if a morpho butterfly was a person
Mana Sama 「Merveilles」
everybody in WH is a villain
heathcliff is a villain but you also have to admit the racist, classist society kinda had it coming 🗿
somehow, it looks like a beautiful world, all those thin landforms surrounded by sea
map of the world where the countries are weighted by speakers of the brahui language...
This is extremely important
I can't remember what part of Homestuck deals with this though
My take: it is nevertheless okay to be afraid of sludge. Just because it's connected to life doesn't mean it's wrong to be disgusted, it's just part of the experience... don't feel bad about feeling repulsed by the universe and life itself
i feel like a lot of fiction forgets (or purposefully ignores) the fact life is intrinsically, inextricably linked to *filth*
to *garbage*
shit gets *gross* and if you clean it it will quickly get gross again regardless
the total absence of the disgusting is uncanny
don't be afraid of the sludge
(works that understand this include discworld, significant parts of 40k, blame!, and homestuck, as well as the undisputed king of grime and sludge; dorohedoro. dorohedoro *fucks* absolutely)
Evillious ❤ my favourite is Capriccio Farce
Interesting: in the title of Capriccio Farce, the word being translated as 'farce' is 茶番 "Chaban" which referred originally to a specific kind of popular theatrical entertainment. The author Jun'ichirō Tanizaki witnessed these performances as a child, and described them in his writing as being very violent, with content taken from true crime cases or military history. They were performed at a Shinto shrine in his neighbourhood. However, it's possible that only the specific Chaban troupe Tanizaki saw performing had this particular, violent aesthetic.
this is a photo of Guarino Guarini's church, Santissima Annunziata dei Teatini, before it was destroyed by the Messina earthquake in 1908.
Because the image has colour, it's interesting to pretend it's current day but just blurry. It looks like something you could encounter in your daily life
I didn't realize there were images of the fire happening.
I could say, "it's inevitable with wooden architecture." But maybe it's better to not make excuses and to feel the sense of loss
Temple of the Golden Pavilion, a Buddhist temple in Kyoto, Japan, burned down by a schizophrenic monk, 1950, it was rebuilt in 1955
It's a probably a distortion based on whoever stopped sending Zheng He
*Looks up* the Hongxi and Xuande emperors.
Totally a wrong narrative, really it was admirable that these emperors didn't want to go down the overseas colonization path + they never closed off the country
a while ago i heard someone say “it’s crazy to think that china used to be a world superpower, and then one of their emperors decided he hated all foreigners and completely closed the country off, and they’ve never recovered since. imagine what they could have been if not for that one man’s decision” and the thing that drives me nuts is i know a lot of chinese history and i cannot for the life of me think who this might be about
attr. Sang Schichuan, Public domain, via Wikimedia Commons
The Burning of the Red Lotus Temple
A lot of people perceived her as being cringe for political reasons, but they didn't realize that all British classicists are cringe
like how Armand d'Angour did good work reconstructing Ancient Greek music, but his poetry is truly repulsive
the emily wilson odyssey discourse happening is so funny because. yeah. if you actually sit down and try to do a strict translation of most ~epic poems~ they don't sound ~epic~ at all. sometimes they sound flat out stupid, even after you're done fixing the syntax for english. this is true of pretty much every Ancient Text.