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Tentaclii

~ News & scholarship on H.P. Lovecraft

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Category Archives: Scholarly works

Jean Monnet University Lovecraft symposium, January 2018

27 Tuesday Nov 2018

Posted by asdjfdlkf in Scholarly works

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Abridged translation of a report on a two-day symposium on Lovecraft, held in January 2018 at Jean Monnet University, Saint-Etienne, France.


Students, researchers, translators, publishers or writers of H.P. Lovecraft gathered at Jean Monnet University on the 29th and 30th of January 2018. The event was organised by Anne Bechard Leaute (Lecturer in English and Anglo-Saxon Language ​​and Literature) and Arnaud Moussart (Associate Professor), as well as by the CIEREC laboratory (Interdisciplinary Center for Studies and Research on Expression Contemporaine).

The first day took the form of a writing workshop led by the writer Francois Bon, translator of Lovecraft. Bon chose to build on Lovecraft’s “Commonplace Book”, aiming to have attendees begin thinking about the importance of ‘the fragment’, and Lovecraft’s ability to reduce stories to their simplest plot-germ while also retaining suggestiveness. Participants then adopted a Lovecraftian technique to attempt to produce their own fantastic stories [implied: from ideas in the “Commonplace Book”].

The second day began with the reading of different texts composed by the participants of the writing workshop. Then the presentation of papers opened, with a lecture by François Bon on the matter of translation. The archaism of certain syntactical structures, or the omnipresence of the semicolon, are all elements which must be the object of the greatest respect on the part of the translator of Lovecraft, and the translator must not attempt to ‘correlate the contents’. Because each sentence has its own unique function in the text, and thus it is useless to anticipate its role in the total construction of the new work.

Francois Bon explained that he considers the sum of Lovecraft’s writings as a vast ecosystem made up of correspondences, postcards, diaries, manuscripts, notes, drafts, many preserved in handwritten notebooks and letters written with the greatest care. He also sketched the portrait of Lovecraft as a man constantly on the move in summer, a man who happily recounts his diurnal excursions and travels to places from Narragansett to Mobile, from New York to Florida, all the while witnessing a modernizing America.

Olivier Glain, Lecturer in English Linguistics and Semiotics of the Arts at Jean Monnet University, presented a paper entitled “New England Dialect Events in Lovecraft”. Relying mainly on the new “The Shadow Over Innsmouth” [translation?] and more specifically on the dialect speech of Zadok, Olivier noted some variations not present in the actual local speech. This raises the possibility that Lovecraft was mixing several several dialects together for Zadok’s dialogue. Glain also suggested, among other things, that the character of Zadok Allen is not raucous in speech, which is surprising since it is one of the main features of New England. [“raucous” may be a mis-translation of a technical term used among dialect specialists? It might refer to the rolling of r’s rather than raucous shouting.]

Sophie Chapuis, lecturer in American literature at Jean Monnet University, spoke on the difficulties posed by the translation of the new “The Color Out of Space”. The task of the translator is complicated, due to the need to try to put into words what Lovecraft fails to say. Lovecraft uses what Gilles Menegaldo has called an “under-language” of syntactic breaks and interstices into which the monstrous eventually erupts.

Masters degree Communication student Robin Gire spoke on the sublime in Lovecraft, specifically in relation to adjectives such as “strange”, “ancient”, “hideous”.

Christophe Thill gave a 30 minute talk on “Coordinating a large-scale translation of a work on Lovecraft: the example of translating I Am Providence by S.T. Joshi”. Five pages of standards were devised, to enforce consistency across the translation of the thirty chapters, by multiple translators.

Jerome Dutel, lecturer in comparative literature at Jean Monnet University, presented a paper on Lovecraftian imagery today, mainly in pop culture. Entitled “My son! What did they do to you? The denaturing of Cthulhu” he looked at four parody caricatures of Cthulhu. Cthulhu has become a universally recognised character, and yet even in parody each use expands his power of popular suggestion and future incarnation.

The second day ended with the opening of the gallery exhibition “Objets-Pieges”, showing the completed artworks made by students on a Masters degree course. Their “Art Edition, Book of Artists” drew on Lovecraft’s “Commonplace Book”. The resulting works are protean and have various inspirations. A few even draw on the very concept of the “Commonplace Book”, rather than the book’s individual plot-germs, or draw on Lovecraft’s literary obsession with forbidden books, notebooks and fragmentary notes.

The Alphabet of Walking: a new anthology

25 Sunday Nov 2018

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When I recently made the new Free Stuff page on this blog, I forgot The Alphabet of Walking: a new anthology, which I made as a side-project from my book Walking with Cthulhu: H.P. Lovecraft as psychogeographer, New York City 1924-26. I’ve now restored the broken link to this PDF, and added it to the Free Stuff page.

“H.P. Lovecraft and Great Zimbabwe”

17 Saturday Nov 2018

Posted by asdjfdlkf in Historical context, Scholarly works

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A new free sample essay from my book Lovecraft In Historical Context: the fifth collection (2014). “H.P. Lovecraft and Great Zimbabwe”.

Update: due to popular demand I’ve re-uploaded it in colour rather than black and white.

Rootwork

16 Friday Nov 2018

Posted by asdjfdlkf in Historical context, Scholarly works

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Now free on Archive.org, a huge encyclopaedic compendium of folk-beliefs about the ‘active supernatural’, that could still be found being expressed by folks in America during the 1930s. The beliefs are exhaustively categorised by type, in the manner of the theme-sorting ethnographic folklorists and fairy-tale sifters of the period (sadly, sci-fi has never had a similarly completist look-up volume containing an index of all of its themes and concepts).

Many of the book’s ‘folklore collecting points’ overlap with areas encompassed by Lovecraft’s annual summer travels.

My red dots, for clarity. South Carolina is a probable dot as well, but I can’t be sure.

This defunct historical lore is possibly most useful, these days, as a set of Oblique Strategies-like ideas which writers can use to inspire new works. Open at random three times, pick an idea randomly from each of the three pages, then think of a setting that might contain and combine them all in some way. Add characters, and devise the skeleton plot framework.

New book – 21st-Century Horror: Weird Fiction at the Turn of the Millennium

13 Tuesday Nov 2018

Posted by asdjfdlkf in Censorship, New books, Scholarly works

≈ 4 Comments

S.T. Joshi’s new book 21st-Century Horror: Weird Fiction at the Turn of the Millennium is now available in paper. It’s had to be self-published, in order to beat leftist threats of a ‘boycott’ of any publisher who dared publish the book. The threats simply had the effect of moving the title from a limited-edition PS Publishing niche hardback, to an affordable mass-market paperback on Amazon. No Kindle edition is yet visible to Amazon UK, but I expect there will also be a Kindle ebook edition soon, hopefully with a more appealing front cover. (Update: £3 Kindle edition now available).

The book surveys recent weird fiction with the usual Joshi straightforwardness, familiar to readers of similar books such as The Rise, Fall, and Rise of the Cthulhu Mythos (2015).

And, by silent implication… “The Unmentionables”.

“By Crom, ’tis huge!”

11 Sunday Nov 2018

Posted by asdjfdlkf in REH, Scholarly works

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Messages from Crom spots the online pages for the Glenn Lord Collection of Robert E. Howard: A Preliminary Inventory of the Collection at the Harry Ransom Center. A huge 32 archival boxes, complete with a 2.6Mb .XLS spreadsheet download — which an internal date-stamp says was last updated October 2018.

Europe

11 Sunday Nov 2018

Posted by asdjfdlkf in New books, Scholarly works

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The long-running Europe literary journal had a Lovecraft and Tolkien special in April 2016 (No. 1044), with essays in French.

J.R.R. Tolkien et Georges Dumezil.
J.R.R. Tolkien et (l’)Europe.
Peut-on (re)traduire J.R.R. Tolkien?
Tolkien et la fantasy, encore et toujours.

H.P. Lovecraft et l’imaginaire Americain.
Lovecraft a l’ecran.
Le jour ou Cthulhu a traverse les Pyrenees.

Une reinvention du fantastique.
Entre la magie et la terreur.

Plus many reviews and lecture reports.


J.R.R. Tolkien and Georges Dumezil.
J.R.R. Tolkien and Europe.
Can we (re)translate J.R.R. Tolkien?
Tolkien and fantasy, again and again.

H.P. Lovecraft and the American imagination.
Lovecraft and the screen.
The day Cthulhu crossed the Pyrenees.

A reinvention of the fantastic.
Between magic and terror.

Theology and horror – call for abstracts

08 Thursday Nov 2018

Posted by asdjfdlkf in New books, Scholarly works

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A call for abstracts, for the academic book Theology and Horror.


Explorations of the relationship between religion and horror are fairly well established. However, this is not the case for theology and horror. Many times explorations of theology and horror involve simplistic readings in which theological concepts or doctrines are spotted within horror narratives and noted as points of connection. While this approach has its place, great possibilities exist for going deeper and wider in the exploration of horror and theology.

[The book will explore] how theology is present in horror [and suggest] how theology can be changed and shaped by an interaction with horror. [It will be] co-edited by John Morehead and Brandon R. Grafius. Morehead is the proprietor of TheoFantastique.com, and is a contributor, editor and co-editor to a number of books including The Undead and Theology, Joss Whedon and Religion, The Supernatural Cinema of Guillermo del Toro, and Fantastic Fan Cultures and the Sacred (forthcoming). Grafius is assistant professor of Biblical Studies at Ecumenical Theological Seminary.

Abstracts of 300-500 words with CVs should be sent to johnwmorehead@msn.com and bgrafius@etseminary.edu by 15th January 2019. The submission deadline for drafts of manuscripts of 6,000-8,000 words is scheduled for 1st September 2019.

Pulpster 2019 – call

06 Tuesday Nov 2018

Posted by asdjfdlkf in New books, Scholarly works

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The Pulpster magazine calls for contributions for 2019. The associated PulpFest 2019 convention theme is to be “Children of the Pulps”, which seems to mean the continuation of pulp characters into other media. But The Pulpster editor is casting his net wider. Advertising space is also up for grabs.


Picture: #24 (2015) the Lovecraft special of The Pulpster.

‘Further Reading’ for Simak

05 Monday Nov 2018

Posted by asdjfdlkf in Scholarly works

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I’ve added a ‘Further Reading’ section to my long post “Rediscovering Clifford D. Simak” of a few days ago. Includes a link to a PDF of the excellent biographical profile by Sam Moskowitz, “The Saintly Heresy of Clifford D. Simak”, Amazing Stories, June 1962.

Part-time Librarian (Science Fiction Collections)

02 Friday Nov 2018

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Now recruiting, a Part-time (0.7) Librarian for the Science Fiction Collections at the University of Liverpool. It’s our leading centre for Science Fiction Studies in the UK, and has a fine collection. The disadvantage here is you’d most likely have to live in Liverpool, a coastal shipping city in the North-West of England that’s seen better days.

‘The Decline of the West’ on Kindle

28 Sunday Oct 2018

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

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I see that S. T. Joshi’s H. P. Lovecraft: The Decline of the West was made available as a Kindle ebook since the end of summer 2018, and now sports a very reasonable pocket-money price.

It’s the fullest account of ‘Lovecraft the philosopher’ and his wide range of influences in that field. Also the influence on him of what might be called ‘the phantasm of decline’ — that strangely popular but nebulous apparition that haunts gloomy intellectuals, and which leads them to believe that civilisational collapse is forever just around the corner. (As a corrective, see heavyweight books such as: Ridley’s The Rational Optimist; Paul Johnson’s Intellectuals; Herman’s The Idea of Decline in Western History, and my ongoing 2020 blog). Perhaps also Staring Into Chaos: Explorations in the Decline of Western Civilization; and The Perennial Apocalypse: How the End of the World Shapes History.

Joshi writes clearly and precisely as usual, and the book is usefully untainted by airy academic genuflections toward the latest idols of literary-political theory. The Decline of the West was previously available as an oversize paperback, which has a two-column layout — which some may prefer for the task of ploughing through dense philosophical triangulations. On the other hand, the ebook is keyword-searchable, which means that Lovecraft scholars may want to own both editions — though you may chuckle at such a heavyweight ebook having a toy-like ‘stop-motion Cthulhu’ on the front cover. Such are the demands of trigger-finger ebook marketing today, I suppose — ‘no monster, no sales’.

Purchasers will also want to have on their Kindle the texts available from my 2014 blog post Lovecraft as Philosopher, these being a sniffy review of Decline of the West and Joshi’s magisterial demolition of the review.

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