"All this he saw, for one moment breathless and intense, vivid on the morning sky; and still, as he looked, he lived; and still, as he lived, he wondered."

Shirabyōshi dancers in the diary of Lady Sarashina

For a very small and specific part of the novel, I decided to research the role of a specific kind of dancers in medieval Japan, called shirabyōshi. As it happens, their role and characteristics are highly romanticized (i.e., objectified) by male authors of the time: they’re often portrayed as femmes fatales and seductresses, and this is marginally what this part of the novel is about.
In order to look for better sources, we need to be sexist and look for female contemporary authors, and one of the most relevant is lady Sarashima, the daughter of a provincial governor who writes a sort of retrospective diary. In today’s post on my Patreon, we read a snippet of her night encounter with three travelling entertainers.
note to self

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In the (Digital) Swarm

Byung-Chul Han is a contemporary German philosopher born in Korea whose work explores the transformation of subjectivity, power, and social relations in late modern and digital societies. In the Swarm fits within this broader inquiry, focusing specifically on the effects of digital communication on perception,

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What happened in February…

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