intertext: (fillyjonk)
Thursday, May 7th, 2009 01:47 pm
Let's start with the delightful "blog" of "unnecessary" quotation marks. Along with the proliferation of apostrophes where no apostrophe needs to be, we see "quotation marks" all over the place. Someone is keeping track and commenting dryly on them.

I find this one fascinating: The Book Depository Live. Watch in real time as people all over the world buy books. Why I should be mesmerized by seeing someone buying Neil Gaiman's Anansi Boys in Sweden, I don't really know. It's the magic of the WWW.

And a link for Shakespeare buffs to add to their bookmarks: Shakespeare and Film: A Microblog. Great source of news on new and old movie versions, dvd releases (including David!! Tennant's!! Hamlet!!!), and useful YouTube clips.


(crossposted on College English)
intertext: (fillyjonk)
Saturday, October 25th, 2008 09:28 am
My posting has been remiss, lately. I hope to have something exciting to post about tomorrow, and I'm planning on signing up for Noblomo... whatever it is (the blog one, not the novel one). Meanwhile, have some links:

Jeanette Winterson on Sarah Palin. She writes that having Palin would be like having Mrs Winterson in the White House, and that Pentecostalism takes all the nastier bits from the Old and New Testaments and turns them into tenets for life. Yuck. As if anyone needed any more reason not to vote for McCain (do not fail me, US friends!).

From [livejournal.com profile] the_red_shoes via [livejournal.com profile] wordweaverlynn, Rozencrantz and Guildenstern are TA's. This is brilliant.

From [livejournal.com profile] arcana_mundi The Little People Project. Would that I were in London and could stumble over one of them...

Most of you don't know that I collect bookmarks (no, not delicious ones, real ones, the ones they call "marquepages" in France). Here is a wonderful resource that I could get lost in. Thank you to [livejournal.com profile] david_de_beer for the link.

Oh, and in other news, my ultimate guilty pleasure, ultimate comfort read, Mercedes Lackey, has a new Valdemar book coming out. It looks to be exactly like all the rest (mistreated, misunderstood hero is "chosen" by Companion and makes good) but isn't that what ultimate comfort reads are all about?
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intertext: (Default)
Monday, August 11th, 2008 11:08 am
So many links, so little time.

An English teacher's wet dream: George Orwell hath a blog. His diaries are being published in "real" time, beginning with August 9, 1938/August 9, 2008 and will go on until 2020. They are annotated, too, just to add to the delight. I keep hoping some day someone will do this with Virginia Woolf...

To publicize the reissue of Gentleman Jim, there is an interview with Raymond Briggs in the Observer. He sounds just like the characters in his books (even Fungus).

For your viewing pleasure: just a beautiful website.

And this has been sitting in my delicious links for a while: The Little Professor posts on The Practical Applications of Gothic Fiction.
intertext: (Default)
Tuesday, October 30th, 2007 04:09 am
If you are an Edward Gorey fan, or a Star Trek fan, or, better yet, both (like me) - please go and have a look at The Trouble With Tribbles done by "Edward Gorey," if you haven't seen it yet.

Link courtesy of the always reliable Cabinet of Wonders
intertext: (pride and prejudice)
Tuesday, October 2nd, 2007 11:59 am
Crossposted at College English

In keeping with the current "Jane" trend, here is a lovely blog on all things Austen. Not only are the main entries fascinating in and of themselves - interviews with people connected with recent movies, explorations of daily life, in depth treatment of all kinds of fascinating topics - but if you explore the additional pages you'll find a wealth of links to other material. Even the most fanatical Austen-ite must find this a satisfying "world" to visit.
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Friday, June 8th, 2007 11:46 am
For movie fans: news of a fascinating new documentary, The Pervert's Guide to Cinema. You can read about it and listen to excerpts at Open Source

I'm not entirely sure why you'd want to, but for those with too much time on their hands you can Shake up a Sonnet by rearranging lines from all Shakespeare's sonnets.

The latest in the lolcat craze: Schrodinger's lolcat

And finally, I'm going to join the throng of people recommending this beautiful and fascinating video:

intertext: (little my)
Sunday, March 11th, 2007 09:10 am
I have always detested Oprah. Her seemingly endless vanity and self-aggrandizement. The "oh I was so poor as a child and look how wonderful I am now" rags to riches life history repeated over and over in the books she recommends in her book club. Her apparent inability to make a genuine gesture or crack a real smile, or indeed to do anything at all without several billion people looking on.

Now, in this article from Salon.com I'm glad to see others observing cracks in the facade.

Apparently, the big O has put her significant muscle behind one of those insidious and unpleasant self-help books, "The Secret." The idea is that you, too, can get rich if you just wish hard enough. The authors certainly did - but didn't someone say something about a sucker born every minute? The Salon commentator points out that this book is, in fact, no better than a scam, a huge pyramid scheme, with the horrible O right there *plop* on the top:

But what really makes “The Secret” more than a variation on an old theme is the involvement of Oprah Winfrey, who lends the whole enterprise more prestige, and, because of that prestige, more venality, than any previous self-help scam. Oprah hasn’t just endorsed “The Secret”; she’s championed it, put herself at the apex of its pyramid, and helped create a symbiotic economy of New Age quacks that almost puts OPEC to shame.

Why “venality”? Because, with survivors of Auschwitz still alive, Oprah writes this about “The Secret” on her Web site, “the energy you put into the world — both good and bad — is exactly what comes back to you. This means you create the circumstances of your life with the choices you make every day.” “Venality,” because Oprah, in the age of AIDS, is advertising a book that says, “You cannot ‘catch’ anything unless you think you can, and thinking you can is inviting it to you with your thought.” “Venality,” because Oprah, from a studio within walking distance of Chicago’s notorious Cabrini Green Projects, pitches a book that says, “The only reason any person does not have enough money is because they are blocking money from coming to them with their thoughts.”

intertext: (Default)
Saturday, March 25th, 2006 06:00 pm
This is like the late lamented "Visual Thesaurus" (which not really late because it is still there, but no fun any more because you have to pay after you've followed about three links), only it's a kind of ... I'm not quite sure how you'd describe it! Called The Literature Map, you type in an author, and you get a kind of mind-map of other authors that other people read who like that author, which is cool enough, but if you click on your original author you also get info on her (or him) and links to discussions, and all kinds of things. Very, very cool. Try it!