selenak: (Rocking the Vote by Noodlebirdsnest)
2009-01-21 12:44 pm
Entry tags:

Song links

If, like me, you were too busy to watch the inauguration concerts when they were broadcast, here comes YouTube with some highlights:

This land is your land: Pete Seeger, Bruce Springsteen and just about everyone else.

Pride (in the name of love): U2, singing their song about Martin Luther King exactly where he held his speech.

The Rising: Bruce Springsteen. You know, I remember visiting the US for the first time when I was fourteen, in the middle of Ronald Reagan's reelection campaign, when a rather famous gaffe happened: the Reagan campaign tried to appropriate Born in the USA, evidently having no further knowledge of the lyrics than the refrain and ignoring that it went on "Down in the shadow of the penitentiary/Out by the gas fires of the refinery/I'm 10 years burning down the road/Nowhere to run ain't got nowhere to go". Springsteen was less than thrilled and forbade the use of his song. Having this moment - singing for a change of goverment he actually can believe in, with a song written as a tribute to 9/11 that was the antithesis of the way the Bush administration exploited that tragedy - must have been incredible for him.
selenak: (James Boswell)
2006-09-19 10:35 am

Reading Boswell

Another thing I aquired on my tour through England and Scotland was yet another volume of James Boswell’s journals. Which gave me all kind of crazy ideas (for example, Boswell meeting the Pirates of the Caribean characters would be a riot, and it might even fit with the very vague hints we get as to when the hell PotC is supposed to take place), and most of all made me want to do what things we’re enthusiastic about always do to us: spread the enthusiasm.

So, Boswell, James Boswell.. Who is he, and why should you bother reading his diaries? For starters and most obviously because they’re great fun and offer a look at the 18th century sans hindsight, 21st century glasses or censorship. Boswell was and is most famous because he wrote what is probably the most famous biography in the English language, the Life of Samuel Johnson; said biography had already managed to eclipse its subject’s work in the 19th century. People quoting Johnson were quoting him from the aphorisms he spouts in the Life, not from his own works. Johnson went from being one of the most famous writers of his day to being A Character; meanwhile, Boswell went from being Johnson’s Disreputable Sidekick (Macauly in the 19th century write a particularly vicious diatribe about what an unworthy, disgusting toadying fellow Boswell was and how the greatness of the Life came by sheer accident and certainly not due to any skill of Boswell’s) to The Literary Discovery (when his journals began to be edited, which started in the 1950s and ended in the 1990s; Boswell really wrote a lot of journals).

A lot of the charm of Boswell and his diaries lies in the contradictions. He was very observant (well, duh) and yet introspective; he could be enthusiastic as hell one minute and depressed in the next; he was a passionate Tory with a sneaking fondness for revolutions and rebels (hence was rooting for the Americans, saw Rousseau and Voltaire when he was visiting the Continent, which from the pov of both his father and Dr. Johnson, i.e. the men he revered most, was like visiting the devil), a lawyer who was never that successful because he invariably chose the cases no one else cared about, clients who hardly had any money – horse thieves, sheep thieves, drunken and unemployed veterans, conscripts who made it back to England from Australia and got caught – and yet was pro-slavery because he couldn’t see anything wrong with the system; a Scotsman proud of his heritage and simultaneously ashamed because everyone ridiculed Sots in those days; a man who wanted to be respected desperately and yet when things got boring invariably clowned around (once he imitated a cow in a theatre where the audience waited and waited for the curtain to rise); deeply in love with his wife and yet, the first three years of their marriage aside, unable to remain faithful to her; and so on, and so forth. Boswell describes figures of world history with the same detail and intensity he gives to descriptions of people we’d never heard about otherwise and who are insignificant to history, like his client John Reid (whom he saved from being hanged for stealing sheep the first time around but could not save the second time) or his children. (Boswell, who had a rather severe father, was himself a very enthusiastic one, and it amused but didn’t surprise me to find out in the Edinburgh journals that when his little daughter Veronica shocked him by declaring God didn’t exist, he did what one associates more with parents of the 20th than the 18th century – he consulted a guidebook. In vain, btw; it didn’t cover religious doubts. Boswell then didn’t reprimand Veronica but talked to her to find out how she got the idea.) Oh, and his sexual encounters and/or romances. One reason we’re lucky the journals didn’t get published before the 20th century – they would have been hopelessly cut otherwise, because of Boswell’s sex life.

And now I’m going to let the man speak for himself – and for some of his contemporaries:

Of patriotism, sex, love, Shakespeare, polygamy, marriage and death )
selenak: (Sloane - Monanotlisa)
2006-04-05 06:17 pm
Entry tags:

Alias questions and Dr. Who rec

Mainz and true April weather today - snow storm in the morning, when I was still in Oberkochen, and sunshine right now. As today's hotel has wi fi, I got to browse through the net somewhat. [livejournal.com profile] yahtzee63 made a great Best Of Alias poll, with the show drawing to a close, which was fun to reply to. Speaking of Alias, one fanon has puzzled me somewhat, or rather, I guess I know the explanation, but I want to be sure: to wit, Sark-the-abused-child. Now, as far as I recall, and I admit I only watched the relevant scenes once, Sark not being of great interest to me when he's not with Sloane, Irina or Sydney, Sark did not know Lazarey was his father until he got told just this in early season 3 (upon receiving nice cash as his heritage). When he finally met the gentleman in question, he gave the impression of not being on a familiar level with him as well. I did not get the idea that his torturing Lazarey was motivated by anything other than wanting the information Lazarey was hiding. So I am forced to conclude that unless I'm grossly misremembering or missed out important scenes, the fanon that Sark was abused as a child by his bad father and that this was the motivation of torturing and killing the guy doesn't have any basis in canon. I mean, other than the wish to give Sark some motivation.

Sidenote I: this reminds me of Abused!Draco in HP fanon, but then, Sark quite often seems to be Fanon Draco.

Sidenote II: The other Sark fanon, that Irina was his mother figure, at least does have a canon basis, but then again his "your mother is like a mother to me" speech to Sydney might have just been made up on the spot in order to get under her skin/in her pants. Can't say I got a maternal vibe from Irina, except perhaps in one scene, where she sends Sark out of the room before she rips into Sloane re: Sydney (and Sark distinctly sulked at being sent away while Mommy and Daddy were clearly about to fight). However, Irina could just have been her professional self, and you don't quarrel in front of your minion with your partner in crime. It also reminded me of Sloane's chilly reaction when Sark attempts to ridicule the SD 6 personnel for their gullibility in front of him. One thing seems clear, Sark just isn't in the club with either Irina or Sloane.

I'm not really sure why Sark, Krychek, Sawyer et al never did anything for me. Good-looking, cool assassin (or crook, in Sawyer's case) with the occasional good one liner isn't a bad archetype; perhaps it's that in each fandom, the middle-aged/old guys were just more interesting and offered more layers. I was never an X-File fanatic, but I did watch and read some fanfic now and then, and seriously, as far as villains were concerned, I'd read something about the Cigarette Smoking Man any time of the day before looking for Krychek. Lost fandom continues to frustrate me by not having written about Locke instead of Sawyer (and Jack), and with Alias, well, we all know whom I fell for ever all the way back in season 1.

It's not a reverse age-ism with me, either. In BTVS, you'd think I'd be a Giles fan, or a Giles-and-Ethan fan, and I like them, I do, but it's Buffy all the way, and over at AtS, it's Connor (in addition to Darla, but as she's 400 plus, she's not a help to the point I'm trying to make), so clearly, I can like young characters.

****

To switch fandoms entirely, and moving over to Dr. Who [livejournal.com profile] astrogirl2 has written an excellent story about Mickey meeting one of the Doctor's old aquaintances. Mickey being another young character I like, I urge you to read it.
selenak: (Illyria - Kathyh)
2005-12-26 08:13 am
Entry tags:

I bring recs!

In betweeen family stuff and watching of Spooks, I bring you three quick Christmas recs drawn from hasty surfings. Not Yuletide stories, I'll check those out once I have more time, but:

[livejournal.com profile] andrastewhite made a great multifandom Christmas vid. Chances are your fandom of choice will be represented. I know a lot of mine were. (The two Alias clips made me go "aw", the Star Wars one made me giggle in a good way, I just was over the moon with the first B5 one etc...)

[livejournal.com profile] sylviavolk2000 wrote a post-NFA-Angel Christmas story about Illyria and Andrew. The way she uses the characters, and the pattern of gods born and reborn is just amazing.

And speaking of patterns: [livejournal.com profile] superplin wrote one of her clever and observant essays about Christmas motifs in the Jossverse.
selenak: (faceyourfate - yodaamidala)
2005-08-24 08:22 pm
Entry tags:

More Vids

Kid Fears by [livejournal.com profile] astolat was fabulous in the old version already - an Imperial Trilogy vid, focusing on Leia and Luke, with some footage from TPM as well. Now that all three movies of the Republic Trilogy are available, she has remastered it, connecting Leia's and Luke's journeys to crucial points in their parents' lives, and the result is breathtaking. It's here.

Footlose, an ST: TNG vid, otoh, is one of the funniest things I ever saw and a must if you love Q and Picard. (That means you, [livejournal.com profile] alara_r!) Q himself would have adored it, and put it on the Enterprise screens for all to see. Whether Jean-Luc would have forgiven him for that is up to debate. To be admired and downloaded here.

In other news, does anyone know where I can get 1602 scans?
selenak: (Shadows - Saava)
2005-07-25 05:59 pm

Fanfiction Recommendations

I bring fanfic recs, from various fandoms.

Babylon 5:

"Revenant", by [livejournal.com profile] andrastewhite. Vir, and a character we only heard about, after Londo's and G'Kar's deaths. Touching and wistful. Ah, Vir.

Dr. Who:
"Coward in your own story": one of the many things I loved about the new Dr. Who was how the people Rose left behind - her boyfriend Mickey and her mother Jackie - were developed from comic relief into fully fledged characters. This story takes on Mickey after End of the World, visiting Clive' s (remember him? Website guy, killed in the pilot?) family and dealing, or not, with his decision about the Doctor's offer. Excellent.

Deep Space Nine:
"Trust a Gambler": Quark and Dax after her wedding to Worf. There aren't many who share my Quark adoration and soft spot for his relationship with Jadzia, but [livejournal.com profile] bethos is one of them, and she captures both superbly.

Alias:
"They that are honest"

A rare take on Emily's and Sydney's relationship pre-pilot, and on several other issues besides. No spoilers, just foreshadowing. There cannot be enough Emily fanfiction. Loved it.
selenak: (Tardis - saava)
2005-07-06 09:54 pm
Entry tags:

Fanfic and meta links (Dr. Who, Alias, Star Wars)

Found a delightful Dr. Who story, gen, set post-Boom Town as Rose deals with what happened between Mickey and herself. Terrific Rose-Jack interaction, ditto for Jack-Doctor. Everyone is written very well here, but Jack especially stands out: "Times Like These".

***

One of the great things about Alias is that the show offers several interesting middle-aged women. Starting with SpyMommy, of course, but someone I love as much as the fascinating Irina is her quieter counterpart, Arvin Sloane's wife Emily. So I was glad to see a new Emily story and got inspired to answer this week's [livejournal.com profile] alias500 challenge with Emily myself:

"Marriage"

Set in late season 1, but with a spoiler for the season 4 episode "In Dreams".

***
It's a question that comes up every now and then: why does Padmé love Anakin? My own take on it is pretty much similar to [livejournal.com profile] thalia_seawood's, which is why I was glad to read her post here.