“One of the symptoms of an approaching nervous breakdown is the belief that one’s work is terribly important.” – Bertrand Russell
Via The Twin’s Shadow, a blog of juxtapoetry.
Twin Shadow’s blogroll:
“One of the symptoms of an approaching nervous breakdown is the belief that one’s work is terribly important.” – Bertrand Russell
Via The Twin’s Shadow, a blog of juxtapoetry.
Twin Shadow’s blogroll:
Off-screen, Kinski often appeared as a wild-eyed, sex-crazed maniac. He chronicled his exploits in an autobiography—Kinski: All I Need Is Love or Kinski Uncut, which, according to Werner Herzog’s My Best Fiend, a documentary about the pair’s experiences working together, was largely fabricated to generate sales. (A libel suit from Marlene Dietrich due to Kinski depicting her as a lesbian resulted in the book being withdrawn from circulation until her death). Throughout the memoir we witness encounters with young actresses, hookers, chambermaids and, in two memorable scenes, Alberto Moravia‘s wife and Idi Amin‘s daughter. He was married three times and had (according to his autobiography) at least five children, three of whom he regarded as such: two daughters (Nastassja Kinski and Pola Kinski), and a son (Nikolai Kinski), all of them actors. His brother Arne lives in Berlin, still bitter about the way Klaus portrayed him in his autobiography. He alienated his family with claims of incest with his sister and his mother.
Image via The Devil’s Honey
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Liebestod (German, “Love’s Death”) is the title of a song from the opera Tristan und Isolde by Richard Wagner.
As a literary term liebestod (from German Liebe, love and tod, death) it refers to the literary theme of erotic death or love death meaning the two lovers’ consummation of their love in death or after death.
Two-sided examples include Tristan und Isolde, Romeo and Juliet and to some degree Wuthering Heights, one-sided examples Porphyria’s Lover and The Sorrows of Young Werther.
The joint suicide of Heinrich von Kleist and lover Henriette Vogel is often associated with the liebestod theme.
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Excuse the light posting recently. The reason being that I am converting Jahsonic.com to a MediaWiki which takes a lot of time. I would like to ask your help. I am especially looking for technically skilled people.
At this moment I am looking for someone to write a WikiMedia bot to automate some simple tasks.
Contact me at jwgeerinck at hotmail.com if you want to help out.
P. S. : the song is Newcleus’s Jam On It, “the theme song to Wikipedia” due to “the little chipmunk-funk voices” that go ‘wikiwikiwiki‘.
One of the 15.000 nazi bunkers along the Atlantic coast; this one at Cap Blanc Nez, Northern France where I just spent a couple of days.
The best collection of photographs of the Atlantic Wall is by Paul Virilio:
Bunker Archeology: Texts and Photos (1975) – Paul Virilio [Amazon US] [FR] [DE] [UK]
Kurt Vonnegut (1922–2007) was an American writer.
In some of Kurt Vonnegut’s novels, when somebody dies, Vonnegut does not call it dying. He writes that this person had their “peephole closed” and when they are born, they simply have their “peephole opened”.
To my girls, Bonnie, Fee, Fara (from left to right)
For lack of a better illustration: Ligeia read by Vincent Price
The Imp of the Perverse is a metaphor for the common tendency, particularly among children and evildoers, to do exactly the wrong thing in a given situation. The conceit is that the misbehavior is due to an imp (a small demon) leading an otherwise decent person into mischief.
The phrase has a long history in literature, and was popularized (and perhaps coined) by Edgar Allan Poe in his short story, “The Imp of the Perverse“. It is a study in guilt or the human thirst for self-destructive behaviour.
“Guilt” should not be taken here in either the standard legal or moral senses. Poe’s characters usually do not feel “guilt” because they did a “bad” thing—that is, the story is not didactic (in his essay “The Poetic Principle” Poe called didacticism the worst of “heresies”); there is no “moral to the story.” Guilt, for Poe, is “perverse,” and perverseness is the desire for self-destruction. It is completely indifferent to societal distinctions between right and wrong. “Guilt” is the inexplicable and inexorable desire to destroy oneself eo ipso.
The Poe Decoder notes that “When Poe speaks of perverseness, he does not intend narrower denotations of the various forms of the word. He does not mean “perverted,” as in sexual miscreance. Though such deviancy may be perverse, it bears little resemblance to the examples of perversity which Poe elucidated in his tales.” As such, Poe’s interpretation of perverseness deserves a prominent place in the history of irrationalism.
In Poe’s words:
“… no reason can be more unreasonable; but in fact, there is none more strong. With certain minds, under certain conditions, it becomes absolutely irresistible. I am not more certain than I breathe, than that the assurance of the wrong or error of any action is often the one unconquerable force which impels us, and alone compels us to its prosecution. Nor will this overwhelming tendency to do wrong for the wrong’s sake, admit of analysis, or resolution into ulterior elements. It is a radical, primitive impulse–elementary.”
and
“We stand upon the brink of a precipice. We peer into the abyss – we grow sick and dizzy. Our first impulse is the shrink away from the danger. Unaccountably we remain… it is but a thought, although a fearful one, and one which chills the very marrow of our bones with the fierceness of the delight of its horror. It is merely the idea of what would be our sensations during the sweeping precipitancy of a fall from such a height… for this very cause do we now the most vividly desire it.”
See also:
Interpretation of The Raven, The Imp of the Perverse and The Black Cat.
The Poe decoder, I am Safe!
The Imp of the Perverse is also masterfully exemplified in The Bad Glazier, a prose poem by Baudelaire collected in Paris Spleen:
Baudelaire’s prose poem “The bad glazier” is a marvelous example of the imp of the perverse; after a discourse on personality and action, a man calls a glazier up to his fourth-story apartment. He inspects the glazier’s glass, “discovers” that there is no colored glass in the man’s pack (which we sense he may have known all along), and sends the glazier back on his way. When the poor glazier reaches the ground floor and leaves the building, our protagonist throws a flower pot at him and breaks his glass. “And drunk with my madness,” the protagonist tells us, “I shouted down at him furiously: ‘Make life beautiful! Make life beautiful!'” Rachel Barenblat via www.webdelsol.com/InPosse/barenblat.htm
Photo courtesy of the BBC
Reader Christopher Larner alerts us to an interesting documentary which:
“has started showing on BBC2 in the UK – It is made by Adam Curtis who also made ‘The Century of the Self’ and ‘The Power of Nightmares’. This new one is called ‘The Trap: What happened to our dreams of freedom’ and attempts to show how our/and our politicians notions of freedom were born out of the cold war and ‘game theory’ – as a filmmaker he perhaps ties too many disparate narratives together into a seemingly cohesive whole – the editing, footage and insight provided are nevertheless compelling.”
Here is the link. YouTube has, for some unknown reason, deleted parts 5 and 6. Amongst other subjects, these segments criticize psychiatry.
“After being flagged by members of the YouTube community and reviewed by YouTube staff, the video below has been removed due to its inappropriate nature.”
Internet pundit Momus was luckier than us (dependent on YouTube), he was sent the documentary on DVD. He appropriately labels Curtis a television essayist and juxtaposes his documentary to Nicolas Bourriaud’s Relational Aesthetics.
K-Punk has this (There’s nothing very surprising in Adam Curtis’ The Trap: What happened to our dreams of Freedom, compelling as it is.).
See also: freedom