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Quote for today

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Learned Hand, ca 1910

Liberty lies in the hearts of men and women; when it dies there, no constitution, no law, no court can save it; no constitution, no law, no court can even do much to help it. (wikiquotes)

 

Happy Christmas from Florida

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Bathing scene, St. Cloud, Fla. Xmas, 1912, Digital Collections, Tampa Library, University of South Florida. http://digital.lib.usf.edu/SFS0010636/00001
Florida Christmas cheer. 1925. Color postcard. State Archives of Florida, Florida Memory. Accessed 21 Nov. 2018.<https://www.floridamemory.com/items/show/157561>.
Christmas greetings from Florida. between 1907 and 1919. Color postcard. State Archives of Florida, Florida Memory. Accessed 21 Nov. 2018.<https://www.floridamemory.com/items/show/157557>.

Meta-idiot’s guide to meta

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In some of our earliest schooling we learn about metaphors.  Perhaps we even read Kafka’s Metamorphosis (wikipedia).  By college, we look into metaphysics, or know enough about it that we do not want to know more.  Meta, a Greek preposition, is used in several English words to indicate a concept which is an abstraction of another concept (wikipedia).  Yet, today, it seems to have taken on a new life where there is a meta version of most any word or concept you can imagine.  I tested this theory, brainstorming what I thought were ridiculous meta permutations.  Then I looked them up and discovered that all but one of them was actually in use by someone, somewhere.  This is my meta-idiot’s guide to meta.Continue reading Meta-idiot’s guide to meta

NaNoWriMo 2018

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I am turning my sights to NaNoWriMo; it is fast approaching. It’s been sometime since I managed to participate in a monthly challenge. It feels both like I am out of practice and like going home. What will I write? Should I cheat and use the challenge to finish a story that is half done? Should I write a compilation of short stories?

More importantly, what will you write? Find me on NaNoWriMo.org and be my writing buddy!

Cryptids

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No surprise I love a good cryptid story. Now you can make your own, just like I did, with the Hybridizer. Have fun!

Perception, Gender, Identity, and Otherness: Un-Defining the Giallo Film

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Introduction

Any discussion on the origin of the giallo, whether the discussion is concerned with the literature or the film phenomenon, will most likely begin with an explanation that the giallo took its name from the yellow book covers used by Mondadori to color code their mystery novel publications (Pieri, 2011; Koven, 2006; Needham, 2002).  Eventually, giallo became a term used for any type of detective fiction, story with a mystery element, or intrigue.  Mikel Koven would coin it a “metonym for the entire mystery genre (2006 p2-3).” Initially, between WWI and WWII, the stories were imported from the UK, America, and France.  The foreignness helped to distance the stories of crime and murder from Italian readers while also becoming so attractive an element that Italian authors began to adopt anglicized pseudonyms to put their locally produced work on even footing with the popular imports (Pierri, 2011; Needham, 2002).   Italian writers of the giallo faced another hurdle in competing with the foreign imports in the strict oversight and censorship in the Fascist regime pre WWII for their production of what was considered low brow literature.  This label of ‘low brow’ followed the giallo from literature to film when the movies rose as a genre in the 60s and 70s, sometimes considered a component of a larger movement in Italian Fantasy Cinema that included horror (Palmerini & Mistretta, 1996).  The giallo in film has been popularly defined by its characteristics, by time period, and by driving personalities.  It has been said to be an “auteurist domain,” defined by the directorial names that made the most memorable examples of the genre; defined by Argento (Heller-Nicholas, 2012; Palmerini & Mistretts, 1996).  However, similar to the debate over the rigid, proscribed, and repetitive structure of crime fiction literature giving way, through that very repetition, to a dynamic and flexible reimagining of the genre (Maher & Pezzotti, 2017), the cinematic giallo has also been described as having “an inherently ambivalent form (Koven, 2010 p144)”.  Despite the giallo’s formulaic narratives and repetitious plot elements, the genre can seem even less definable in film than in literature, and may represent a cultural exchange that only adds to its fluidity and timelessness (Heller-Nicholas, 2012).  As Gary Needham thoroughly points out:

“One interesting point about the giallo in its cinematic form is that it appears to be less fixed as a genre than its written counterpart. The term itself doesn’t indicate, as genres often do, an essence, a description or a feeling. It functions in a more peculiar and flexible manner as a conceptual category with highly movable and permeable boundaries that shift around from year to year…  (2002)”

What follows is an exploration into the phenomenon of and discourse on the cinematic giallo, as it is intrinsically linked to giallo literature and to the unique historical environment in which it evolved, to determine what, if any, are the defining elements that make a film a giallo.  Perhaps like it’s literature forebears, the giallo’s blending of characteristics from different genres creates “dynamic conceptual structures” that cannot be defined without allowing for blurred boundaries (Maher & Pezzotti, 2017 p9).Continue reading Perception, Gender, Identity, and Otherness: Un-Defining the Giallo Film

Fan Fail, apologies to Mr. Twain

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I thought that I was a fan of Mark Twain’s work, though I would usually specify that I enjoyed his essays and sketches more than the novels he is typically known for.  I have to admit, I am not a very good fan, perhaps of anything, because it never occurred to me to find out any more.  I never knew that while working as a typesetting apprentice on his older brother’s newspaper he began penning humorous stories under pseudonyms, or that he would continue this pseudonymous writing on other papers.  I knew that Mark Twain was a pseudonym, but I never knew that it was simply a later and greater pseudonym that followed:  W. Epaminondas Adrastus Perkins, W. Epaminondas Adrastus Blab, Rambler, grumbler, Peter Pencilcase’s Son, John Snooks, and Thomas Jefferson Snodgrass, and A Dog-Be-Deviled Citizen…  A curious and, perhaps tenacious, view through Chronicling America can call up some of these early articles (example left from the Hannibal Journal September 16, 1852).

My fandom was renewed recently when reading Kipling’s account of searching out and meeting Mr. Samuel Clemens in his 1890 ‘Letter Twenty:  Rudyard Kipling on Mark Twain’ in Kipling’s America:  Travel Letters, 1889-1895.  Of course their conversation turned to copyright as it was one of Mr. Clemens’ favorite topics of the time.  Of course this is what I was looking for, as it is one of my favorite topics now.

For those of you who, like me, may want to improve their fandom of Mark Twain I highly recommend the PBS Documentary.

Summer Fancy from Puck

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From Puck Magazine 1879 volume 5 on the HathiTrust

Making research

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I’ve been attempting to organize the information I have gathered during my search for author voices in copyright discussion. I put a bunch of it in a timeline and though it is not done yet, it has helped me see some patterns and questions that I had not seen before.  Take a look around if you are so inclined.

Sea Witch

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Past Blast

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Columbia (representing the American people) reaches out to oppressed Cuba with blindfolded Uncle Sam in background; Judge Feb. 6, 1897; cartoon by Grant E. Hamilton

Remembering America

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Star Spangled Banner; Library of Congress LC-DIG-pga-09877
Columbia

 

Before there was an Uncle Sam, the original thirteen colonies that made up a young U.S. were known as Brother Johnathan. He was a rougher version of the U.S., elaborated on at Atlas Obscura, that was balanced by the compassion, liberty, and pride of Columbia.

Columbia (above) hasn’t really been in circulation since the first World War, but her message and presence is more welcoming, compassionate, and nurturing. She was, like the Statue of Liberty, a welcoming beacon.

Happy Independence Day!

Unexpected Consequence of Compost

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Surprise tomato with nasturtiums behind and pineapples in upper right.

This year, I was determined. I was going to direct sow seeds into the garden beds in my back yard and grow something. I watered them every day and was rewarded, after an inordinately long time, with tiny little sprouty things.  I planted nasturtiums, lemon balm, and lemon grass.  I received nasturtiums and tomatoes.

Pretty amazing, right?  Almost magic.  After some head scratching and wondering if the seed company had somehow got it hilariously wrong I realized something.  Besides the lemon balm and lemon grass seeds that didn’t sprout, I had unwittingly sown tomato seeds into the bed fresh from the compost heap I raided to amend the dirt.

I have fuzzy memories of watching a Martha Stewart episode, or some such, that talked about how to harvest tomato seeds for your own garden and it involved rotting the gelatinous protective shell of the seeds before they could be planted.  Well, in a compost heap this happens naturally right?  Now, I’m just as lazy a composter as I am a gardener, so I’m probably not doing something right, like creating an environment where a lot of heat is generated.  I just throw fruit and vegetable waste on the heap and cover it with the leaves and grass clippings that are also  on the heap.  Nature does the rest.  So now, I am half expecting random tomatoes in every amended bed.  It adds some randomness.

Googling my name

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Like everyone does, every now and then I Google myself. It’s good to keep track of the image of me that others find, but I also do it to scope out other LeEttas. Most recently my search turned up a result for a babyname database, babycenter.com. Though the entry for LeEtta isn’t fleshed out a meaning, provenance, or variations (of course) it did have an awesome graph of the name’s popularity over time.  It seems like 1938 was the most popular year for LeEtta with 15 babies in a million having that name. By 1989 it’s only 2 per million.

I had some time on my hands a while ago and input the Leetta/LeEtta results of three different census, 1860, 1900, & 1940, into Google Maps. Both the increase in names and the progression west must correlate to population increase and migration, though I haven’t tested for either.

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