shepherd article, which appeared in the previous April 2019 issue.

“It does not permit itself to be read…”

13 Saturday Jul 2019

Posted by asdjfdlkf in Scholarly works

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This event may interest those with deep thoughts about ‘the unreadable’, especially in relation to ‘lost’ medieval libraries and books. Note that the organisers also state they’re interested in modern imaginative evokings of such medieval things. This concern sits at the edge of wider debates about intellectual ‘dark matter’ and the transmutation of modern archives into publicly accessible forms.

Call: The Dark Man journal

10 Wednesday Jul 2019

Posted by asdjfdlkf in REH, Scholarly works

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The Dark Man: Journal of Robert E. Howard and Pulp Studies, call for the Vol. 10, No. 2 issue…

Note that during their Howard Days presentation the editors said they were also interested in Lovecraft and wider pulp magazine history of the period. Though I’d imagine that papers on these would probably be most welcome if they featured themes and concerns found in Howard’s work and/or life.

I wonder if “The Small Town” might be such a theme, and if it might even make a special themed issue, with essays on the early pulp-magazine use of the theme by Howard, Lovecraft, Simak, Bradbury and others. Possibly also an examination of the demographics and spread of the readership, to determine how ‘remote’ and small-town some of the readers were, and what the pulps meant to them in that context.

Added to Open Lovecraft

10 Wednesday Jul 2019

Posted by asdjfdlkf in Scholarly works

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* P. Israelson, The Vortex of the Weird: Systemic Feedback and Environmental Individuation in the Media Ecology of Ito Junji’s Horror Comics”, Orientaliska Studier, No. 156, 2018. (Illustrated. Possibly not safe for download at work or college, depending on regime. A study of noted Japanese manga artist Ito Junji in relation the literary horror of H. P. Lovecraft).

* J. Norman, ‘Sounds Which Filled Me with an Indefinable Dread’: the Cthulhu mythopoeia of H.P. Lovecraft in ‘extreme’ metal (Short chapter from the book New Critical Essays on H.P. Lovecraft, 2013. ‘Metal’ = metal rock music).

* L. Sorensen, A weird modernist archive: pulp fiction, pseudobiblia, H.P. Lovecraft, Modernism/modernity, Vol. 17, No. 3, September 2010. (In “The Shadow out of Time” the archive is “possessed of disturbing agency”, and this idea counters the high modernist ideal for such things. Also has some useful observations on Lovecraft’s stance on the familiar and the unknowable, and notes that Boas shared much the same sentiments).

Crypt of Cthulhu #113

08 Monday Jul 2019

Posted by asdjfdlkf in New books, Scholarly works

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Crypt of Cthulhu #113, now with a pre-order page and table of contents. This double-sized jumbo book edition should out by the 1st August 2019, according to the page.

Looking interesting…

* “Memory” Re-membered, by Donald R. Burleson. [Presumably re-visiting Lovecraft’s “Memory”]

* A Heritage of Hubris: Sources for “The Doom That Came to Sarnath”, by William Fulwiler.

* Atmosphere and the Qualitative Analysis of “The Colour Out of Space”, by Steven J. Mariconda. [Presumably the “Colour” essay mentioned, but not included, in his recent book collection]


Also, elsewhere DMR blog has a new A Shout-Out to Robert M. Price, Crypt editor, on his 65th birthday.

Providence Tales #4

08 Monday Jul 2019

Posted by asdjfdlkf in New books, Scholarly works

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The Italian magazine Providence Tales #4 (Spring/Summer 2019) is a special tribute to Italian Lovecraft scholar and publisher Giuseppe Lippi, who was one of the leading Italian Lovecraftians. The magazine features a fine portrait of him on the cover, framed by pleasingly lively typography. Inside there are two memoirs. He passed away before Christmas 2018, after a short illness.

Translating the contents page for the magazine’s back-issues, I see it also has other non-fiction articles. #3 has an article on Lovecraft’s appearances in the Weird Tales letters pages, and the magazine has five such letters translated into Italian.

The remaining Howard Days videos for 2019

07 Sunday Jul 2019

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

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I don’t see more of videos coming online from the 2019 Howard Days, so below are links to what I take to be the final tranche.

Previous posts here at Tentaclii have already covered Howard Day 2019 – the first videos (trailer, keynote, and a main panel) and More Howard Days (“What’s new with REH”, and an excellent “History of Project Pride” which gives a fine insight into how just a few dynamic can-do people make all the difference to a small town).

The remains videos to be linked are:

* The Writers of REH, a 58 minute panel during which “Biographers of Howard answer biographical questions”.

* Glenn Lord Symposium 2019: Nicole Emmelhainz, giving a 40 minute talk about Howard’s letters and correspondents.

* Glenn Lord Symposium 2019: Ralph Norris, giving a short 20 minute talk about Howard’s Kull character.

* Fists of the Ice House 2019 is a 48 minute talk on Howard’s boxing stories, given dynamically in the very place where the author used to box. Followed by a 50 minute panel on Sailor Steve Costigan of the boxing stories.

Many thanks to Ben Friberg for the uploads and (I assume) he was also the one to be thanked for the clear audio and professional recordings.

Others? Unfortunately YouTube has near-enough turned off their ‘sort by date’, to the extent that it’s now very difficult to get a comprehensive slate of ‘most recently posted’ videos in the results for any keyword or phrase. So my apologies if someone else has also posted a Howard Days 2019 video, but I wasn’t able to find it. Nothing pops up on ListenNotes either, which is the best podcast search-engine. Sadly it’s 2019 and the world still lacks a ‘timely blog-post search’ engine like the old Technorati, but using the general search-engines to approximate that didn’t turn up anything in the form of .MP3s or video.

* The Abeline Reporter local newspaper has a good long write-up and crisp photos, “Howard Days celebrates Cross Plains writer’s legacy”. I’m pleased to see that this is accessible outside the USA (many small town newspapers block outsiders now). It includes the interesting news that…

At this moment, Howard is way bigger in France than he is the [United] States,” said French scholar Patrice Louinet, who regularly travels to Cross Plains to present at Howard Days. “He’s everywhere [in France].”

The local cemetery website also has a nice look at the excellent promotional poster for 2019, along with the artist’s details if you’d care to commission him for something similar for your town…

Lovecraft’s Diary: a project proposal

04 Thursday Jul 2019

Posted by asdjfdlkf in Odd scratchings, Scholarly works

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As we head toward the anniversary of “Dagon” (The Vagrant Nov 1919, first appearance of “Dagon”) it strikes me that there’s an imminent opportunity for starting a new diary blog, possibly to be named The Compleat Diary and Almanak of Mr. H. P. Lovecraft, Gent.

In which one blog post per day would briefly summarise Lovecraft’s doings (and thoughts or dreams) on that particular day in history. Or simply note the location at which he resided, or what the weather of the day was, if he was otherwise unknown at that point in time. The Diary might be written in the fairly brief and straightforward ‘dashed note’ manner of his 1925 Diary, with additional placenames and personal names.

Such a blog would take some 17-18 years to complete, if run at one post per day. But, if done correctly and diligently each day, it would soon become a very fine achievement.

It might be reduced to a 10-12 year project if there were two posts per day, staggered by a decade, e.g.:

  1st November 1919
  1st November 1929

I’m not sure such a Diary could be made to progress more quickly that that, due to the levels of research involved on some posts. Some days in New York would be very complex, others very easy. Though even determining the exact weather and night-sky at a particular spot on a particular day can be quite a challenge, more so if one also looks beyond the simple meteorological tables. Such things become even more difficult after the mid 1920s, due to the copyright lock-down. The authors of the blog would need to be solid Lovecraftians, and have access to all the letters published to date, and vast amounts of the scholarship.

The staff roster would probably need to be:

  * Chaser of weather, stars, migrations, moon and tides.
  * Collator of news events that Lovecraft may have noted.
  * Letter archivist and search wizard.
  * Letter reader and highlighter.
  * General Admin Assistant (who chases and feeds the above through to…)
  * The blog post summary-writer (who also notes sources, via footnotes).
  * Proofreader and hyper-linker of names/places in the resulting blog post.
  * Perhaps a quick-fire pen-&-ink sketch artist and sketch-mapper.
  * The Project Producer, a heavyweight scholarly oversight and backstop.

  * Editor of the 1890-1919 weekly/monthly summary, something on which someone might work alone.

Initially there might be a role for a graphic designer, perhaps working to evoke something of the feel of the old Almanacs which Lovecraft collected and enjoyed. Photos would probably be best left out, to be added judiciously in a final print edition, since really good picture research would be a very tough task on a daily basis.

Fellowship in H. P. Lovecraft 2020/21

03 Wednesday Jul 2019

Posted by asdjfdlkf in Scholarly works

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The S. T. Joshi Endowed Research Fellowship in H. P. Lovecraft page has been refreshed for 2020/21. Application deadline: 13th March 2020. “Residence at the John Hay Library to be completed by 30th June 2021.”

Published: Brumal’s Lovecraft issue

29 Saturday Jun 2019

Posted by asdjfdlkf in New books, Scholarly works

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Brumal, Vol. 7, No. 1 (2019), the special issue on “The fantastic universe of H.P. Lovecraft”. Public open access, and online now in full. Only the paper “H.P. Lovecraft on Screen” is in English. The editors’s introduction doesn’t (on translation) appear to be a summary of the papers, but on clicking through you’ll find that each paper’s record page has an English abstract.

The Arthurian Lovecraft

24 Monday Jun 2019

Posted by asdjfdlkf in Historical context, Scholarly works

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There was an “Armitage Handout on Lovecraftian Arthuriana” at the scholarly symposium at NecronomiCon 2017. Basically, a preliminary but useful list of King Arthur work which elides in some way with Lovecraft.

This has now been revised and updated as “Mergers of the Matter of Britain and Lovecraft’s Cthulhuan Mythos: A Preliminary Bibliography (Revised)” (May 2019), which is online and public.

Picture: Merlin, by a young Howard Pyle.

Research funding: New England Regional Fellowship Consortium

23 Sunday Jun 2019

Posted by asdjfdlkf in Scholarly works

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New England Regional Fellowship Consortium offers grants for new archival and museum research into areas including… “literature, history and art history, anthropology, oceanography”. Lovecraft research could potentially work across several such areas.

Are you working on a specialized topic that requires a depth of resources such as only New England can provide? The New England Regional Fellowship Consortium (NERFC), a collaboration of 27 major cultural agencies, will offer at least two dozen awards in 2019–2020.

This year’s deadline of 1st February 2019 has been and gone, but it’s annual so presumably a 2020-21 deadline will be rolling around in February 2020. By that time the Boston Public Library will be open again for applications to host a Research Fellow.

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