Vulbus Incognita Magazine
61
Arts & Tendencies with a bit of geek culture
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A sociology of the cinema

A sociology of the cinema | Vulbus Incognita Magazine | Scoop.it

One of the very first scholarly theses to be written about the cinema, Emilie Altenloh’s Zur Soziologie des Kino: Die Kino-Unternehmung und die Sozialen Schichten Ihrer Besucher (A Sociology of the Cinema) (1914) has proven to be of lasting worth. Altenloh’s study of the habits of cinemagoers in Mannheim, Germany has greatly grown in reputation in recent years, partly because her interest in the social drivers behind the popularity of cinema anticipate modern interests and concerns, and partly because of the increase in studies of cinema as social space generally.

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Signed copy of Frankenstein found by chance sells for over £350,000 - Telegraph

Signed copy of Frankenstein found by chance sells for over £350,000 - Telegraph | Vulbus Incognita Magazine | Scoop.it
A signed copy of the Gothic horror Frankenstein which was found by chance has sold for at least £350,000.

Via Ricardo Lourenço
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Was ‘Frankenstein’ Really About Childbirth?

Was ‘Frankenstein’ Really About Childbirth? | Vulbus Incognita Magazine | Scoop.it

 

The last notes that Wollstonecraft wrote to Godwin are included in the exhibition“Shelley’s Ghost: The Afterlife of a Poet,” which began last year at the Bodleian Library in Oxford and has now come to the New York Public Library.

On display are numerous artifacts both personal and literary from the lives of the Shelleys, including manuscript pages from the notebook in which Mary wrote Frankenstein (with editing in the margins by her husband), which have never before been shown publicly in the United States.

But it was Wollstonecraft’s scribbled note, in which she referred to her baby as “the animal”— the same word that the scientist in Frankenstein would use to describe his own notorious creation—that gave me pause.

Could the novel—commonly understood as a fable of masculine reproduction, in which a man creates life asexually—also be a story about pregnancy?


Via Ricardo Lourenço, vidistar
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