Riyoko ikeda biography of abraham lincoln
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FRENCH 17
PART V: AUTHORS AND PERSONAGES
ARIOSTO
LALLEMAND, MARIE-GABRIELLE. “L’unité d’action dans les romans héroïques (Desmarets, Gomberville, La Calprenède, Scudéry).” PSCFL XL.79 (2013), 291-305.
Covering the years 1640-1670, author looks at influence of Ariosto and Tasso on theories of unity of action in the heroic novel. Concludes that Tasso is the greater influence in terms of how best to create variety in the plot without sacrificing unity.
LINTNER, DOROTHÉE. “Appropriations comiques du Tasse et de l’Arioste à travers quelques histoires comiques du XVIIe siècle.” PSCFL XL.79 (2013), 261-75.
Shows that most comic novelists either allude to the Tasso-Ariosto quarrel, or reference the authors themselves, or yet again emulate one or the other. Tendency is to show preference for one without necessarily rejecting the other.
STEIGERWALD, JÖRN. “De la querelle entre l’Arioste et le Tasse à la dispute entre l̵
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Fujoshi Fantasy Play and Transgressive I
Fujoshi Fantasy Play and Transgressive I
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The kanji for "manga" from the preface to Shiji no yukikai (1798), via Wikimedia Commons
Mitfreude is the joy of sharing joy with friends.
Sometimes you have a friend who’s passionate about a topic—lizards, the Basque language, regency hairstyles—and you sit and ask, “What’s so cool about [topic]?” and a delightful hour later you’ve tasted the topic’s awesome history, examples, taken delight in your friend’s delight, and forever after when that topic comes up you smile, and get the context, and look forward to telling your friend about the cool thing you heard. And (most important!) your friend has not pressured you to get you to buy a pet lizard, learn Basque, or start wearing regency hair to work every day, they’ve just shared the fascinating energy of why find that thing so cool.
This essay is that conversation—sharing the niftiness without the pressure—for anime and manga and how they and Western SF fandom have shaped each other for the last seventy-five years. The aim