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The Finer Heinous Things Club

Online Resources and Facilitator Blog for the UC Berkeley DeCal

Saturday, March 6, 2010

Excerpts from the work of Charles Baudelaire

This guy's great.

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LECTURE #1 - Excerpts from the work of Charles Baudelaire
Posted by JR at 2:02 PM No comments:
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Authors We Will Not Cover Intensively

The occult and supernatural subject matter is a surprisingly bounteous, incredibly prolific occurrence in literature. Thus, there are a number of celebrated classical authors - horror writers or the occasional dabbler therein - who, unfortunately, we will not cover, or cover to the extent of the featured authors. It is safe to attribute any gross omissions or neglect to a sole fact, that none of us are versed, learned, or read in these authors (hopefully be amended in time). Or, yet, the most notable supernatural work is a bit too long (Oscar Wilde and 'Dorian Gray').

If any one is particularly attached or experienced in these authors, we greatly encourage you to extend your recommendation to the class whenever the opportunity arises.

- Dante
- Lafcaido Hearn
- Sheridan Le Fanu
- Matthew Lewis
- E.A. Poe
- Edith Wharton
- Oscar Wilde

Last Updated: 1/21/09

Invaluable Resource Link #1: HorrorMasters.Com

  • HorrorMasters.Com
  • - A very, very generous online collection of classical horror stories, in PDF form, online. Most of the stories we will cover are available here.

Profile #1: S.T. Joshi

  • * Literary Critic
  • * The authority on weird fiction and its Golden Age authors. The course will borrow liberally from his work.
  • Wikipedia Page
  • His Official Site
  • - Discovered Lovecraft at the age of 13. Never looked back.
  • - Became an undergraduate at Brown University in Providence, Rhode Island, primarily to pilfer their Lovecraft manuscripts.
  • - A leading scholar and bibliographer on Lovecraft, Dunsany, Machen, Bierce, etc.
  • - Also dabbles in social criticism, as exhibited by his recent work The Angry Right, so aptly subtitled Why Conservatives Keep Getting It Wrong

Profile #2: Charles Baudelaire

  • * French poet and critic
  • - His name has "become a byword for literary and artistic decadence."
  • - Words attributed to him: bachannal, blasphemer, provocateur, "materialist," dandy, French Revolutionist
  • Wiki page
  • Les Fleurs du mal Online
  • The Poem of Hashish

Profile #3: H.P. Lovecraft

  • * American author, probably the most popular Golden Age writer of Weird Fiction
  • * A good ol' boy, misbegot trans the Atlantic and thoroughly reactionary to the social climate of America, Land of Immagrae (read: harbored questionable racialist perspectives, which find interesting ways into his work)
  • * Words attributed to him: "pessimist," "anti-modern conservative," "materialist" (although soon to disaffect), "atheist," "rationalist," fuddy-duddy
  • * An all-around fascinating human being / trainwreck.
  • Wiki page
  • Supernatural Horror in Literature
  • Short Biography by S.T. Joshi
  • The H.P. Lovecraft Archive
  • - An extensive catalogue of all things Lovecraft. Will make you realize that, apart from a horror fiction writer, Lovecraft was also a prolific poet, journalist, literary critic, essayist, philosopher, pundit, and crank.

Profile #4: Lord Dunsany

  • aka Edward Plunkett, 18th Baron of Dunsany
  • * Anglo-Irish writer of high fantasy
  • * Words attributed to him: "fantasist," "classicist," "anti-modernist," dapper ol' chap
  • * Renowned for beautiful, ethereal, transporting prose.
  • Wiki page

Profile #5: Algernon Blackwood

  • * English writer of "environmental" horror stories like "The Willows" and "The Wendigo"
  • * Would also make careers for himself in journalism and broadcast radio
  • * His brand of "fantastic fiction" emphasized the awe-inspiring in the terrifying
  • Wiki page
  • - Was a "member of one of the factions of the Cabalistic Order originally called the Hermetic Order of the Golden Dawn," of which Arthur Machen and Aleister Crowley were also involved.
  • - Nature lover and outdoor enthusiast
  • - Seemingly one of the more well-adjusted and agreeable of our authors. Not much dirt on him on Wikipedia.

Profile #6: Arthur Machen

  • * Welsh author of "decadent horror"
  • * Fantastic subject matter inspired by Celtic and Roman mythology
  • * His less morbid fixations consisted of Celtic Christianity and the beauty of the Welsh lands, fused together in his short autobiographical novels The Secret Glory and The Hill of Dreams
  • Wiki Page

Contributors

  • JR
  • The Great God Pan

Blog Archive

  • ▼  2010 (2)
    • ►  August (1)
    • ▼  March (1)
      • Excerpts from the work of Charles Baudelaire
  • ►  2009 (2)
    • ►  January (2)
  • ►  2008 (7)
    • ►  December (3)
    • ►  November (4)
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    12 years ago
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    GREAT CTHULHU’Z CREW SHOWZ OFF THEIR MAD DDR SKYLZ - (Image credit: r3v3n63 | Image source: Privateer Press’ Monsterpocalypse)
    17 years ago
  • The Literary Gothic
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  • Friends of Arthur Machen
  • Propping Up the Mythos
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Satan Sowing Tares

Satan Sowing Tares
by Felicien Rops
Haply on strange roads I shall be, the moorland's peace around me / Or counting up a fortune to which Destiny hath bound me / Or - Vanity of Vanities - the honey of the Fair / Or a greybeard, lost to memory, on the cobbles in my chair --- / How shall I know that the end of things is coming?
- Walter de la Mare

The Dead Mother

The Dead Mother
by Edvard Munch
"I remember one little girl of the Marais, who, till the age of nine, in no way seemed to differ from her playmates. But one night, lying a-bed, she whispered into her mother's ear: 'Maman, can you not hear the sound of the world?'

"For such, this earth-- I had almost said this universe -- is clearly no fit habitation, but a Machine of Death, a baleful Vast. Too horrible to many is the running shriek of Being-- they cannot bear the world."

- M.P. Shiel, Vaila

Study after Velazquez's Portrait of Pope Innocent X

Study after Velazquez's Portrait of Pope Innocent X
by Francis Bacon

Followers

February 4 Screening Vote

DISCLAIMER: Regardless of the results, the final decision will be up to the facilitators. For example, unless it gets overwhelming and unanimous support, Dagon will not likely be the film shown, for it is the film least germane and useful to the course, as well as the most graphic.

Some comments on the selection:

The Dunwich Horror

Gore/Violence Level (out of 10): 3 An adaptation of Lovecraft's story of the same name; pre-dates the Stuart Gordon Lovecraft films' equating of cosmic power with sex; not a "good" film, at all really, but an interesting and amusing one.

Re-Animator

Gore/Violence Level (out of 10): 8 An adaptation of Lovecraft's story Herbert West - Reanimator; a fun, if weightless, cult classic.

From Beyond

Gore/Violence Level (out of 10): 7 An adaptation of Lovecraft's story of the same name; the short story only constitutes the first scene of this film; the most explicit film dealing with the "cosmic power = sex" theme.

In the Mouth of Madness

Gore/Violence Level (out of 10): 6 Not based on a Lovecraft story, but the story revolves around the powers held within a Lovecraft-like writer's work.

Dagon

Gore/Violence Level (out of 10): 9 An adaptation of one of Lovecraft's shortest stories, of the same name.