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The Medusa Reader (Culture Work (Paperback))

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Scenarios of your favorite male characters of Record of Ragnarok. Language: English Words: 34,967 Chapters: 6/? Comments: 10 Kudos: 233 Bookmarks: 33 Hits: 8,656 Her book Shakespeare After All (Pantheon, 2004) was chosen one of Newsweek's ten best nonfiction books of the year, and was awarded the 2005 Christian Gauss Book Award from Phi Beta Kappa. Medusa has always already been queer, like literature. Queer is a torsion, a twist. Well, Medusa’s emblem, her hair, is a tuft of twists. The twisting is her signature: it’s about producing twists, about not going in a straight line. Gusseted with a map, family trees, notes and glossaries, this feminist corrective oddly recalls the kind of old-fashioned mythological compendia that Higgins grew up with. She first fell under the spell of the myths when an older brother bought her a copy of Kenneth McLeish’s Children of the Gods. Initially, she suggests, it was the pictures that enthralled her – emphatic illustrations by Elisabeth Frink that exude dark solidity. NOT ALL EVENTS ARE CANONICAL IN THE ORIGINAL GREEK STORIES!!! Language: English Words: 14,228 Chapters: 7/? Comments: 2 Kudos: 12 Hits: 180

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While the essay was originally published in 1975, Medusa remains a figure of the present. After the 2010 republication of “Le Rire de la Méduse,” Cixous reintroduces Medusa as a queer body that diverges from the traditional masculine/feminine binary: Freud, Sigmund (Summer 2017). "Medusa's Head". The Standard Edition of the Complete Psychological Works of Sigmund Freud. The Hogarth Press. Vol. XVIII, p. 273 Diatkine, Anne. “Portrait, Hélène Cixous, sage femme.” Le magazine littéraire, December 2014, Vol. 550, 36-38.

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PALAEPHATUS The Daughters of Phorcys fourth century BCE from On Unbelievable Tales translated by Jacob Stern A Rationalist View What is relatively new is the way in which female mythological characters are now being placed at the centre of narratives in which they’ve traditionally been peripheral. Taking her lead from the likes of Pat Barker and Madeline Miller, Higgins’s Greek Myths: A New Retelling is narrated by female characters. Or rather, it’s woven by female characters, because to give voice to this very 21st-century impulse, she uses a classical literary convention known as ekphrasis, or the telling of tales through descriptions of striking works of art – in this case, tapestries. a b Cixous, Helene (1976). "The Laugh of the Medusa" (PDF). Signs. 1 (4): 875–893. doi: 10.1086/493306. JSTOR 3173239. S2CID 144836586 . Retrieved 5 December 2018.

New Retelling by Charlotte Higgins; Medusa Greek Myths: A New Retelling by Charlotte Higgins; Medusa

As the only daughter of a merchant whose wife passed away, you were expecting to follow the family’s tradition in the financial field. By the education you’ve received since you were a child, nothing suggested that there was a different plan concerning your future underway... Until one day, when your father announced that you were now a part of a divine, marital contract through which you would become one of the many wives of Poseidon, the Tyrant of the Seas. Language: English Words: 36,165 Chapters: 9/? Comments: 42 Kudos: 207 Bookmarks: 29 Hits: 5,425 But first it must be said that […] there is, at this time, no general woman, no one typical woman. What they have in common I will say. But what strikes me is the infinite richness of their individual constitutions: you can’t talk about a female sexuality, uniform, homogeneous, classifiable into codes.

Nurturing the Souls...

Originally posted on mxomo.tumblr.com Language: English Words: 16,049 Chapters: 10/10 Comments: 15 Kudos: 492 Bookmarks: 53 Hits: 13,682

Medusa - Wikipedia Medusa - Wikipedia

A different kind of venom courses through Crona's veins, it's one that always dissipates the light in their moments of happiness, a cursed family bloodline. Medusa Gorgon, the mother of Crona, had fused her child with the demon sword Ragnarok, creating an unforgiving life for her offspring, slowly transforming Crona throughout the traumatic years and giving them untapped power and potential to become a truly higher being from the brimstone earth down below. Now a teenager, Crona's vain attempts at a normal life have often been forfeit, all they've ever known was completing soul harvests of those unfortunate enough to cross their path, making Crona long for a peaceful future, but there can be no peace without penalty. The brutal world of Soul Mayhem is a living hell, full of beings from above, below and beyond the galaxy that are willing to kill Crona and Ragnarok without hesitation, but neither one of them are willing to lie down and accept death, not when a shining ray of hope still remains within this dark and brutal world of Mayhem. Language: English Words: 1,013 Chapters: 1/? Comments: 1 Kudos: 2 Bookmarks: 1 Hits: 31 Her,” Poseidon spoke, his voice so deep it felt like it would rattle your bones. The head priest seems confused, before he notices that Poseidon is squatted in front of you. He gripped your chin tightly, holding your head up so he could stare into your gaze with piercing sea blue eyes, “I will choose her as my bride.” It’s a peaceful evening on your island of Sarpedon. Well, as peaceful as it can be considering the warning your serpentine companions hissed in your ear of a dilapidated boat on the shoreline. Great. Another pompous demigod pissing themselves at the notion of claiming the trophy that is your head. Much like the majority of your garden decor. She wrote Vested Interests: Cross-Dressing and Cultural Anxiety, a ground breaking theoretical work on transvestitism's contribution to culture. Other works include Sex and Real Estate:Why We Love Houses, Academic Instincts, Vice Versa: Bisexuality and the Eroticism of Everyday Life, Shakespeare After All, and Dog Love (which is not primarily about bestiality, except for one chapter titled "Sex and the Single Dog").

ACHILLES TATIUS from The Adventures of Leucippe and Clitophon second century translated by John Winkler Medusa and the Power of Ekp... SÁNDOR FERENCZI from On the Symbolism of the Head of Medusa 1923 translated by Olive Edmonds Medusa and Castration

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