olivermoss: (Default)
[personal profile] olivermoss
I've made my yearly post on works entering public domain in the US. There is some excitement over The Great Gatsby entering public domain on January 1st.

This year, it's works with a US publication date of 1925 that are entering public domain here. What books, songs, films, musicals or art are you excited to see leave copyright? Or are you looking ahead a few years to when (if my math is right) Sherlock Holmes leaves copyright?
cuddyclothes: (Default)
[personal profile] cuddyclothes
Over at give_satisfaction, there's a post about an essay with that title with a link. My personal headcanon is that PGW had a picture of movie star Ramon Novarro over his writing desk. But that's just me.




Essay On P.G. Wodehouse Being Squeamish About Sex


olivermoss: (Default)
[personal profile] olivermoss

Based on a post I wrote for IndeedSir.

It's almost The Roaring 20s again! Just a few weeks now. To prepare to ring in the new decade here are some history tidbits from the 1920s to inspire fic or discussion of the era.

* Elizabeth Alexandra Mary was born to the Duke and Duchess of York. She would go on to become Queen Elizabeth II.

* Petting Parties, young people and their scandalous behavior.

* Over in Berlin, Institute for Sexual Science opened just months before the 20s started. They collected LGBT history and had transgender staff members. "Various endocrinologic and surgical services were offered, including the first modern sex reassignment surgeries in the 1930s." The first LGBT rights organization was run out of the institute through the 20s.

* Even outside of Germany, there was growing tolerance of homosexuality.

* Over in the US, we had the start of prohibition. Lots of booze smuggling and secret booze making shenanigans.

* Art Deco, jazz music and flapper dresses are in.

* Egyptomania is big as King Tutankhamen's tomb is discovered.

* Mass production brought prosperity, fine clothing and cars to far more people than before. This pressured the rich and trendy to stay head of the curve as more and more people have status symbols.

* Russia was in the middle of a transition from an Empire to a Soviet State.

Does anyone else have a 1920s history, art or culture to share?
scripsi: (Default)
[personal profile] scripsi
I've just tried to put my thoughts down about The Marvelous Mrs. Masiel on my own DW, and it struck me some of you may find it interesting.

The Marvelous Mrs Maisel
chelseagirl: Alice -- Tenniel (Default)
[personal profile] chelseagirl
Linking to a post in my journal about the wearing -- or not wearing -- of corsets in fiction set in the 19th century. https://chelseagirl.dreamwidth.org/512120.html Feel free to drop by and say hi or tell me I'm wrong or whatever!
thisbluespirit: (margaret lockwood)
[personal profile] thisbluespirit
When you're researching for fic, art, or general curiosity, what are your go to online sources for your historical fandoms?

Does yours have a great wikia, are you a follower of fashion blogs, got treasures on your tumblr dash, buried in out of copyright Google books, or have a nifty Secret Site tucked away somewhere?

Resources List )

Share them here in the comments! (I will, hopefully, then edit them into a helpful topic list in the body of the post presently, and make this post a sticky, for the edification of all.)
foreverdawning: Rosalie Hale (portrayed by Nikki Reed) smiling (Default)
[personal profile] foreverdawning
I'm sure everyone's already read it but 13th century nuns' love letters made me swoon. (link) I was wondering if anyone knows how common it was historically for sapphic women to become nuns. I read a little bit about it in the book Teresa by Barbara Mujica, but after reading the article I got to thinking about it. 
sea_changed: Close-up of the face of Anne Bonny from Black Sails (black sails; anne)
[personal profile] sea_changed
There was discussion about making a post where people could share their favorite historical TV shows, so I thought I would go ahead and do that: I'd love to hear people's favorites, and I'm always looking for recs.

A few of my own favorites, to start us off--I'm undoubtedly forgetting many, but here are a few off the top of my head that I love:

Black Sails - Early 18th century pirates. The first season starts out somewhat trashy, but the show quickly matures into a fascinating and beautifully-done meditation on the stories we tell--about history, about others, about ourselves--and what stories get preserved and remembered and what stories are forgotten or destroyed. Excellent LGBT rep. Four seasons.

The Hour - 1950s BBC news reporters. The cast here is stellar--Ben Whishaw, Romola Garai, Dominic West--and the production and writing utterly stunning. This isn't an era or a subject I would be naturally drawn to, but everything about this show is just so extraordinarily well done. Two very short (six-episode) seasons.

Deadwood - 1870s gold-mining town in South Dakota. The one, the only. A cult show for a reason--you either love it or you, well, don't--this show is incredibly well-acted and written like nothing you're likely to hear on television before or since. Three seasons.

North and South - Victorian England. The most goddamn romantic thing you'll ever see in your life. Based on the Elizabeth Gaskell novel, this follows a woman from the south of England and a man from the north, and deals with social and class issues in the mid-Victorian era while telling a nuanced and compelling love story. Also contains the best refusal of a marriage proposal scene ever. Miniseries.

ETA: I knew I was forgetting something important--the HBO John Adams miniseries. It's absolutely wonderful--the acting is incredible (almost everyone's perfect, but their Jefferson is especially perfect), the production is stellar, and it's for the most part quite remarkably historically accurate. A definite recommendation.

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