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#GIVE ME AN ESSAY TO WRITE
nogenderonlychair · 3 months
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Im not BUSY I need to be BUSY I need something to DO um pretend your a darn teacher or something give me ASSIGNMENT I need to not be doing time wasting things like failing miserably at crocheting I need to be BUSY
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emilys-axford · 4 days
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i know i talk about it all the time bc it’s one of my favourite lines from fantasy high but sandra lynn saying to fig “everything you’re going through is something that i get i was just like you” in light of her (most likely) being groomed by bobby dawn, with figs ill-advised interactions with older men in freshman year….. ya i’m thinking about it
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peoplesprincessgeorge · 3 months
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nortrell + txt posts = true
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cosmicquilt · 3 months
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"Is black the absence of light - or the presence of color?"
the darkness in his eyes is from the absence of any light that would usually find the color underneath...
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charlunday · 2 months
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The boy with the bread 🧡
Part 1 of my everlark portraits! Can you guess who I referenced for this? (Hint: there are multiple correct answers)
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quantumshade · 2 years
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boomers be like the kids don't want to work!!! they're so lazy!! and then the application for a job even slightly relevant to my desired career path is like this
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cloudpalettes · 1 year
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unwavering
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thefrogdalorian · 5 months
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The Mandalorian - Chapter 3: The Sin
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nynxmacabre · 4 months
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Okay but theyre the exact same genre of character, right?
Close-ups under the cut <3
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comradekatara · 1 year
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fucking theater kids.
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beanghostprincess · 5 months
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i honestly think the weakest link in the one piece fandom are people who don't like usopp
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briarrolfe · 6 months
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I keep thinking about that “would you suck x number of dicks for a billion dollars” tumblr post, mainly about how I would use that power to become the most powerful political lobbyist on earth.
The biggest individual donations to Australian political parties are in the low millions; I would be able to accumulate these numbers in a matter of days.
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(Source)
Now, I hate billionaires… but ethically, I could not turn down the opportunity to suck dick and reshape our nation. This sort of money would buy unprecedented political cache! For example: I Could Own Senator Penny Wong. Currently her office is ignoring the phone calls of regular punters like me… but I could buy not being ignored and end Australia’s contribution to the genocide of Palestine. And I could outcompete mining company donations! If they tried to one-up me, I’d just need to increase my workload to a second dick a day, whereas they would have to open additional mines (I would by that point have the political cache to block new mines). Hell, I’d suck a lot more dick than that if it meant I could end our country’s contributions to climate change. I could spend entire days with the Health Minister (taking breaks, of course, for sucking dicks) talking about nothing but putting trans healthcare and dental on Medicare. I could threaten to withdraw my support from both parties until they raised Centrelink benefits. I could make us a republic. Do you understand! I would enter my villain arc! Clive Palmer would be constantly putting hits out on me!! I WOULD BRING ABOUT FULL SOCIALISM. And then. Then! I would graciously retire from politics, finally able to work full time on my book, knowing I would be supported into old age by the social system, still sucking dicks of course so that I could, as a hobby, systematically undermine the American gun lobby and the British Royal Family.
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localaceken · 6 days
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They should have 'killed' Jay in Seabound.
It would have been the perfect parallel to Nya dying at the end of Skybound.
Nya dying at the end of SKYbound.
Jay dying at the end of SEAbound.
The perfect Jaya parallel...
I still don't understand how they messed that up THEY HAD THE PERFECT SET UP AND THEY FUMBLED IT!!!!!
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plutoslvr · 4 months
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the thing about gansey is thats he's connected to everyone in the most awful ways but also he's obsessed with his friends and cares for them so deeply that it becomes a vulnerability in a sense. he's interwoven in everyone's lives so... permanently and he doesn't even know. he's constantly warring with himself and is sinking in this feeling of loneliness, that his friends are destined for things greater than he can offer and who is he to hold them back? does he even truly know his friends when they are constantly walking away from him but he can't bear to do the same? even when he carefully plans out the words in his head, he still says the wrong thing without meaning to. and he has no idea that the people he's collected willingly will follow him to the ends of the earth because he's simply gansey.
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ghostl0re · 3 months
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if 𝕻𝖔𝖔𝖗 𝕿𝖍𝖎𝖓𝖌𝖘 doesn't win best picture the Oscars will lose all credibility. that movie is insane from start to finish, actually im thinking on writing a whole essay about the movie.
my love for films resurrected from the ashes with this movie (and Past Lives ngl)
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there's many controversial opinions about the movie which is normal and acceptable but no one can deny this movie (i know is a book) talks about a common feeling in a disturbing and haunting way that leaves you mind blown which is the whole point of art; art is subjetive and that's why this movie is not for everyone. you either love or hate this movie, there's not in-between.
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if a piece of art doesn't leave a sensation, realization, feeling or thought on you, then is not for you. this movie is not light, to the point that i think i could never watch it again, but is just so good. i could talk for HOURS about this movie and what it made me feel. God i love art so much.
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viasplat · 1 year
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I typed up the Pentiment bibliography for my own use and thought I’d share it here too. In case anyone else is fixated enough on this game to embark on some light extra-curricular reading
I haven’t searched for every one of these books but a fair few can be found via one of the following: JSTOR / archive.org / pdfdrive.com / libgen + libgen.rocks; or respective websites for the journal articles.
List below the cut!
Beach, Alison I, Women as Scribes: Book Production and Monastic Reform in Twelfth-Century Bavaria. Cambridge University Press, 2004
Berger, Jutta Maria. Die Geschichte der Gastfreundschaft im hochmittelalterlichen Mönchtum die Cistercienser. Akademie Verlag GmbH, 1999
Blickle, Peter. The Revolution of 1525. Translated by Thomas A. Brady, Jr. and H.C. Erik Midelfort. The Johns Hopkins University Press, 1985
Brady, Thomas A., Jr. “Imperial Destinies: A New Biography of the Emperor Maximilian I.” The Journal of Modern History, vol.62, no.2, 1990. pp. 298-314
Brandl, Rainer. “Art or Craft? Art and the Artist in Medieval Nuremberg.” Gothic and Renaissance Art in Nuremberg 1300-2550. The Metropolitan Museum of Art, 1986
Byars, Jana L., “Prostitutes and Prostitution in Late Medieval Barcelona.” Masters Theses. Western Michigan University, 1997
Cashion, Debra Taylor. “The Art of Nikolaus Glockendon: Imitation and Originality in the Art of Renaissance Germany.” Journal of Historians of Netherlandish Art, vol.2, no.1-2, 2010
de Hamel, Christopher. A History of Illuminated Manuscripts. Phaidon Press Limited, 1986
Eco, Umberto. The Name of the Rose. Translated by William Weaver. Mariner Books, 2014
Eco, Umberto. Baudolino. Translated by William Weave. Boston, Mariner Books, 2003
Fournier, Jacques. “The Inquisition Records of Jacques Fournier.” Translated by Nancy P. Stork, San Jose University, 2020
Geary, Patrick. “Humiliation of Saints.” In Saints and their cults: studies in religious sociology, folklore, and history. Edited by Stephen Wilson. Cambridge University Press, 1985. pp. 123-140
Harrington, Joel F. The Faithful Executioner: Life and Death, Honor and Shame in the Turbulent Sixteenth Century. Farrar, Straus and Giroux, 2013
Hertzka, Gottfied and Wighard Strehlow. Große Hildegard-Apotheke. Christiana-Verlag, 2017
Hildegard von Bingen. Physica. Edited by Reiner Hildebrandt and Thomas Gloning. De Gruyter, 2010
Julian of Norwich. Revelations of Divine Love. Translated by Barry Windeatt. Oxford University Press, 2015
Karras, Ruth Mazo. Sexuality in Medieval Europe: Doing Unto Others. Routledge, 2017
Kerr, Julie. Monastic Hospitality: The Benedictines in England, c.1070-c.1250. Boydell Press, 2007
Kieckhefer, Richard. Forbidden rites: a necromancer's manual of the fifteenth century. Sutton, 1997
Kümin, Beat and B. Ann Tlusty. The World of the Tavern: Public Houses in Early Modern Europe. Routledge, 2017
Ilner, Thomas, et al. The Economy of Dürnberg-Bei-Hallein: an Iron Age Salt-mining Centre in the Austrian Alps. The Antiquaries Journal, vol. 83, 2003. pp. 123-194
Làng, Benedek. Unlocked Books: Manuscripts of Learned Magic in the Medieval Libraries of Central Europe. The Pennsylvania State University Press, 2008
Lindeman, Mary. Medicine and Society in Early Modern Europe. Cambridge University Press, 2010
Lowe, Kate. “'Representing' Africa: Ambassadors and Princes from Christian Africa to Renaissance Italy and Portugal, 1402-1608.” Transactions of the Royal Historical Society Sixth Series, vol. 17, pp. 101-128
Meyers, David. “Ritual, Confession, and Religion in Sixteenth-Century Germany.” Archiv für Reformationsgeschichte, vol. 89, 1998. pp. 125-143
Murat, Zuleika. “Wall paintings through the ages: the medieval period (Italy, twelfth to fifteenth century).” Archaeological and Anthropological Sciences, vol. 12, no. 191. Springer, October 2021. pp. 1-27
Overty, Joanne Filippone. “The Cost of Doing Scribal Business: Prices of Manuscript Books in England, 1300-1483.” Book History 11, 2008. pp. 1-32
Page, Sophie. Magic in the Cloister: Pious Motives, Illicit Interests and Occult Approaches to the Medieval Universe. The Pennsylvania State University Press, 2013
Park, Katharine. “The Criminal and the Saintly Body: Autopsy and Dissection in Renaissance Italy.” Renaissance Quarterly, vol. 47, no. 1, Spring 1994. pp. 1-33
Rebel, Hermann. Peasant Classes: The Bureaucratization of Property and Family Relations under Early Habsburg Absolutism, 1511-1636. Princeton University Press, 1983
Rublack, Ulinka. “Pregnancy, Childbirth, and the Female Body in Early Modern Germany.” Past & Present, vol. 150, no. 1, February 1996. pp. 84-110
Salvadore, Matteo. “The Ethiopian Age of Exploration: Prester John's Discovery of Europe, 1306-1458.” Journal of World History, vol. 21, no. 4, 2011. pp. 593 - 627
Sangster, Alan. “The Earliest Known Treatise on Double Entry Bookkeeping by Marino de Raphaeli”. The Accounting Historians Journal, vol. 42, no. 2, 2015. pp. 1-33.
Throop, Priscilla. Hildegard von Bingen's Physica: The Complete English Translation of Her Classic Work on Health and Healing. Healing Arts Press, 1998
Usher, Abbott Payson. “The Origins of Banking: The Primitive Bank of Deposit, 1200-1600.” The Economic History Review, vol. 4, no. 4, 1934. pp. 399-428
Waldman, Louis A. “Commissioning Art in Florence for Matthias Corvinus: The Painter and Agent Alexander Formoser and his Sons, Jacopo and Raffaello del Tedesco.” Italy and Hungary: Humanism and Art in the Early Renaissance. Edited by Péter Farbaky and Louis A. Waldman, Villa I Tatti, 2011. pp. 427-501
Wendt, Ulrich. Kultur und Jagd: ein Birschgang durch die Geschichte. G. Reimer, 1907
Whelan, Mark. “Taxes, Wagenburgs and a Nightingale: The Imperial Abbey of Ellwangen and the Hussite Wars, 1427-1435.” The Journal of Ecclesiastical History, vol. 72, no. 4, 2021, pp. 751-777.e
Wiesner-Hanks, Merry E. Women and Gender in Early Modern Europe. Cambridge University Press, 2008
Yardeni, Ada. The Book of Hebrew Script: History, Paleography, Script Styles, Calligraphy & Design. Tyndale House Publishers, 2010
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