The end of a streak means relaxing into my Amsterdam trip with my wonderful husband tomorrow.

There is something rather neurotic about daily blogging. Well, there you go. I am free at last. WordPress has, or had, a function by which it congratulated people each time they increase the number of days of continuous daily blogs. You were given a streak number corresponding to the number of days you continued your … More The end of a streak means relaxing into my Amsterdam trip with my wonderful husband tomorrow.

Personal, institutional, or collective. What is Malpractice?

Personal, institutional, or collective. What is Malpractice? Tom Hughes as Dr. James Ford in the midst of a hospital discharge mental health assessment, which becomes the focus of the first malpractice claims levelled against him I started watching the series Malpractice only in its second series, and then because I had heard that its focus was on mental … More Personal, institutional, or collective. What is Malpractice?

Why does Simon Armitage dwell on dwelling? A blog on Simon Armitage (2025) ‘Dwell’ London, Faber & Faber.

Why does Simon Armitage dwell on dwelling? A blog on Simon Armitage (2025) [with illustrations by Beth Munro} Dwell London, Faber & Faber. The new poems by Simon Armitage that were published yesterday are inextricably linked to  the Lost Gardens of Heligan, ‘Europe’s largest garden restoration project’, in Cornwall. They will also be ‘manifested physically … More Why does Simon Armitage dwell on dwelling? A blog on Simon Armitage (2025) ‘Dwell’ London, Faber & Faber.

Children Processing the Hard Stuff in Dying County Durham Mining Communities

Geoff brought me a gift from his day volunteering at Oxfam to include in my mining books. It is a pamphlet published in 1990 by Durham Arts Association.  It charts encounters by a retired miner, of 40 years work down pits, who was dedicating the time released to his lifelong wanting to produce art with … More Children Processing the Hard Stuff in Dying County Durham Mining Communities

Redundant beauty: excess of signification and resurrected narratives of desire. This is a blog on the brilliant book by Michael Sappol (2025) ‘Queer Anatomies: Aesthetics and Desire in the Anatomical Image 1700 – 1900’, Bloomsbury Publishing PLC.

Gaze on the picture above and any anatomical learning, or at least a good proportion of it, gets absorbed in gazing at the beauty of the head and face of the model, which though logic (and that ‘little knowledge that is a dangerous thing’) tells us that this is the head and face of a … More Redundant beauty: excess of signification and resurrected narratives of desire. This is a blog on the brilliant book by Michael Sappol (2025) ‘Queer Anatomies: Aesthetics and Desire in the Anatomical Image 1700 – 1900’, Bloomsbury Publishing PLC.

Communication between the diverse: the benefits of modelling conflictual consensus.

What do you do to be involved in the community? In an article by the American Public Power  Association [APPA], called ‘Dissecting the True Meaning of Community’, some things are said about unpacking the meaning of the word  ‘community’ from its origins as a word. I have no knowledge of the real politics of APPA, though … More Communication between the diverse: the benefits of modelling conflictual consensus.

I think it must be being a film critic for I surely could not do a worst job than some! LOL. Malcolm Bradshaw, the film critic for ‘The Guardian’, I am told, says he thinks ‘Sinners’ would be a better film without the ‘supernatural element’. Yet this is the first film ever to understand the beauty of the mythology of the vampire in a way that matters. This blog tries to say why.

I think it must be being a film critic for I surely could not do a worst job than some! LOL. Or perhaps a comedian! Have you heard the one about the old man who in his youth survived a vampire attack that turned his friend into a vampire? One night in a bar, his … More I think it must be being a film critic for I surely could not do a worst job than some! LOL. Malcolm Bradshaw, the film critic for ‘The Guardian’, I am told, says he thinks ‘Sinners’ would be a better film without the ‘supernatural element’. Yet this is the first film ever to understand the beauty of the mythology of the vampire in a way that matters. This blog tries to say why.

Freedom has little use for those who prefer to be bound without choosing and committing to the bonds that matter.

My convoluted title is meant to avoid the sense that bonds are unimportant and contrary to what freedom is. Freedom and bondage are only binary contraries either to: Freedom is oft best experienced and compromised in relationships. The death of love of any kind is usually the accompaniment of the plea of one person on … More Freedom has little use for those who prefer to be bound without choosing and committing to the bonds that matter.

‘But there is no sign of the boy.’ The coming to age of a queer boy told in the third person captures the alienation possible in that experience but that may be all it seeks to show! This is a blog on Michael Amherst (2025) ‘The Boyhood of Cain’.

‘But there is no sign of the boy.’ The coming to age of a queer boy told in the third person captures the alienation possible in that experience but that may be all it seeks to show! This is a blog on Michael Amherst (2025) The Boyhood of Cain London, Faber & Faber. I sighed … More ‘But there is no sign of the boy.’ The coming to age of a queer boy told in the third person captures the alienation possible in that experience but that may be all it seeks to show! This is a blog on Michael Amherst (2025) ‘The Boyhood of Cain’.

The serious games queer art plays: this blog is a reflection on a brilliant article in this month’s ‘Gay & Lesbian Review’ by Joseph Shaikewitz.

The serious games queer art plays: this blog is a reflection on a brilliant article in this two-monthly offering of ‘Gay & Lesbian Review‘ by Joseph Shaikewitz. The article to which this blog owes everything: in Gay & Lesbian Review May – June 2025 Volume XXXII, Number 3, pages 32 – 35. The present two-monthly … More The serious games queer art plays: this blog is a reflection on a brilliant article in this month’s ‘Gay & Lesbian Review’ by Joseph Shaikewitz.