210 posts
me after sitting in the sun for ten minutes: love is real
Me: I'm fine.
What I mean: How the academy can sleep when Jake Gyllenhaal doesn't have an Oscar after all the dedication that he did in Southpaw or in Nightcrawler and Nocturnal Animals?
Opel Car Calendar, Kadett, Mostar Bridge, Bosnia-Herzigovina, 1970.
“Nothing ever ends poetically. It ends and we turn it into poetry. All that blood was never once beautiful. It was always just red.”
— Kait Rokowski
Invitation, Mary Oliver
river phoenix and keanu reeves
Old town of Siena (Tuscany, Italy) by Yixing Wu
Peter Paul Rubens, details from The Origin of the Milky Way, 1636-1637
oh to be a cryptid living in the basement of the paris opera house, who is so annoying the owners pay me 20,000 francs a month to leave them alone
Stucco Relief Panels from a 1st century CE Roman Villa
Unpacking Mona Lisa at the end of World War II (1945)
dark hozier take me to hell
I love the kind of tired that comes from a lot of fresh air and a little too much sun
“If you want to overcome the whole world, overcome yourself.” - Fyodor Dostoyevsky, Demons
Women Walking on the Beach, Clotilde on the Beach, Joaquin Sorolla y Bastida (Spanish, 1863 - 1923)
it takes years to develop your craft. do not romanticize the idea of an ‘overnight success’. be a student. grow organically. get really good. hate your work. start over. find new ways to express the same ideas. the student becomes the master. your time will come.
Do you ever just have a breakdown over the fact that there are too many books to read, too many movies to see, too many poems to memorize, too many plays to watch, too many artworks to stare at and that you will never be able to consume all of it or is that just me
please don’t forget to drink water and get some sunlight because you’re basically a houseplant with complicated emotions.
check these glossy fuckin scans of the original manuscript of The Picture of Dorian Gray in Oscar’s own hand (full size: 1; 2; 3; 4; source)
16 books everyone needs to read at least once because people will reference them in front of you your entire life:
“the faerie queene,” by edmund spenser. this poem is divided up into six books, which you should read, if for no other reason than the fact that there’s an exclusive book club at harvard university for the select few people who have finished all six sections. and honestly, who wouldn’t want to read something that forms the foundation of a semi-secret, decades-old book club at harvard?
“romeo and juliet,” and “othello,” both by shakespeare. these plays fall on the exact same spot on the dark academia spectrum. they both involve two lovers who die because of communication issues. but regardless, they’re both super important to read because there are so many references to them, both in other pieces of classic lit., and in modern culture
“the picture of dorian gray,” by oscar wilde. if you can’t tell, this is my favorite book ever. if you can get past the purple prose, it’s like the most ‘dark academia’ book ever. it’s got references to other famous pieces of literature (which i’ll include on the list), lots of gay shit, a dramatic young adult who loves shakespeare, and ofc, murder
“the brothers karamazov,” by fyodor dostoevsky. actually started reading this one to impress a boy; i think that perhaps he and i have different concepts of what is considered impressive, but the book has turned out amazing, so i’m happy
“the prince,” by niccolo machiavelli. alright, so this isn’t classic literature so much as it is politics, but honestly, so many people talk about ‘machiavellianism’ without ever having read the original Machiavellian treatise, and it would be so much better to just read the book and then be able to cite machiavelli himself at your next political-philosophy discussion.
“the count of monte cristo,” by alexandre dumas. another classic that i heard people talk about for long enough that i finally gave up and read the book. now i can talk about it too, and pretend to be smart
“the canterbury tales,” by geoffrey chaucer. these are classics. they’re filled to the brim with medieval language and sexual innuendo, but that’s part of what makes them so wonderful. if that’s not enough of a selling point, ‘the tale of the deathly hallows’ from “harry potter” is super similar to ‘the pardoner’s tale’ from this book.
“the divine comedy,” by dante alighieri. includes a crap ton of great history references and some super sick burns directed towards the corrupt people of dante’s time.
“meditations,” by marcus aurelius. the original metaphysical journal. probably the epitome of ‘light academia’ if i’ve ever read one
“the great gatsby,” by f. scott fitzgerald. jay gatsby is low-key super relatable…and so is nick, the third wheel…and so is daisy, who feels like women are forced by society to be ‘beautiful little fools’
“the iliad,” by homer. you can’t justify reading “the song of achilles” by madeline miller until you’ve read the original. enough said.
“frankenstein,” by mary shelley. not only is this a great books in terms of philosophical potential, but there are so many great things to debate about in it. and, it’s written by a woman :)
“beowulf,” author unknown. although i make no claims about the original anglo saxon, my favorite english translation is, like the iliad and the odyssey, particularly enjoyable because of its dactylic hexameter.
“oedipus rex,” by sophocles. my favorite book in 9th grade, though god knows why my mother let me read it then
“metamorphoses,” by ovid. a collection of my all-time favorite greek myths, which every single person needs to read because it explains how the ancient greeks believed the world operated, from the way the sun rises, to the reason we hear echoes.
“the aeneid,” by virgil. suggested by @catilinas :) the final addition to the holy iliad/odyssey/aeneid trinity, written hundreds of years after the last part, by a different author, and in latin instead of the original greek. chronologically ocurrs at about the same time as the odyssey, although from the trojan perspective.
and maybe it’s just me, but there’s something about being able to connect with people over classic books that is really enjoyable. it makes me feel like some literature student in the early 1900’s who wears tweed (or glasses or something) and wanders through hallways with a cup of coffee ranting about existentialism ;))
if anyone has any to books to add to the list, just comment or reblog and i’ll edit the original.
“If you don’t fight for what you want, don’t cry for what you lost.”
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