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Tentaclii

~ News & scholarship on H.P. Lovecraft

Tentaclii

Category Archives: Scholarly works

Added to Open Lovecraft

22 Sunday Jun 2014

Posted by asdjfdlkf in Scholarly works

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* Dustin Geeraert (2010), “Spectres of Darwin: H.P. Lovecraft’s nihilistic parody of religion”. (Masters disseration, University of Manitoba. An advanced work from an M.A. student. “In Lovecraft, one can find a response to Darwin which rather uniquely sympathizes with religious belief aesthetically, culturally and emotionally while simultaneously condemning it intellectually and scientifically”)

* Heath Row (2008), “H.P. Lovecraft’s Use of Dream and Elements of the Fairy Tale: a survey of five topics”, Hedge Trimmings, Vol.2, No.1, November 2008.

* James R. Russell (2011), “A Tale of Two Secret Books” (Paper
presented at ‘Knowledge to Die For: transmission of prohibited and esoteric knowledge through space and time’, 2nd-4th May 2011, Berlin, Germany. Looks at the Armenian compendium of ancient mathematico-magical texts, the Vec’hazareak or ‘Book of the Six Thousand’, and Lovecraft’s fictional Necronomicon)

* Jerome Alestro (2005?), “Du Cuachmar d’Innsmouth a la Metamorphose: aspects de la transformation” (In French. Appears to be a paper presented at a conference in 2005? Compares Lovecraft to Kafka, in relation to the conclusion of “The Shadow out of Innsmouth”)

* Rodolfo Munoz Casado (2012), “Los mitos de Cthulhu como movimiento literario” (PhD thesis for the University of Madrid. In Spanish. Seems to be a broad survey of Lovecraft’s influence?)

The Developing Storyworld of H.P. Lovecraft

21 Saturday Jun 2014

Posted by asdjfdlkf in New books, Scholarly works

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Appearing soon is a new academic book on popular culture, albeit with only one Lovecraft essay in it. Swedish adademic Van Leavenworth’s “The Developing Storyworld of H.P. Lovecraft” is the final essay in a chunky 340-page University of Nebraska book on transmedia storytelling (transmedia meaning: multiple linked stories told across multiple media, often with fan creators and re-mixers being as active as the original creators). Storyworlds across Media: Toward a Media-Conscious Narratology is set to ship at the start of July 2014.

I’ve only read the editor’s brief summary of the essay. But it sounds like the essay is not a historical study of Lovecraft’s role as the ur-site for the core structures and ‘structures of feeling’ of such participatory fan cultures. But I wonder if Lovecraft’s unique approach to fiction could have played a part in bringing about his own fan culture? I mean that a case might be made that Lovecraft, consciously or unconsciously, tapped into old oral culture forms of storytelling: what with his poet’s stress on precise internal rhythms and patterns; his almost archaic ring composition -like plot re-structures; his slow working up of primal ‘ancestral’ fears, often while evoking wild or strange or marginal types of landscapes; his tapping into New England’s oral folklore; and also how well his stories work and flow when read aloud by a compelling reader. This idea is not incongruous with the nascent desire of some in academia to make Lovecraft respectable by claiming him as a modernist. Since much of early modernism had deep tap roots in the primitive and the archaic. A Lovecraft who approached his audience with techniques based partly in oral culture would then presuppose — and perhaps organically draw to himself — a ‘recognising’ audience ready to play with, reinvent and pass along the stories being told. Many of whom were the children or grandchildren of immigrants steeped in a living oral culture. He certainly had that audience fairly early on, if only in small measure. But to then suppose the same cultural effect operating in the 1970s and 80s is probably just wishful academic thinking. A media industries history approach might instead suggest he was simply ready to start being co-opted by wider commercial forces: he had some cool monsters; many questing young paperback readers; and the spurious copyright claims were crumbling.

Sadly it appears Van Leavenworth doesn’t enjoy the stories themselves. I found someone noting that he complained at a conference of the… “leaden Lovecraft prose”. Which is perhaps a pity, since reading the stories as thinly veiled autobiography is another form of transmedia, especially when the reader knows the finer details of his biography via the abundant fan-scholarship and contextualising cultural histories. But, fair enough, it appears Leavenworth’s Storyworlds across Media essay is not about that. It’s labelled by the book’s editor as an “extensive case study” of the appeal of the post-Lovecraft Mythos and the constraints of genre for participating fans. He also engages with early transmedia theory, reportedly building on and challenging aspects of…

“Klastrup and Tosca’s concept of transmedial worlds [“Transmedial Worlds: Rethinking Cyberworld Design” (2004)] as abstract content systems”.

For his essay’s actual case-studies Van Leavenworth thankfully avoids the ‘plushy-dolls ‘n occult loons’ end of the Mythos spectrum, instead focussing on discussing: the HPL Historical Society’s Cthulhu movie; the Call of Cthulhu tabletop RPG game; and the interactive fiction Anchorhead.

At conferences Van Leavenworth has reportedly previously argued that two key elements in the fan popularity of the Mythos are: i) “the loss of control involved in ‘cosmic fear'”; and ii) “humanity’s inability to understand cosmic knowledge”. His conference papers aren’t online, but I guess this means that these factors naturally appeal to intelligent and sensitive readers, and as such they provide a fairly flexible post/non/anti-religious cultural base on which to build new stories that seek some kind of spiritual accommodation with the universe. Of the sort perhaps exemplified by the Derleth strand of the Mythos. The task for the cultural historian might then be to explain how much of that initial cosmic appeal gets seeded into the later and more diluted fan-works, and if those works are then potent enough in themselves to sustain those two key elements which make for fan popularity. If not, then other cultural mechanisms will need to be found to explain the ongoing longevity of the Mythos culture, especially for those participants who never read or who actively dislike the stories. For such “yaps and nitwits” (Lovecraft’s words) perhaps the Mythos is just about the cool monsters and scaring your credulous girlfriend with tales of owning the Necronomicon (“like, it’s real, girl…!”).

“I seemed to puzzle the lecturers now and then…”

19 Thursday Jun 2014

Posted by asdjfdlkf in Scholarly works

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Roger Luckhurst (he of the “savaged by Joshi” fame) pops up in the Times Higher education newspaper today, with an article “Tentacles: the new fangs”…

Sea monsters are inspiring new critical theory and can even be a useful tool in the seminar room

Who knew?

tentclass

Added to Open Lovecraft

18 Wednesday Jun 2014

Posted by asdjfdlkf in Scholarly works

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* Cole Nelson (2014), “Devils in the Wilderness”: The Character of Wilderness in American Horror Fiction, University of Wisconsin-La Crosse Journal of Undergraduate Research XVII, 2014. “The Dunwich Horror” is one of three texts analysed. Explores the idea that description of wilderness in horror might be influenced by the manner of social deviance at the time of writing)

* Eric LaFreniere (2010), “An Awe-ful Integrity: The Science-Fiction Horror of H.P. Lovecraft” (2nd Place Winner of the long research essay category in the Madison Writing Awards 2010, James Madison University)

* Olmo Pedro Castrillo Cano (2013), “Memoria Explicativa del Trabajo de Fin de Master, “The Shadow over Innsmouth”” (In Spanish. Title roughly translates as: “An Explanatory Memorandum on The Work of The Master in “The Shadow Over Innsmouth””. For the University of Seville, Dept. of Communication. Seems to be an analysis of “Innsmouth”, possibly as part of adapating it as a film? script?)

* S.T. Joshi (trans. Alexander Pechmann), Das Ubernaturlich Grauen in der Literatur (In German. Appears to be a substantial free PDF sample of Golkonda Verlag’s German language edition of S.T. Joshi’s Annotated Supernatural Horror in Literature)

Phillips Genealogies (1885)

17 Tuesday Jun 2014

Posted by asdjfdlkf in Historical context, Scholarly works

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The full text of the book Phillips Genealogies (1885). This is probably a key source from which Lovecraft constructed his family tree as he knew it: I read in the footnotes for the recent H.P. Lovecraft in the Merrimack Valley that this point has been suggested by Kenneth W. Faig Jr. Or I wonder if perhaps the book may have been used by Lovecraft’s maternal grandmother Robie (‘Rhoby’), who died in 1896 and who had apparently done much work on the family tree?

phillips

Added to Open Lovecraft

16 Monday Jun 2014

Posted by asdjfdlkf in Scholarly works

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* Vicente Quirarte (2014), “Morir en Azcapotzalco”, Revista de la Universidad de Mexico, No. 122, 2014. (In Spanish. Note that the HTML version of this article appears prematurely truncated. Muses on what might have happened had Lovecraft followed Barlow into exile in Mexico City, in order to recuperate from his survived illness. The author supposes that there Barlow would have gladly acted as typist for Lovecraft, and the climate would also have encouraged new fiction writing. With a legacy from Barlow’s aunt, the two friends would set up house together and Lovecraft discover a new sunset paradise amid the summer estate villas and strict social hierarchy of Mexico. Lovecraft would learn to read and write Spanish, and thus directly influence the peak years of early magic realism. However, the illness would return and Lovecraft dies in 1945. Barlow — having the income from Lovecraft’s estate and so not needing to teach classes — escapes homosexual blackmail by a student and thus lives to 80, and so Derleth never gets a look-in. These musings are made on the occasion of the publication of a book of Spanish translations of the works of Barlow and Lovecaft. The PDF version of this article appears to be a longer version of the 2012 blog post “Lovecraft, Barlow y Azcapotzalco”).

Added to Open Lovecraft

15 Sunday Jun 2014

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* Stefano Lazzarin (2014), “Il volto velato: Iperbole e reticenza in Howard Phillips Lovecraft, e nel racconto fantastico e d’orrore otto-novecentesco”, Between journal, Vol 4, No.7, 2014. (In Italian. “Lovecraft … as part of a certain line of nineteenth- and twentieth-century fantastic genre and horror literature [which] plays with — and reflects on — the rhetorical devices of hyperbole and reticence. In the texts examined by the author, what cannot be represented is chased throughout the story and is finally revealed, but only to leave room for an irresolvable ambiguity … The last horror, unnameable and unthinkable, is nothing more than an empty signifier.” In Italian.)

“A sort of mad-eyed monstrosity behind the leader…”

13 Friday Jun 2014

Posted by asdjfdlkf in Historical context, Scholarly works

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The Organization of American Historians is holding their 2016 conference in Providence. The conference theme is “Leadership in America”, so on that basis I guess there might be room to shoehorn Lovecraft in there? Which would be fitting, as the conference will be in Providence.

Perhaps a paper titled something like… ‘Corresponding Leaderships: H. P. Lovecraft as leader of the amateur journalism movement’. Looking not at the tedious minutiae of the posts he occupied and the twist and turns of his leaderships-by-correspondence, but at Lovecraft as an example of the sort of people who gained skills from leading an autonomous literary open movement that was — perhaps for the first time in world history — outside of religion or party/single-issue politics, free of pre-publication censorship, and which consciously tried to overcome boundaries (gender, income, education, and geography) between members.

“I was lectured upon as a typical example…”

13 Friday Jun 2014

Posted by asdjfdlkf in Scholarly works

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72nd World SF Convention, London in August 2014. The keynote academic speaker is Isabella van Elferen (author of the book Gothic Music: The Sounds of the Uncanny), on “In Space, No One Can Hear David Bowie: A Brief History of Unheard Music”…

Few authors have described the terrifying silence of space more grippingly than H. P. Lovecraft, whose stories narrate the “black seas of infinity” surrounding human life. But the vacuum of space, Lovecraft asserts, listens. Through the “audient void” of his universe voiceless sounds resonate. Detestable, gigantic, absurd … What could this arch-alien possibly sound like?

MLA 2015: “Weird Fiction, Weird Methods” roundtable

13 Friday Jun 2014

Posted by asdjfdlkf in Scholarly works

≈ 1 Comment

MLA 2015 Vancouver, session roundtable on “Weird Fiction, Weird Methods”. Does weird fiction have a single coherent approach and origin? Does it need to be read and studied differently than other fiction? Can it find a place in academia, or is it just too… weird?

* Kate Marshall (elements of American naturalist literature may have been co-opted by the early weird)

* S. T. Joshi (recapping Lovecraft’s theories of the weird)

* Ali Sperling (the early literary weird should be understood as part of the history of modernist literature)

* Matthew Taylor (what the new Speculative Realist philosophy has taken from the old weird, especially re: autonomous self-generating systems that have unhuman frames of reference)

* Eileen Joy (can academics develop a weird methodology for weird literature, by borrowing ideas from the philosophers of OOO Speculative Realism?)

Rediscovering the Deep Sahara

12 Thursday Jun 2014

Posted by asdjfdlkf in Podcasts etc., Scholarly works

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New 90 minute podcast from the Long Now Foundation. Stefan Kroepelin on “Civilization’s Mysterious Desert Cradle: Rediscovering the Deep Sahara” (.mp3 link. Starts at 4:10).

Kroepelin has survived every kind of desert hardship to discover the climate and cultural history of northern Africa. He found that the “Green Sahara” arrived with monsoon rains 10,500 years ago, and people quickly moved into the new fertile savannah. There they prospered as cattle pastoralists — their elaborate rock paintings show herds of rhinoceros and scenes of prehistoric life — until 7,300 years ago, when gradually increasing desiccation drove them to the Nile river, which they had previously considered too dangerous for occupation. To manage the Nile, the former pastoralists helped to invent a Pharaonic state 5,100 years ago. Its 3,000-year continuity has never been surpassed. Kroepelin, a climate scientist at the University of Cologne, is a dazzling speaker with hair-raising stories.

nameless_1280

Unknown Friends of H. P. Lovecraft: No.1, Chester Alwyn Mowry

11 Wednesday Jun 2014

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

≈ 3 Comments

I’m very pleased that the legendary Lovecraft researcher Randy Everts has chosen Tentaclii to help publish an important new essay on Lovecraft in Providence. His essay reveals, for the first time, one of Lovecraft’s previously unknown local friends — Chester Alywn Mowry (1898-1945).

With his permission I have slightly tweaked the essay, formatted it with my usual book style, and added my footnotes plus a few extra pictures. My thanks to Randy for this great opportunity.

   “Yeh—keep it up [meaning, the use of new American slang and twang], & you’ll have even Mowry rolling his rrr … ’s in mid-western style yet!” (Letter from Lovecraft to James F. Morton of January 1928).

Download: Randy Everts, “Unknown Friends of H. P. Lovecraft: No.1, Chester Alwyn Mowry”. (PDF, formatted for 6″ x 9″ print, 8,000 words inc. footnotes).

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