In textual studies, a manuscript page whose text has been erased so that the page can be reused
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Konuklarımız Alanya Üniversitesi'nden Muzaffer Özgüleş ve İstanbul Teknik Üniversitesi'nden Zeynep Kuban ile Sevgi Türkkan, mimarlık tarihi ve kültürel miras farkındalığı üzerine gerçekleştirdikleri “Palimpsest Şehirler” projesini anlatıyor. Bir AB projesi olarak gerçekleştirilen proje kapsamında bir de mobil uygulama üretildi. “Palimpsest Cities: Gamification and Storytelling for Architectural History and Cultural Heritage Awareness” isimli uygulamada çok katmanlı kentlerin tarihi yapıları bir harita üzerinde ve filtrelenebilir bir listede gösteriliyor. Bir yapının üzerine tıklandığında okuyarak ya da dinleyerek detayları keşfedilebiliyor. Ayrıca “turlar” sekmesinde, özel olarak oluşturulmuş tematik turlar (Alanya Kalesi turu, Mimar Sinan yapıları turu, vs.), güzergahları ve detaylarıyla yer alıyor. “Çağdaş mekanlar” sekmesi ise müzeleri, kafeleri, restoranları, manzara noktalarını ve daha birçok yeri keşfetmeye imkan sağlıyor.
Konuklarımız Alanya Üniversitesi'nden Muzaffer Özgüleş ve İstanbul Teknik Üniversitesi'nden Zeynep Kuban ile Sevgi Türkkan, mimarlık tarihi ve kültürel miras farkındalığı üzerine gerçekleştirdikleri “Palimpsest Şehirler” projesini anlatıyor. Bir AB projesi olarak gerçekleştirilen proje kapsamında bir de mobil uygulama üretildi. “Palimpsest Cities: Gamification and Storytelling for Architectural History and Cultural Heritage Awareness” isimli uygulamada çok katmanlı kentlerin tarihi yapıları bir harita üzerinde ve filtrelenebilir bir listede gösteriliyor. Bir yapının üzerine tıklandığında okuyarak ya da dinleyerek detayları keşfedilebiliyor. Ayrıca “turlar” sekmesinde, özel olarak oluşturulmuş tematik turlar (Alanya Kalesi turu, Mimar Sinan yapıları turu, vs.), güzergahları ve detaylarıyla yer alıyor. “Çağdaş mekanlar” sekmesi ise müzeleri, kafeleri, restoranları, manzara noktalarını ve daha birçok yeri keşfetmeye imkan sağlıyor.
Adrian Teacher plays in the band Apollo Ghosts. He has also been in the projects Cool TV, Adrian Teacher and the Subs and the solo venture, Arbutus. This conversation was recorded on August 26th, 2024. Venues visited: The Toast Collective was a "grassroots nerve centre for new bands, art movements, community projects, and activism," which started around 2010. It was located at 648 Kingsway and when it closed its doors in 2021 the space for run for a few years by a new veture, called 648 Kingsway, which has now closed down. Lucky's Comics was a comic and bookstore at 3972 Main Street which has now relocated eight blocks north. After a hiatus of many years at the original location, the new location is now hosting some hows. Little Mountain Gallery was at 195 E 26th Ave built in 1930. It became an art space known as the Butchershop Collective in 2001 and Little Mountain Gallery was established in 2006. After music shows ended, it became an underground comedy club. It was demolished in 2023 despite the attempts of arts groups to preserve it. Other venues mentioned: Hoko's, Princeton Pub, Red Gate, Red Cat Records Bands discussed: Bad Fate, Chris-a-Riffic, Twin Crystals, the Winks, Smithy Ramone, Shawn Mrazek, Dirty Beaches, the Doers Music clips used with artist permission. Apollo Ghosts: Land of the Morning Calm from Hastings Sunrise (2008) Smithy Ramone: Magic Leather Jacket from Cursed (2018) Chris-a-riffic: I Can't Carry That from Bible Beats (2012)
The Observer misses an exit. The most mundane eyes will be unclouded. I choose to remain here. Deep in the dead channels.The thirteenth episode of Observable Radio, a found footage anthology podcast from Cameron Suey. Phil van Hest, and Purpurina.Written and Edited by Cameron SueyProduced by Cameron Suey, Phil van Hest, and PurpurinaBased on Characters from "The Selling", written by Gabriel DianiThe EnsemblePhil van HestRae LundbergJesse LealMink EtteJoshua KellyKhai TruongDavid WooJason SmithJack GriguoliJason SmithSony GreenHector LealLiam GregoryKimberly ScottThe Suey Family PlayersKyle GouldGabriel DianiEtta DevineMariah Angus-RobinsonLaurie PennyJared RosenCohen EdenfieldPaul WarrenWendy HectorTatiana GefterJoseph FaradayAlasdair StuartPurpurinaKirsty WoolvenRae WitteKatie SkovholtJohn StaffordArt by Karrin FletcherPsychology Consultant - Elisa Leal, Psy.D (CA PSY28330)Our Theme Music is: The Backrooms - MyuuAdditional Music provided by Tim Kulig, and the artists at Epidemic Sound and fiftysounds.com, including:Painted Road - Jon AlgarA Fool's Errand - Jon BjorkAir on the G String - perf. Johannes BornlofRaincoat Waltz - Franz GordonThe Tales He Told - Raymond GrouseCreepy Woods - Tim KuligImpromptu Exorcism - Tim KuligNearer My God to Thee - Esther GarciaChariots - Gavin LukeRoyal Highness - Harley RainReturn Home - Moorland SongsKavorka - Rymdklang SoundtracksCinema Francais - Sight of WondersSaddle Up - Francis WellsSFX provided by Epidemic Sound and the artists at Freesound.orgAdditional SFX and Music covered under the following licenses:creativecommons.org/licenses/by/3.0/creativecommons.org/licenses/by/4.0/Special Thanks to Cathleen, Jon, Geoff, Tid, Russ, Kalasin, Rick, Rachel, and Brianna and all our patrons and listeners.Stick around after the credits for a look at the podcast Nowhere On Air, late night community radio broadcasts from a strange little town, from Ensemble member Jesse Syratt.https://nowhereonairpodcast.weebly.com/
It would feel wrong to place labels on Jane Hirshfield. Language would fail to reach there, ironic for someone who has devoted their life to the practice of poetry and the practice of Zen Buddhism. Jane is a modern master, change-maker, and wise and winsome voice. Origins Podcast WebsiteFlourishing Commons NewsletterShow Notes:The Ritual Process by Victor Turner (09:30)nonattachment (14:00)Poem: "My Skeleton" (21:30)Poem: "For What Binds Us" (28:20, read 33:00)Poets for Science (29:10; 56:30)Silent Spring by Rachel Carson (31:00)Poem: "Let Them Not Say" (32:10)Gary Snyder (32:00)Palimpsest (36:20)Poem: "My Hunger" (42:20)Poem: "I Sat in the Sun" (45:30)Man's Search for Meaningby Victor Frankl (48:00)Neti Neti (49:00)Poem: "Possibility: An Assay" (50:30)Stuart Kauffman's theory of adjacent possible (55:30)The 'assay' form of poetry (56:30)Poets for Science in New York Times (57:00)Poem: "On the Fifth Day" (58:40)March for Science (59:00)Wick Poetry Center and David Hassler on Origins (01:01:00)Nobel Science Summit (01:01:00)Videos of poets in poets for science mentioned (01:02:00)Brian Eno (01:06:30)Lightning Round (01:06:00):book: The Invention of Nature by Andrea Wulf passion: being an embodied person outside of words; natural horsemanshipheart sing: conversationsscrewed up: Poem: "My Failure"Astonishing the Gods by Ben Okri (01:12:00)Find Jane online:The Asking: New & Selected Poems Logo artwork by Cristina GonzalezMusic by swelo on all streaming platforms or @swelomusic on social media
Sun, 16 Jun 2024 02:00:00 +0000 https://geschichteeuropas.podigee.io/333-333 71222393109a296a93ebcf894d41f1c2 X: Geschichtswissenschaft und Erinnerungskultur Dies ist eine Auftragsproduktion für die TU Chemnitz Link zur Webseite des Forschungsprojekt "Palimpsest Spaces" Verknüpfte Folgen Marcus Tullius Cicero, de re publica (54-51 v. Chr.) (09.06.2024) Den Podcast unterstützen UNTERSTÜTZE DEN PODCAST BEI STEADY! Marlon unterstützt den Podcast seit März 2023 mit einem Betrag, der den monatlichen Hosting-Kosten entspricht. Dafür möchte ich ihm hier ganz besonders danken! EINZELSPENDE ÜBER PAYPAL SENDEN Feedback und Kommentare! Podcast-Blog mit Kommentarfunktion #historytelling - Netzwerk unabhängiger Geschichtspodcasts Schick mir Kommentare und Feedback als Email! Der Podcast bei Fyyd Folge mir bei Mastodon! Frag mich nach deiner persönlichen Einladung ins schwarze0-Discord! Die Episoden werden thematisch und nicht nach Erscheinungsdatum nummeriert. Für einen chronologischen Durchgang zur europäischen Geschichte sollten die Episoden nach Namen sortiert werden. schwarze0fm hatte als Hobbyprojekt begonnen - inzwischen habe ich aber durch Auftragsproduktionen und Crowdfunding die Möglichkeit gewonnen, mehr und bessere Folgen für Geschichte Europas zu produzieren. Das Prinzip "schwarze Null" bleibt - die Einnahmen werden verwendet, für mich Rahmenbedingungen zu schaffen, den Podcast zu betreiben und weiterzuentwickeln. In dieser Folge habe ich das ausführlich erklärt. This episode of "Geschichte Europas" by schwarze0fm (Tobias Jakobi) first published 2024-06-16. CC-BY 4.0: You are free to share and adapt this work even for commercial use as long as you attribute the original creator and indicate changes to the original. Der Podcast ist Teil des Netzwerks #historytelling und von Wissenschaftspodcasts.de. 333 full X: Geschichtswissenschaft und Erinnerungskultur no Antike,Mittelalter,Frühe Neuzeit,Geschichtswissenschaft,Palimpsest,Kulturwissenschaft,Literaturwissenschaft,Stadt
Episode No. 658 features artists Jes Fan and Emilio Rojas. Fan's work is included in two ongoing -ennials: the 2024 Whitney Biennial, which is at the Whitney Museum of American Art, New York through August 11; and Greater Toronto Art 2024 at the Museum of Contemporary Art, Toronto through July 28. The Whitney exhibition was curated by Chrissie Iles and Meg Onli with Min Sun Jeon and Beatriz Cifuentes; GTA 2024 was organized by Ebony L. Haynes, Toleen Touq, and Kate Wong. Fan's sculptures consider the constructs of race and gender and their relationship to the intersection of biology and identity. As part of his explorations, Fan often incorporates living matter, such hormones, and fluids, such as glass, into his work. Fan's work has been exhibited at the 2022 Venice Biennale, the 2021 New Museum Triennial at the New Museum, New York, the MIT List Visual Arts Center, the Contemporary Arts Center, Cincinnati, and more. As mentioned on the program: Stills from Fan's 2023 video Palimpsest. Byung-Chul Han's book Saving Beauty. Rojas is included in "Descending the Staircase" at the Museum of Contemporary Art Chicago. The exhibition, presented across two floors of the MCA, presents ways in which artist have represented the human body. Curated by Jadine Collingwood and Jack Schneider, it is on view through August 25. Rojas works across disciplines to investigate and reveal sites of knowledge that are rich with historical narrative. His work often specifically addresses colonial histories, and the relationships between those histories and the present. Rojas' work has been exhibited at museums such as the Art Institute of Chicago and Museo Tamayo, Mexico City, and he has participated in festivals and biennials in the US, Europe, and in Asia. As mentioned on the program: Rojas' GO BACK TO WHERE YOU CAME FROM (Santa Maria); The Columbian half dollar coined for the 1893 World's Columbian Exposition in Chicago. Instagram: Jes Fan, Emilio Rojas, Tyler Green.
Veda Hille is a beloved Vancouver musician, composer, theatre maker, and performer. She first played in a band called Mudlarks and started making records under her own name in 1991. She also had a children's band called Duplex. She has been involved in music, art, and theatre for several decades, creating and collaborating in many genres. This conversation took place on May 14th 2024. Venues visited: La Quena Coffee House was at 1111 Commercial Drive from the early 1980s until 2000. It was a non-profit political meeting hub. Cafe Deux Soleils (1393 Commercial Dr, ) was a vegetarian restaurant which hosted music and poetry events starting in the ‘90s, and closed in 2022. Edison Electric Gallery of Moving Images, an experimental film centre run by Alex Mackenzie, was near Commercial and Venables. The Oddfellows Hall at 1720 Graveley Street (a branch of the international frateral orgnization), held at least a dozen punk shows fom 1979 to 1984. The York Theatre (639 Commercial Drive), where Veda Hille stages the East Van Panto each winter, was previously the New York Theatre rock venue in the ‘80s and ‘90s before becoming the Raja Bollywood Cinema. Royal Canadian Legion Branch 179 at 2205 Commercial Dr. Music clips used with artist permission. Veda Hille: Neighbourhood Song from Songs About People and Buildings (1991) One Hot Summer from Spine (1996)LuckLucky from This Riot Life (2008) Tracers from Beach Practice (2020)
Every house holds a secret, doesn't it? And in those houses, individual rooms have secrets of their own... and in those rooms, there are items with their own secrets, too. What happens when one of those secrets goes missing? And needs to be returned... Read by Rachel Blake. Music: Theme music by Trevor Brown Incidental music: (All tracks played by Gregor Quendel) and free for use under the Pixabay Content License.) Moonlight Sonata 1st Movement by Ludvig van Beethoven. Impromptu No 1 by Franz Schubert. Piano Arpeggio 1 Variation 1 by Gregor Quendel. Cinematic Music Sketches: Cinematic Piano Sketch by Gregor Quendel. Fantasie Impromptu by Chopin, arr for music box by Gregor Quendel. Caprice N0 24 in A Minor by Niccolo Paganini. Prelude Op 32 No 12 in G Sharp Minor by Sergei Rachmaninoff. Moonlight Sonata 3rd Movement by Beethoven arr for strings by Gregor Quendel. Requiem Dies Irae by Wofgang Amadeus Mozart. Frühlingsrauschen Rustle of Spring by Christian Singding. The Tempest Piano Sonata No 17 in D Minor by Ludvig van Beethoven. Clair de Lune by Claude Debussy.
This episode features "Kardashev's Palimpsest" written by David Goodman. Published in the February 2024 issue of Clarkesworld Magazine and read by Kate Baker. The text version of this story can be found at: https://clarkesworldmagazine.com/goodman_02_24 Support us on Patreon at https://www.patreon.com/join/clarkesworld?
On the Overthinking It Podcast, we tackle spring cleaning and why we aren’t doing it. Episode 820: Your Desk is a Palimpsest originally appeared on Overthinking It, the site subjecting the popular culture to a level of scrutiny it probably doesn't deserve. [Latest Posts | Podcast (iTunes Link)]
Hey folks! Today's show features Chris Kuriata, fellow Palimpsest author. Sacrifice of the Sisters Lot is a weird, wild ride (meant as a compliment!). Hope you enjoy.
Monkey bots, revolutionary polities, and robot gladiators, oh my! Shaun Duke and Daniel Haeusser are joined by the phenomenal Samit Basu for a discussion of his latest novel, The Jinn-Bot of Shantiport! Together, they discuss Basu's approach to worldbuilding and storytelling, the difficulties of writing about revolutionary change, the novel's unique POV, and so much […]
Show Notes: In this episode we discuss his audio drama, The Palimpsest. Palimpsest is a single-voiced audio drama about memory, identity, and the things that haunt us. He tells me how he uses his PhD in gothic horror when teaching now and why gothic horror is his favorite. I love talking to academics about horror because it is not a side of my brain that I can access so easily. I know you're going to love this discussion! Thanks to Magic Mind for sponsoring this episode! Jamieson's Socials: The Palimpsest Podcast: http://www.thepalimpsestpodcast.com/ Instagram: https://www.instagram.com/thepalimpsestpodcast/ Magic Mind: Purchase here: https://www.magicmind.com/ALLISON Discount code: ALLISON20 for 56% off a subscription or 20% off a one-time purchase. Who's There? Socials: Join the Patreon: https://www.patreon.com/user?u=103143437 Twitter: https://www.twitter.com/WhosTherePc Instagram: https://www.instagram.com/WhosTherepc Email: whostherepc@gmail.com Website: https://www.whostherepodcast.com --- Support this podcast: https://podcasters.spotify.com/pod/show/whostherepod/support
Celeste Callen returns to share her insights on how Henri Bergson's theories of the 'superficial self' and the 'mechanical man' permeate through Dickens' novels such as The Signal-Man, Bleak House, Hard Times, The Chimes, and Master Humphrey's Clock Celeste Callen holds a BA (Hons) in English Language and Literature from King's College London and an MSc in Enlightenment, Romantic and Victorian Literature from the University of Edinburgh. She is a third year PhD candidate in English Literature at the University of Edinburgh. Her PhD research explores subjective temporal experience in Dickens' fiction, through the lens of Henri Bergson's philosophy of time. Her other areas of interest include representations of selfhood, memory, subjectivity and temporality, as well as reflections on the novel and the philosophy of time more broadly. Support the showIf you like to make a donation to support the costs of producing this series you can buy 'coffees' right here https://www.buymeacoffee.com/dominicgerrardHost: Dominic GerrardSeries Artwork: Léna GibertOriginal Music: Dominic GerrardThank you for listening!
Palimpsest is a bi-weekly audio drama about memory, identity, and the things that haunt us. Each ten-episode season is a unique and self-contained story, exploring the spaces between horror, fantasy, and psychological realism. Season 5 tells the tell of Lenore's fairy-tale marriage to the mysterious Radcliffe Thorne. Set in France in the 1920s, Season Five weaves a tale of wolves and romance, drawing on folk tales and Gothic novels. It runs bi-weekly through March 5th, 2024. Transcript of Tal's intro: Palimpsest is an audio drama about memory, identity, and the things that haunt us. Each ten-episode season is a unique and self-contained story, exploring the spaces between horror, fantasy, and psychological realism. It's produce by Jamie Ridenhour, who is our script editor and an executive producer for Carmilla! I'm a big fan of the podcast, and you should absolutely check it out. Here's the trailer. Learn more about your ad choices. Visit megaphone.fm/adchoices
01 Hitomi Tohyama - Love Is The Competition 02 Shoody - Tokyo Melody 03 Momoko Kituchi - Ocean Side 04 Tomoko Soryo - I Say Who 05 Makoto Matsushita - This Is All I Have For You 06 Piper - Summer Breeze 07 Junko Ohashi - I Love You So 08 Minako Yoshida - Flames Of Love 09 Tatsuro Yamashita - Love Talking 10 Masaki Ueda - Big Foot 11 Junko Yagami - Bay City 12 Naomi Akimoto - Bewitched 13 Anri - Remember Summer Days 14 Tomoko Aran - Midnight Pretenders 15 Minako Yoshida - Tornado 16 Tatsuro Yamashita - Dancer 17 Noriki - Night Lights 18 Taeko Onuri - Summer Connection 19 Kingo Hamada - Midnight Cruising 20 Ann Lewis - Alone In The Dark 21 Cosmic - Midnight Shuffle 82 22 Kimiko Kasai - Tokyo Special 23 Minako Yoshida - Lovin You 24 Yasuko Agawa - L.A. Night
Season 6 Episode 3 In this episode, we discuss the book Palimpsest: Documents From a Korean Adoption by Lisa Wool-Rim Sjöblom. Lisa Wool-Rim Sjöblom is a Korean-Swedish adoptee who discovers some shocking truths about the circumstances surrounding her adoption. We explore some of the secrets of the Korean intercountry adoption and learn about why some adoptees and adoptee advocates are accusing the South Korean government and the government of the country they were raised in of not enough oversight over South Korean adoption practices of the late 20th century. LINKS: Legally 'orphaned' to be adopted transnationally [The Korea Times] Paper orphans [CBC] Dutch gov't broke law by destroying adoption files: Inspectorate [NL Times] South Korea's truth commission to probe foreign adoptions [AP] When her mother came to see her, Holt lied and said she'd already been adopted [Hankyoreh] ‘Korea is hiding our past': the adoptees searching for their families – and the truth [Guardian] All records must be unsealed for Korean adoptees who want it, argue experts [Hankyoreh]
Season 6 Episode 3 In this episode, we discuss the book Palimpsest: Documents From a Korean Adoption by Lisa Wool-Rim Sjöblom. Lisa Wool-Rim Sjöblom is a Korean-Swedish adoptee who discovers some shocking truths about the circumstances surrounding her adoption. We explore some of the secrets of the Korean intercountry adoption and learn about why some adoptees and adoptee advocates are accusing the South Korean government and the government of the country they were raised in of not enough oversight over South Korean adoption practices of the late 20th century. LINKS: Legally 'orphaned' to be adopted transnationally [The Korea Times] Paper orphans [CBC] Dutch gov't broke law by destroying adoption files: Inspectorate [NL Times] South Korea's truth commission to probe foreign adoptions [AP] When her mother came to see her, Holt lied and said she'd already been adopted [Hankyoreh] ‘Korea is hiding our past': the adoptees searching for their families – and the truth [Guardian] All records must be unsealed for Korean adoptees who want it, argue experts [Hankyoreh]
"...in the black water with the sun shining at midnight, those fruit shall come ripe and in the darkness of that which is golden shall split open to reveal the revelation of the fatal softness in the earth..." —Jeff VanderMeer, Annihilation In part two of this city setting, we explore Palimpsest's depths and roots, and even add a touch of greenery to brighten up the place. Listen to this exciting conclusion for consensual necromancy, predatory slime mold, TechnoFrance™, guessing what popular media Daniel is talking about based on vague clues, and so much more! Do you have a setting you'd like us to build? Send us your worldbuilding prompt! https://forms.gle/F4SNMH3k7ea5fr1F8 And if you're feeling particularly generous, you can support us on Patreon! https://www.patreon.com/worldbuildwithus Chat with us on our Discord server: https://discord.gg/SRFhWV3 Subscribe to our YouTube channel: https://www.youtube.com/@worldbuildwithus Email us your suggestions: WorldbuildWithUs@gmail.com Follow us on Twitter: @LetsWorldBuild Intro theme: "Half Mystery" Kevin MacLeod (incompetech.com) Licensed under Creative Commons: By Attribution 3.0 http://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/3.0 Outro Theme: "Study and Relax" Kevin MacLeod (incompetech.com) Licensed under Creative Commons: By Attribution 3.0 http://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/3.0
"Where lies the strangling fruit that came from the hand of the sinner I shall bring forth the seeds of the dead to share with the worms..." —Jeff VanderMeer, Annihilation New patron and first-time prompt-submitter Ewan introduces us to Palimpsest, a city empowered by language and slime molds. We build it up with mysterious poetry, eerie choirs, and layers upon literal layers of construction...But can you read the writing on the wall to learn what lurks at the center of this labyrinthine metropolis? Do you have a setting you'd like us to build? Send us your worldbuilding prompt! https://forms.gle/F4SNMH3k7ea5fr1F8 And if you're feeling particularly generous, you can support us on Patreon! https://www.patreon.com/worldbuildwithus Chat with us on our Discord server: https://discord.gg/SRFhWV3 Subscribe to our YouTube channel: https://www.youtube.com/@worldbuildwithus Email us your suggestions: WorldbuildWithUs@gmail.com Follow us on Twitter: @LetsWorldBuild Intro theme: "Half Mystery" Kevin MacLeod (incompetech.com) Licensed under Creative Commons: By Attribution 3.0 http://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/3.0 Outro Theme: "Study and Relax" Kevin MacLeod (incompetech.com) Licensed under Creative Commons: By Attribution 3.0 http://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/3.0
This poem and all the podcasted poems, plus many more poems not yet available as podcasts, are online at https://writingtheday.wordpress.com/ Here's a list of all the places you can listen to this podcast https://writingtheday.wordpress.com/podcast/ --- Send in a voice message: https://podcasters.spotify.com/pod/show/ken-ronkowitz/message
"Take me on vacation, take me to anywhere, take me to the lakes!" After our Show & Tell on Ecocriticism, we're ready to Deep Dive head-first into “the lakes,” bonus track 17 on “folklore (deluxe version).” Join us as we walk through Taylor Swift's nature imagery and consider the lyrics in some historical context. We'll also unpack the speaker's relationship with nature as we consider what the speaker is escaping from, where she is going, and why she is running away. And, we introduce a word of the day (“P-A-L-I-M-P-S-E-S-T”) and pull in references from the dictionary, textbooks, classic novels, and poetry for this one, with hopes of understanding the “waves of hurt” that are packed into this song. Mentioned in the episode: Palimpsest: something having usually diverse layers or aspects apparent beneath the surface Town & Country - Emily Doherty 2023 Mrs. Dalloway, Virginia Woolf Victorian Flower Symbolism Lady Chatterley's Lover, DH Lawrence Douglass Livingstone “symbiosis or death” The Spell of the Sensuous, by David Abram *** Episode Highlights: [01:16] A quick recap of ecocriticism [03:29] Palimpsest: Heart-stopping waves of hurt [06:56] The cause of grief: Some name-dropping sleaze [10:32] Why does she want to escape: Hunters with cell phones [12:14] Seeking refuge: Not without my muse [16:59] The speaker and nature: I don't belong [21:49] Nod to Romantics: Is it romantic? [26:17] Final thoughts: What do we think this song is about? Subscribe to get new episode updates: aptaylorswift.substack.com/subscribe Follow us on social! TikTok → tiktok.com/@APTaylorSwift Instagram → instagram.com/APTaylorSwift YouTube → youtube.com/@APTaylorSwift Link Tree → linktr.ee/aptaylorswift Bookshop.org → bookshop.org/shop/apts This podcast is neither related to nor endorsed by Taylor Swift, her companies, or record labels. All opinions are our own. Intro music produced by Scott Zadig aka Scotty Z.
Violinist Andrew Finn Magill has an eclectic, genre-crossing new album called “The Polaris Project.” Horror writer Jamieson Ridenhour is the writer and co-creator of the popular fiction podcast "Palimpsest." The two Asheville artists split this episode of The Overlook. Ridenhour and “Palimpsest” actress and co-creator Hayley Heninger celebrate the upcoming fifth season of their show with a performance Oct. 26 at the Black Mountain Center for the Arts. Magill launches his album with an Oct. 27 concert at the Wortham Center for the Performing Arts.Get five news headlines from around Asheville in your morning inbox. No ads, no spam—simple as that. Subscribe for free to the First Look newsletter from The Overlook. Support The Overlook by joining our Patreon campaign!Advertise your event on The Overlook.Instagram: AVLoverlook | Facebook: AVLoverlook | Twitter: AVLoverlookListen and Subscribe: All episodes of The OverlookThe Overlook theme song, "Maker's Song," comes courtesy of the Asheville band The Resonant Rogues.Podcast Asheville © 2023
A completely self-produced, and self-released artist, Charlotte Day Wilson is a multi-talented singer, songwriter and multi-instrumentalist from Toronto Canada. She first came to a lot of listener's attentions with her second EP "CDW" which dropped in 2016. Since then Charlotte has continued to drop singles, EP's and finally a debut album, 2021's "Alpha".Her sound has been solidly consistent throughout, with seemingly stripped back, minimal production enveloping her smooth vocals and layered electronic textures.Join us as we discuss her creative techniques and career so far."Roots to Grooves" is a production of SIGNL.https://www.signlradio.comhttps://www.instagram.com/signlradiohttps://www.twitter.com/signlradiohttps://www.facebook.com/signlradiohttps://www.mixcloud.com/signlhttps://open.spotify.com/user/96mhz6qfjoztxbl2dpm0uj903?si=aAZpsoEnRAKdx85kr1QWhg
After the Gloaming is a production of Dissonance Media and The Other Stories.The Broomway was written by Caitlin Marceau.Caitlin is a queer author and lecturer based in Montreal. She holds a Bachelor of Arts in Creative Writing, is an Active Member of the Horror Writers Association, and has spoken about genre literature at several Canadian conventions. She spends most of her time writing horror and experimental fiction but has also been published for poetry as well as creative non-fiction. Her work includes "Palimpsest", "23 McCormick Road", "Magnum Opus", and her debut novella, "This Is Where We Talk Things Out". She also has two other collections, "Femina" & "A Blackness Absolute". For more, check out https://caitlinmarceau.ca/.This episode was narrated by James Barnett AKA Jimmy Horrors. James is the creator/producer of the Night's End podcast and After the Gloaming. He is also a writer and voice actor and more recently an audio producer on The Other Stories podcast. You can connect with him on social media @jimmyhorrors. For more info on James's projects, head to www.JamesBarnettCreative.com.Henry Blackwood was performed by Xander ZweigShelly Stevenson was performed by Alexandra ElroyAfter the Gloaming script was written by James Barnett.Sound production and editing was completed by James Barnett.Theme music was scored by Duncan Muggleton and produced by James Barnett.Music and sound effects were provided by: Epidemic Sound, Sound Stripe, and Freesound.org.If you have enjoyed the episode, please spread the word to anyone you feel may enjoy it and please support the show by leaving a review and giving it a 5-star rating.To support the show and gain access to all episodes now, ad-free, and a bonus episode, head over to www.patreon.com/nightsendpodcastThis episode is brought to you with a Creative Commons – Attribution-NonCommercial-NoDerivatives license. Don't change it. Don't sell it. But by all means… share the hell out of it.Stay Horrific, everyone! Get bonus content on Patreon Hosted on Acast. See acast.com/privacy for more information.
An Interview with Dr. Jeremiah Coogan Dr. Jeremiah Coogan, a scholar of ancient manuscripts, explains the significance of the recent discovery of an ancient palimpsest. That's an ancient writing found underneath other writing that had covered it. The object we're discussing contains the Old Syriac translation fragment of the gospel of Matthew, and it gives us a window into what the text of some Greek copy of Matthew would have looked like in the late second century. Coogan also discusses his work with gospel prefaces.
This episode we welcome friend of the show Mark to talk about three albums all guaranteed to satisfy you whatever your occult affiliations. We're talking about Lauren Bousfield's Palimpsest, Chelsea Wolfe's Hiss Spun and Joanna Newsom's Divers. Next episode we'll be looking back on the immense, storied career of Ryuichi Sakamoto. You can find Alexis on twitter @regresssion, and everything else they're up to at regresssion.carrd.co You can find Boo on twitter @boocanan, and find her visual art @designbyboo and her music at boocanan.bandcamp.com You can find Mark on twitter @charaznablunt, and find his new podcast (!) at abnormalmapping.com/starboard
A researcher comes across a legendary text and is overwhelmed by the knowledge contained within. Genre: Mystery, Mythology Excerpt: I glanced at the clean white bandage wrapped around her left hand and a good ways down her wrist. “It's going to be all right,” I said. “I'm here to help.” The steely-eyed woman sitting across from me in the booth gave a single nod. She wasted no time on small talk and launched straight into her first question. “The Axiom Enchiridion, ever heard of it?” What's the Word (that inspired the story)?Palimpsest: a parchment or the like from which writing has been partially or completely erased to make room for another text. (source: dictionary.com) Follow my Fictioneering MischiefSign up to get a monthly round-up of my recent podcast episodes, short stories, trailers, news, recommendations, and more by email in the STORYFEATHER GAZETTE. Storyfeather-themed merchandiseT-shirts, mugs, stickers, notebooks, baby onesies, and more featuring artwork from stories and art challenges STORYFEATHER TEEPUBLIC STORE CREDITSStory: “A Handbook of Universal Truths” Copyright © 2019 by Nila L. Patel Narration, Episode Art, Editing, and Production: Nila L. Patel Music: “Trip-Hop Lounge Abstract Background” by Digital Emotions (Intro/Outro) Music by NICHOLAS JEUDY (Dark Fantasy Studio)* “Master” “Learning punch” “Genetic marker” “Men in black” “Connecting dots” “Under the mask” “Negociation” “Mindhunter” “Complexe mind” Music by RAFAEL ARCHANGEL “Smoke” *These tracks were part of a music and sound effects bundles I purchased from Humble Bundle and sourced from GameDev Market. Music by Nicholas Jeudy is licensed from GameDev Market Music by Rafael Archangel is licensed under CC0 1.0 Universal License Find more music by Digital_Emotions at audiojungle.netFind more music by Nicholas Jeudy at gamedevmarket.netFind more music by Rafael Archangel at bandcamp.comFind more stories by Nila at storyfeather.com Episode Art Description: Digital drawing. A portal that looks like an iris. The center is dark, save for one small bright spot like a star. Surrounding this center is a toroidal or donut shape. This is surrounded by circular layers of lightning sparks and ripples of different colors.
The Sana manuscripts is a palimpsest manuscripts ; which means that there is a lower and upper layers of writing . Scholars say that the two writings are late seventh and early eighth century respectively. They think that it is two versions of the Quran; the first is a pre- standard Quran which was erased and rewritten as the canonical version. On comparing the two writing , it was found that there are seventy variants between the two. Dr Jay says that the lower text was erased because it needed to be updated. See omnystudio.com/listener for privacy information.
We only scuffed this one just a little lmao so you get Banjo and Kazooie music as a little treat. Here's a new Hot Singles all about a pantheon hip-hop record, a beautiful pop curio and one of the best fucking RnB records ever: Run-D.M.C's Raising Hell, Scritti Politti's Cupid & Psyche 85 and Janet Jackson's The Velvet Rope. All that featuring friend of the show Jakey jammkamm! Next episode we'll be talking about Lauren Bousfield's Palimpsest and Joanna Newsom's Divers. You can find Alexis on twitter @regresssion, and everything else they're up to at regresssion.carrd.co You can find Boo on twitter @boocanan, and find her visual art @designbyboo and her music at boocanan.bandcamp.com You can find Jakey on twitter @jammkamm
Absolutely fantastic. In a double Palimpsest. Thanks for listening! Please leave a 5 star review, share and subscribe!
Ray MacManus from the Binder podcast talks with Jamie and Hayley from Palimpsest about horror, gothic storytelling, and growing up haunted. Binder uses art as a catalyst to talk about big ideas, bringing people together through complex conversations and personal stories to create the connections that lift our entire community. Hosted by CMA writer-in-residence Ray McManus and produced by the Columbia Museum of Art, Binder brings you audio storytelling with writers, artists, scholars, curators, and more. Binder is engineered and edited by Drew Baron. Find out more here: https://www.columbiamuseum.org/binder
Thanks very much for dropping by the Three Things podcast. Here, once a week, I try to stop to consider three things that left behind tracks of happiness and gratitude. This week 1. Palimpsest – Things fade, like autographs on guitar straps. 2. Family history – A new story from my mom! 3. Long view – RIP Ian Tyson. I am not a cowboy. I don't once a year pretend to be a cowboy. Not even a fan of the rodeo, gotta say. But on Friday, November 13, 1987, I danced a polka with Shelagh McAnally at a nightclub in downtown Edmonton. Since then I have been an Ian Tyson fan. (I was a Shelagh McAnally fan already.) I have known Harold Munsons who have helped me get through lean times. I have known what it's like to hold my tongue at borders. I have thought about the buffalo. I still like to strum and play Night Rider's Lament. The original music in the podcast is composed and played by Edmonton pianist and piano instructor Brendan McGrath. The end bells are courtesy Edmonton metal artist and humanitarian Slavo Cech. I am at glenn.kubish@gmail.com Happy New Year to all of us who have made it across the Great Divide into 2023.
Of the 4 Gospels, dating to around 400 AD. A treasure. Thank you for listening! Please share, subscribe, and leave a 5 star review!
In this edition of Entrepreneurial Appetite's Black Book discussions, we feature a conversation with Aria S. Halliday, author of Buy Black: How Black Women Transformed U.S. Pop Culture.About the author: Aria S. Halliday, Ph.D., is an Assistant Professor in the Department of Gender and Women's Studies and program in African American and Africana Studies at the University of Kentucky. Dr. Halliday specializes in cultural constructions of black girlhood and womanhood in material, visual, and digital culture in the 20th and 21st centuries. Her interdisciplinary interests include sexuality, Black feminism, and radicalism in Black popular culture in the United States and the Caribbean. She is the editor of The Black Girlhood Studies Collection (Women's Press, 2019) and co-editor of a special issue on hip-hop feminism in the Journal of Hip-Hop Studies (2020). Her articles are featured in Cultural Studies, Departures in Critical Qualitative Research, Girlhood Studies, Palimpsest, and SOULS. Her book, Buy Black: How Black Women Transformed U.S. Pop Culture, is forthcoming from the University of Illinois Press. Dr. Halliday served as co-chair of the Girls' and Girls' Studies Caucus at the National Women's Studies Association 2016-2019; she is currently Chair of the Girls' and Girls' Studies Caucus. She is also co-founder of Digital Black Girls, a digital humanities archive celebrating Black girls' cultural production and innovation.About the Book: Buy Black examines American Black women's role in Black consumption in the U.S. and worldwide, focusing on their pivotal role in packaging Black feminine identity since the 1960s. Through an exploration of the dolls, princesses, and rags-to-riches stories that represent Black girlhood and womanhood in everything from haircare to Nicki Minaj's hip-hop, Aria S. Halliday spotlights how the products created by Black women have furthered Black women's position as the moral compass and arbiter of Black racial progress.Far-ranging and bold, Buy Black reveals what attitudes inform a contemporary Black sensibility based on representation and consumerism. It also traces the parameters of Black symbolic power, mapping the sites where intraracial ideals of blackness, womanhood, beauty, play, and sexuality meet and mix in consumer and popular culture.Support the show
Face your fears with an all-new episode of Binder podcast, just in time for Halloween! Producer Drew drops in to help Ray overcome his phobia of snakes with a new game. After the break, Jamieson Ridenhour and Hayley Heninger of the narrative horror podcast Palimpsest stop by to talk about their show and embracing the things that haunt us. Binder is a production of the Columbia Museum of Art. Get more information about exhibitions and programs at www.columbiamuseum.org
Im Jahr 1229 kratzte ein Geistlicher Text von Pergament und überschrieb ihn anschließend mit Gebeten. Völlig unbeabsichtigt rettete er damit die älteste, bis heute erhaltene, Textsammlung in griechischer Sprache des antiken Mathematikers und Ingenieurs Archimedes von Syrakus. In dieser Episode verfolgen wir den abenteuerlichen Weg seiner antiken Originaltexte von Syrakus über Konstantinopel, Jerusalem und Paris bis ins Jahr 1998, wo der über viele Jahrhunderte verschollene Text für 2 Millionen Dollar versteigert wurde. Das Palimpsest war aufgrund schlechter Lagerung in einem Pariser Keller in keinem guten Zustand und musste viele Jahre bearbeitet werden. Das Ergebnis ist inzwischen hochauflösend im Netz verfügbar – und dank neuester Bildgebungsverfahren konnte der überschriebene Archimedes-Text zum größten Teil wieder sichtbar gemacht werden. Infos zum Projekt: http://www.archimedespalimpsest.org/ Das Archimedes-Palimpsest: https://www.archimedespalimpsest.net/ Literatur: „Der Kodex des Archimedes: Das berühmteste Palimpsest der Welt wird entschlüsselt“, von Reviel Netz und William Noel. //Aus unserer Werbung Du möchtest mehr über unsere Werbepartner erfahren? Hier findest du alle Infos & Rabatte: https://linktr.ee/GeschichtenausderGeschichte NEU: Wer unsere Folgen lieber ohne Werbung anhören will, kann das über eine kleine Unterstützung auf Steady oder ein Abo des GeschichteFM-Plus Kanals auf Apple Podcasts tun. Wir freuen uns, wenn ihr den Podcast bei Apple Podcasts rezensiert oder bewertet. Für alle jene, die kein iTunes verwenden, gibt's die Podcastplattform Panoptikum, auch dort könnt ihr uns empfehlen, bewerten aber auch euer ganz eigenes Podcasthörer:innenprofil erstellen. Wir freuen uns auch immer, wenn ihr euren Freundinnen und Freunden, Kolleginnen und Kollegen oder sogar Nachbarinnen und Nachbarn von uns erzählt!
Join the misfits as they finally make it to the Bulwark. While Lyonel and Bon Bon found a small village and a new companion, the second crew to enter finds a library? A copy? A Palimpsest? Start to unravel the mysteries of the Bulwark with us on Quest Fest!
The Bow Tie Guy talks about visiting a local prison to sign men up for Angel Tree. There are many blessings in the world and some of them can be found behind prison walls. Listen to a few stories of the blessings he found while visiting California Correctional Institution at Tehachapi. Our Song of the Week is "Holy Spirit Come" by Patrick Mayberry.
The amazing Caitlin Marceau joins me to talk about her works, including PALIMPSEST, MAGNUM OPUS, her drawings of Biblically Accurate Genitalia, and so much more! Caitlin was a fantastic guest!Buy MAGNUM OPUS Here:https://www.amazon.com/dp/B0B1FYLW18/ref=cm_sw_r_tw_dp_NQGXH3FRAXK5JF5J4HWN Follow Caitlin on Twitter Here:twitter.com/caitlinmarceau Follow The Curator on Twitter Here:twitter.com/curatorofhorrortwitter.com/terrifyingtomesBecome a Patron Here:patreon.com/terrifyingtomesofterror
Bu yıl "Palimpsest" temasıyla Özel Kurtuluş Rum İlköğretim Okulu'nda yer alan uluslararası sanat etkinliği "Mahalla Festival"i Sabine Büsch'le konuştuk.
Here's what we talked about this week: Ithaca by Claire North Joan by Katherine J. Chen Our Missing Hearts by Celeste Ng Painting Time by Maylis de Kerangal All Good People Here by Ashley Flowers The Feeling of Falling in Love by Mason Deaver All The Living and the Dead: From Embalmers to Executioners, an Exploration of the People Who Have Made Death Their Life's Work by Hayley Campbell Elizabeth Finch by Julian Barnes Happy Birthday, Bookish!
Before our upcoming book club, Caroline Weaver was kind enough to join us for an invigorating discussion about contemporary book clubs, and updates us on what's going on in her world. Don't forget to read up on Matthew Battles' Palimpsest before the next episode in mid-May!Show Notes & LinksErasable PatreonCaroline WeaverThe Orchard Street Reading SocietyBobos in ParadisePalimpsestGoogle Form for Author QuestionsOlga Dies DreamingOur GuestCaroline WeaverWebsiteInstagramYour HostsJohnny GamberPencil Revolution@pencilutionAndy WelfleWoodclinched@awelfleTim Wasem@TimWasem
We're getting ready to launch into a few episodes discussing our book club book, Palimpsest, but before we do that, let's have a short little episode to talk about Fresh Points and some cool stuff we're reading, seeing and hearing. Plus, a poem for Johnny by Erasable Poet Laureate Jay Newton.Show Notes and LinksErasable PatreonStar Trek PicardPalimpsestSNL with LizzoDonkey ThoughtsStory ClubStarship CasualA Man Called OveUploadValentine by Bill FrisellBefore We DieKathy Abbott's book on bookbindingEndless StationeryCodex Book FaireOver-engineered pencilsDylan Eakin on TikTokKiki Petrosino's Bright pre-orderYour HostsJohnny GamberPencil Revolution@pencilutionAndy WelfleWoodclinched@awelfleTim Wasem@TimWasem
Been an interesting week full of fun and challenges. I spent a good amount of time with Derek exploring TikTok and making TNTD videos. I plan on continuing this for Grandma's House for all of April. (3:45) Derek and I review Caitlin Marceau's Palimpsest. (8:15) I overcame my fear of rollercoasters at Knotts this weekend and realized how much hypnosis has helped me be comfortable in settings that used to trigger my anxiety. (11:20) This week was spent recovering physically and redirecting my writing focus. Had a blast examining death scenes. (15:30) Why I'm a co-captain for Team Brown in the CLF's Race to End CTE Here is the link to donate (20:20) I narrate the next scene from TNTD: At Grandma's House
This week, the NTWIC crew talks BREAKCORE! Logan's pick, and he touts this as the crown-jewel of all the internet breakcore albums that have lead to this final selection. Is there an intersection between noise music and hyperpop? Is it possible to put more cocroaches in the skittle bag than there are skittles? Who knows. Certainly not these guys. All of this, and much more, here on NTWIC Radio!
Abby and Alan are thrilled to present six creepy stories that explore various topics within the horror and science fiction genres. Show these writers and narrators some love by following them on social media and supporting their work. Grand Prix by Jamieson Ridenhour @jamiesonridenhour, narrated by Bob Daun. Jamieson Ridenhour is the writer and producer of the popular audio drama Palimpsest, go give them a listen! And of course, tune in to Bob's Short Story Hour. Late Shift by Derek Hutchins @themanwhoknewjustenough, narrated by Jon C. Cook of the Fado Podcast. And check out Derek's Short Story Collection, THE UNDERTAKER AND OTHER MACABRE TALES, available on Amazon.Anytime by Ryan C. Bradley, narrated by Michael Crosa @morklecorkle of Jollyville Radio. Follow Ryan at @RyanB4890 on Twitter. This story was originally published in Literary Hatchet #20.Madam Marielle Has Never Been Wrong by F.R. Diaz @f.r.diaz_a.morbid.writer, narrated by Robin Sand. F.R. Diaz is a new author, and her debut novel, THE EFFECTS OF HER NERIUM, is on sale now at Barnes & Noble and Amazon.Hooked by Emma Kathryn, narrated by Ethan Collins. Follow girlofgotham on Twitter and Twitch and give her podcast The Yearbook Committee a listen! 9119 Lamont written and narrated by Billy Keenly @billykeenly. lunaticsproject.comGet Lunatics Merch here. Join the discussion on Discord. Listen to the paranormal playlist I curate for Vurbl, updated weekly! Check out Abby's book Horror Stories. Available in eBook and paperback. Music by Michaela Papa, Alan Kudan & Jordan Moser. Poster Art by Pilar Keprta @pilar.kep.Support the show (https://www.patreon.com/filmsaboutlunatics)
Around the Campfire with The LobbyistsEpisode 2: PalimpsestWritten by Jessica Kahkoska Music by Tommy CrawfordFeaturing Tommy Crawford, Laura Dadap, Eloise Eonnet, Alex Grubbs, and Will TurnerDirected by Liz CarlsonMixed and recorded by John GilmartinAdditional Sound Design by Erica FeaginSeries created and produced by Tommy CrawfordAdditional producing support by Liz Carlson