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#gotham the centennial issue
h4mm132l1c3 · 5 months
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Hey everyone! I was the writing mod for @gothamcenzine, a for-charity DC Comics zine dedicated to all things fashion. It was an absolute joy to work with everyone, and pre-orders are open until DECEMBER 15TH, so grab a copy now! Here's a sneak peak at my piece, featuring Terry!
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pepper-ot · 6 months
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Preview of my piece for @gothamcenzine
I got to work on Poison Ivy and I’m super happy with how it came out <3
Pre-orders open Nov 17! Check out their page for more info!
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gothamcenzine · 6 months
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PREORDERS FOR GOTHAM: THE CENTENNIAL ISSUE ARE NOW OPEN!!
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bishoujo-bitch · 6 months
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@gothamcenzine gotham: the centennial issue is a gotham based fashion zine that i'm in and it's currently open for pre-orders until december 15th! here is a preview of my piece featuring the gotham city sirens in some iconic alexander mcqueen dresses.
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ninthfeather · 2 months
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Zine/Fan Project Masterpost
Zines I've been in or will be in, plus any other collaborative things that aren't solely hosted on Tumblr!
Love Across Dimensions: A TRC Fanzine (free download)
Dark Waters: A One Piece Angst Zine (AO3 collection)
Midnight Souls: A Bleach Fanzine (currently unavailable)
Gotham: The Centennial Issue (paid download)
Our Brutal, Beautiful, Miserable Fantasy: A 2000's Goth Manga zine (free download)
Bullet's Crescendo: A Fanmade Trigun Zine Inspired by Music (orders closed, in production period)
Tomodachi Dan: A Fanmade Visual Novel (in development)
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romanfive · 4 years
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400 years without Cervantes or "What giants?"
by Roman Vučajnk
(First published on Versopolis in 2016, but the server crashed and things got lost)  This year, we commemorate the fourth centennial of the death of two giants: William Shakespeare and Miguel de Cervantes Saavedra. Multi-centennial reminders sometimes serve as an excuse to dust monuments and re-discover something everyone has already heard of, but few can really lay out without the help of the Wikipedia. I’m looking at you, last year’s Magna Charta. A smooth vellum surface carries a written decision that shaped a significant part of human society, no doubt about that, but by now so distant that we do not recognize our own image in it, nor any reason why we should, so we remain content to cherish it for its age and genealogy.
However, we may rest at ease knowing that the legacy of the bard, who was clever enough not "to take arms against a sea of troubles" the way poor Christopher Marlow did, and the Señor, who took a bullet to his chest at Lepanto before he found something mightier than the sword, remains alive in our common cultural tissue. Born in the age of discovery of the New World, they both tackled basic and fundamental drives of the human psyche; explored oceans of motives and causes; braved currents of Fate and persisted through jungles of self-reflection. By their effort, talent, and a nod from gods, they found a literary Fountain of Youth and gained immortality by genuinely being able to hold a conversation with each passing generation (with the eternal gratitude of all publishers of the world’s collections of quotes). Not only as a immobile relic of the literary Golden Age, which we have to climb up to, but as a modern partner in full understanding of our age and a willing assistant to our quest for the Truth.
 How about a date?
Shakespeare and Cervantes, laureates of two hostile households both alike in dignity, share the same date of death, 23 April 1616. As befits the highly pitched drama of the Elizabethan stage, it should come to no surprise that in truth they died whole eleven days apart. Not a comedy of errors, but a calculated plan to re-calibrate the calendar, proposed by an Italian fellow from fair Verona** (honestly, you can’t make this stuff up). Catholic Spain complied with the Pope’s instructions to switch to the Gregorian calendar in 1582, while England clung onto the Julian calendar until 1752. Thus, Shakespeare’s Julian 23 of April would translate to the Gregorian third of May, if anyone insisted on ruining the magic.
Add the feast of St George, the patron saint of England and chivalric soldiers, to the same day and Destiny can enjoy a well-deserved picnic.
Shakespeare and Cervantes have never seen each other in person, but we may still appreciate a cinematographic entertainment of the idea in Miguel and William (2007). If their meeting actually had taken place, it would have reflected the hostile attitude between the Spaniards and the English at the time, however, nothing two brilliant minds could not handle. What a pair they would make! Sadly, it was not meant to happen in our version of the universe.
Not all is lost, though, as one of the giants fathered a couple who bridged the inequality of their respective statuses and changed our perspective of windmills forever.
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 **  He was called a Veronese by Jean-Étienne Montucla in Histoire des Mathématiques (1758-98), but we must serve the truth by admitting that was an error on Montucla’s part. Aloysius Lilius, who included astronomy among his fields of interests, was a Calabrian.
Complementing differences
The two nomadic natives of La Mancha are definitely not the first known literary couple, who pursued the Truth in their discourse, but in contrast to Platos’ Phaedo and Echecrates almost two millennia earlier, they presented us with a prototype of a costumed hero and his sidekick. Now, that is something we can connect with in full, especially, if it involves special powers.
We may speculate, if Don Quixote’s magic helmet, which for the rest of the world was a mere barber’s basin, has drawn similar reaction from his contemporary audience as a certain underpants-over-trousers style manages from us (even though Don Quixote elaborated on his decision, while I still have no clue in regard to the Gotham’s-finest choice of costume in his animated series). However, we are sure that, in time, his conduct, ambition, and persistence in pursuing a crystal-clear notion of the Truth and his role of a knight-errant rose from a ridicule to an inspiration.
Many thanks to the skeptical voice of another crystal-clear notion of reality, provided by Sancho Panza, a servant-turned-squire (a basic understanding of the feudal social structure might provide necessary grounds for this particular jest. To which we reply: “Thank you, Jeeves.”), which allows for the most important issues from Don Quixote’s LARP quests to stand out in the reader’s own environment.
The dialogue between the two notions challenges the readers to investigate their own aspect of reality, before they can fully appreciate the story. Perhaps this is a part of the secret of this particular literary success: the reader does not need to understand the frame of the narrative. The reader just needs to connect to the action.
 We Call Upon The Author 
While each of us is free to perceive Don Quixote as either a downright loony or a heroic fighter for justice and liberty for all, it might be interesting to peek at the author. A Castilian, soldier in one of the major battles of his time, captured by the Ottomans, a purchasing agent (which eventually led him to stay as a guest at the expense of the Crown in Seville for a while. Not what we would think, regardless of the aversion felt towards the profession. The banker, which kept the collected money, went bankrupt. Which, in a way, gratifies the aversion towards that profession), and, lastly, a successful author with an immense influence on the Spanish language. He even applied for an accountant’s position in one of the prosperous ports on the Spanish Main in the south Caribbean, but that change of scenery has never taken place.
His nickname El principe de los ingenios (The Prince of Wits) hits the spot for the author who skillfully mocked those who deserved it. I cannot say, whether his wit stems from a desire to lessen the impact his physical defect may have had on his self-image (he was wounded in battle and lost the ability to use his left arm). Yet he was as sharp and unyielding as Cyrano, a famous Gascon version of the Knight of the Sorrowful Countenance, even if grown out of chivalric tales and more inclined to fight the system.
The main target of his mockery was not so much the lore of knightly tales, a remnant of medieval literature, but those who took excess pleasure in it. Especially, when they used the invented tales to propagate their view on how things should be run for everybody.
A conglomerate of myths and romances commanded an influence that reached far to the other side of the Atlantic ocean, as it was a companion to the conquistadors, motivated them and even inspired them, also in their topographical exercises (California was originally a name of an island in the sequel to Amadis de Gaul, a literary target in Cervantes’ masterpiece). A notion of honour, bravery, virtue and duty presented by those romances may have worked for conquistadors, whose minds fantasized about immense riches, while their bodies struggled for survival, but in the Old World, it was confined between hard covers of amusing entertainment.
They provided the Prince of Wits with the necessary cover for his satire. In the days of duels of honour, inquisitive religious tribunals of the true doctrine, and a strong-willed monarch, satire had to find its way to the audiences in a considerate way.
One time, Sancho Panza wonders about the glorified battle cry Santiago y cierra España!++ and comments whether Spain was perhaps opened, that it wants to be closed up. That battle cry preceded every military encounter of Spaniards from the times of the Reconquista and it called upon St. James, the patron saint of Spain and Matamoros, the Killer of Moors. Some of my Iberian friends snigger at the remark, much too contemporary for modern Spain to enjoy as a mere play of words. Some may even draw parallels to the EU.
Cervantes also made it to the infamous list of prohibited publications, run by the Holy Inquisition. The readership may gasp in the expectation of Cervantes being hauled by sneering Dominican monks to a damp cell, laden with devices of torture. Why, we do remember how he openly mocked the method of the Holy Office of dealing with heretics. In Don Quixote, when the Barber and the Priest want to burn several books of the Innkeeper that they found guilty of heresy by trial, he asks: “I hope, Sir, they are neither Hereticks nor Flegmaticks (herejes o flemáticos).” To which the Barber corrects him: “Schismaticks (cismáticos), you mean.”
No, the sentence purged from the same book reads: Works of charity done in a lukewarm and half-hearted way are without merit and of no avail. Apparently, a sensitive theological ear considered it a tad too Erasmian in favouring the inner human condition to the outer action.
Cervantes also poked the influence of invented stories over chronicles, expulsion of the Morisco population from Spain, governing administrations, and even mental abilities of the ruling classes. With a dash of ridiculing the Church authority over the common sense of an individual person (that particular dart is still not entirely settled by literary critics, though).
 -------
++ St. James and close, Spain! Interpretations of the unclear second part of the invocation vary from “Close your ranks before your enemies, Spain!” to “Let us close our ranks in the midst of our enemies, Spain!”, but we may be certain that it asks Spain to do harm to her enemies and let St. James play, too.
“There are many who are errant,” said Sancho. ”Many,” responded Don Quixote, “but few who deserve to be called knights.” 
On his deathbed, Don Quixote came to his senses and detached himself from knight-errantry. The moral of the story steps over boundaries of time, and could wear a ruff just as comfortably as a pair of jeans. It addresses us to stand out as individuals and pursue what we believe to be the Good in aversion from the corrupted, however, not by retiring to a constructed ideal, incompatible with the surroundings. Not to make that ideal an instrument of lamentation over some good-old-days that never have been, nor a cause for lamination of cherry-picked historical interpretations to parade as the Truth.
Let us rather make it a reminder of the human ability to better oneself.
Especially in times, when giants are not so easily recognizable. 
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dccomicsnews · 7 years
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DC Comics News has compiled a list of DC Comics titles and collectibles shipping to comic shops for June 14, 2017.
Check back every Friday with the DC Comics News Pull Box to see all the cool new DC Comics titles and collectibles that will be available at your favorite local comic shop! So, what titles or collectibles will you be picking up this Wednesday? You can sound off in the comments section below! Click on Comic shop Locator to find the comic shop nearest to you!
COMICS
ACTION COMICS #981 $2.99 BATGIRL AND THE BIRDS OF PREY #11 $3.99 BUG THE ADVENTURES OF FORAGER #2 (OF 6) $3.99 DARK DAYS THE FORGE #1 $4.99 DETECTIVE COMICS #958 $2.99 FLASH #24 $2.99 GOTHAM ACADEMY SECOND SEMESTER #10 $2.99 HAL JORDAN AND THE GREEN LANTERN CORPS #22 $2.99 JUSTICE LEAGUE OF AMERICA #8 $2.99 LEGION OF SUPER HEROES BUGS BUNNY SPECIAL #1 $4.99 MARTIAN MANHUNTER MARVIN THE MARTIAN SPECIAL #1 $4.99 NEW SUPER MAN #12 $3.99 RED HOOD AND THE OUTLAWS #11 $3.99 SCOOBY APOCALYPSE #14 $3.99 SCOOBY DOO WHERE ARE YOU #82 $2.99 SUICIDE SQUAD #19 $2.99 SUPERGIRL #10 $3.99 SUPERWOMAN #11 $3.99 TITANS #12 $3.99 WONDER WOMAN #24 $2.99
DCN Pull Box Triple Spotlight
HAWKMAN BY GEOFF JOHNS TP BOOK 01 $29.99
Geoff Johns, James Robinson (A) Rags Morales, Michael Bair, Timothy Truman, Patrick Gleason, Ethan Van Sciver, Don Kramer, Prentis Rollins, Dennis Janke, Christian Alamy, Mick Gray (CA) Andrew Robinson
Geoff Johns’ epic run on Hawkman reinvents the winged warrior as Carter Hall and Kendra Saunders unravel the mysteries within the southern epicenter called St. Roch, travel to exotic lands and battle creatures and villains of ancient and new myth! Collects HAWKMAN #1-14 and HAWKMAN SECRET FILES #1!
BUG THE ADVENTURES OF FORAGER #2 (OF 6) $3.99
Lee Allred, James Harvey (A) James Harvey (A/CA) Michael Allred
Bug’s tumble through dimensions ends up taking him back in time, to the start of General Electric’s mad scheme. In the remote Himalayas, the mad scientist leads his robot army in search of a precious magical metal. Sandman, Sandy, Blue Beetle and the Losers are already out in the snow looking to stop him, but only Bug knows that the fate of the multiverse hangs in the balance. Plus, we begin a new backup feature by James Harvey (Masterplasty, We Are Robin).
JACK KIRBY FOREVER PEOPLE ARTIST ED HC $125.00
Jack Kirby (A/CA) Jack Kirby
Continuing IDW’s yearlong celebration of the centennial of Jack “King” Kirby’s birth! Jack Kirby’s classic Fourth World Epic told the story of a group of New Gods sent to Earth to oppose Darkseid. Featuring Beautiful dreamer, Big Bear, Moonrider, and others, this was Kirby’s take on super-powered flower children!
Included in this volume are issues, 1, 4, 5, 6, 7, and 8, with nearly all pages scanned from the originals. Presented in IDW’s award-winning Artist’s Edition format-the next best thing to owning the original art!
Variant Covers
Note: Variant Prices To Be Determined By Retailer
ACTION COMICS #981 (Gary Frank variant) $2.99 BATGIRL AND THE BIRDS OF PREY #11 (Karmome Shirahama variant) $3.99 BUG THE ADVENTURES OF FORAGER #2 (OF 6)(Evan Doc Shaner variant) $3.99 DARK DAYS THE FORGE #1 (Andy Kubert variant) $4.99 DARK DAYS THE FORGE #1 (John Romita Jr. variant) $4.99 DETECTIVE COMICS #958 (Rafael Albuquerque variant) $2.99 FLASH #24 (Howard Porter variant) $2.99 HAL JORDAN AND THE GREEN LANTERN CORPS #22 (Kevin Nowlan variant) $2.99 JUSTICE LEAGUE OF AMERICA #8 (Doug Mahnke variant) $2.99 LEGION OF SUPER HEROES BUGS BUNNY SPECIAL #1 (Ty Templeton variant) $4.99 MARTIAN MANHUNTER MARVIN THE MARTIAN SPECIAL #1 (Stephen DeStefano variant) $4.99 NEW SUPER MAN #12 (Bernard Chang variant) $3.99 RED HOOD AND THE OUTLAWS #11 (Guillem March variant) $3.99 SCOOBY APOCALYPSE #14 (Cully Hamner variant) $3.99 SUICIDE SQUAD #19 (Whilce Portacio variant) $2.99 SUPERGIRL #10 (Bengal variant) $3.99 SUPERWOMAN #11 (Renato Guedes variant) $3.99 TITANS #12 (Dan Mora variant) $3.99 WONDER WOMAN #24 (Jenny Frison variant) $2.99
GRAPHIC NOVEL
BATMAN DETECTIVE COMICS TP VOL 09 GORDON AT WAR $16.99 BATWOMAN BY GREG RUCKA AND JH WILLIAMS III TP $24.99 HAWKMAN BY GEOFF JOHNS TP BOOK 01 $29.99 MOTHER PANIC TP VOL 01 WORK IN PROGRESS $16.99 NIGHTWING TP VOL 02 BACK TO BLUDHAVEN (REBIRTH) $16.99
BOOKS
HARRY POTTER DARK ARTS JOURNAL $14.95 JACK KIRBY FOREVER PEOPLE ARTIST ED HC $125.00
MERCHANDISE/COLLECTIBLES
DC COMICS JUSTICE LEAGUE DARK CONSTANTINE PX VINYL DECAL $6.00 DC COMICS MIDNIGHTER PX VINYL DECAL $6.00 BATMAN CUTIE T/S LG $19.95
ACTION FIGURES/STATUES
BATMAN BLACK & WHITE STATUE NIGHTWING BY JIM LEE $80.00 POP DC BATMAN 66 BATGIRL VINYL FIG $10.99 POP DC BATMAN 66 KING TUT VINYL FIG $10.99
CLOTHING
BATMAN CUTIE T/S MED $19.95 BATMAN CUTIE T/S SM $19.95 BATMAN CUTIE T/S XXL $22.95 JOKER SMILE T/S LG $19.95 JOKER SMILE T/S MED $19.95 JOKER SMILE T/S SM $19.95 JOKER SMILE T/S XL $19.95 JOKER SMILE T/S XXL $22.95 WONDER WOMAN PEACE T/S LG $19.95 WONDER WOMAN PEACE T/S MED $19.95 WONDER WOMAN PEACE T/S SM $19.95 WONDER WOMAN PEACE T/S XL $19.95 WONDER WOMAN PEACE T/S XXL $22.95
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DC Comics Pull Box For 6-14-17 (New Comics and Merchandise) DC Comics News has compiled a list of DC Comics titles and collectibles shipping to comic shops for June 14, 2017.
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gothamcenzine · 6 months
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Here's a preview of @floatinghanmi's "Gotham Punks" piece!
Preorders for GOTHAM: the Centennial Issue open on November 17! Save the date!
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gothamcenzine · 6 months
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Here's a preview of MusicalFanart's stickers!
Preorders for GOTHAM: the Centennial Issue are open until Dec. 15!
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gothamcenzine · 5 months
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Only 1 DAY LEFT to preorder your own copy of GOTHAM: The Centennial Issue!
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gothamcenzine · 6 months
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PREORDERS FOR GOTHAM: THE CENTENNIAL ISSUE OPEN IN TWO WEEKS!
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gothamcenzine · 6 months
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Here's a preview of Bess' Alfred piece!
Preorders for GOTHAM: the Centennial Issue are open until Dec. 15!
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ninthfeather · 6 months
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Hey everyone! Happy to announce that I was able to write a fic for the Gotham: The Centennial Issue zine. It's a fashion-themed zine and proceeds go to the Great Dane Rescue Alliance. I had a ton of fun speculating about Two-Face's clothing supplier, and my fellow contributors have cooked up some fantastic fic, art, and merch. Preorders start November 17th, so if you're a DC comics fan, I strongly encourage you to check it out!
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gothamcenzine · 5 months
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Only 3 DAYS LEFT to preorder your own copy of GOTHAM: The Centennial Issue!
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gothamcenzine · 6 months
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PREORDERS FOR GOTHAM: THE CENTENNIAL ISSUE OPEN TOMORROW!!
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gothamcenzine · 5 months
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Preorders for GOTHAM: The Centennial Issue close today! We’re only 9 orders away from our second stretch goal!!
https://gothamcentennialzine.bigcartel.com
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