‘On Not Being His Echo’: The old story of Narcissus and Echo is adaptable and its sex and gender characteristics flexible. Such stories help if other more appropriate help (such as talking it out face-to-face) are denied when relationships end.

On Not Being His Echo: When one person’s love for another ends what occurs feels like abandonment to the other. Understanding can be slow to follow for that other person until a means of comprehending arises from the process of remembering, repeating and working through the stories that accompanied the lead-up to, duration and end … More ‘On Not Being His Echo’: The old story of Narcissus and Echo is adaptable and its sex and gender characteristics flexible. Such stories help if other more appropriate help (such as talking it out face-to-face) are denied when relationships end.

The illusion of control

What strategies do you use to maintain your health and well-being? The idea that health is JUST an individual one is a relatively new one culturally and socially, although it’s roots lie in the Robinsonades, as Marx called the genre including Defoe’s ‘Robinson Crusoe’, of eighteenth century ‘enlightment’ and free market thinking. The idea has … More The illusion of control

Our hope for the future has to be decoupled from the false promises of economic growth

What would you change about modern society? There is too much to change to achieve justice and decency in the relationships that human beings have with each other. But in the richer West and North of the globe, one necessity must be to stop the pressure on seeing economic growth as the means to hopeful … More Our hope for the future has to be decoupled from the false promises of economic growth

This blog is the final ONE on Yayoi Kusama. The catalogue is beautiful, one essay is fascinating: Phoebe Greenwood (ed. 2023.) ‘Yayoi Kusama: You, Me and the Balloons’.

This blog is the final ONE on Yayoi Kusama and relates to the catalogue of the exhibition at Factory International Manchester Aviva Studios, which I visited on Tuesday 4th July at 11.15 a.m., as part of a selection of the items from the Manchester International Festival. The catalogue is beautiful and the photography stunning but … More This blog is the final ONE on Yayoi Kusama. The catalogue is beautiful, one essay is fascinating: Phoebe Greenwood (ed. 2023.) ‘Yayoi Kusama: You, Me and the Balloons’.

This blog looks at Ahmad Danny Ramadan (2019) ‘The Clothesline Swing’ and wonders about the therapeutic in the act of storytelling. Info. to @TheDannyRamadan

‘ ‘“Tell me a story.” … / “I cannot,” I whisper. I hide my face in your shoulder. I cry. “I cannot lose you.” I pull you closer to me, I cannot lose you after all of our stories. My life is tangled into yours and I fear pieces of me will die with you. … More This blog looks at Ahmad Danny Ramadan (2019) ‘The Clothesline Swing’ and wonders about the therapeutic in the act of storytelling. Info. to @TheDannyRamadan

Christopher Nolan once said: “The relationship between storytelling and the scientific method fascinates me. It wasn’t really about an intellectual understanding. It was a feeling of grasping something”. This blog examines ‘Oppenheimer’ seen on Friday 21st July (release day).

In an interview in Wired with Christopher Nolan prior to the release of his and Emma Thomas’s film Oppenheimer, Maria Streshinsky cited Nolan speaking in the December 2014 issue of WIRED which the film-director himself guest-edited, this statement: “The relationship between storytelling and the scientific method fascinates me. It wasn’t really about an intellectual understanding. … More Christopher Nolan once said: “The relationship between storytelling and the scientific method fascinates me. It wasn’t really about an intellectual understanding. It was a feeling of grasping something”. This blog examines ‘Oppenheimer’ seen on Friday 21st July (release day).

There are some novels that tackle queer life performance head on without reducing it to the absurdity our enemies see in us. This blog is a review of Danny Ramadan (2023) ‘The Foghorn Echoes’. Info @TheDannyRamadan

There are some novels that tackle queer life performance head on without reducing it to the absurdity our enemies see in us. The Foghorn Echoes is one such novel which combines a take of the global sources of the traumatic experience of its characters; the product of civil and religious wars, decayed institutions, even those … More There are some novels that tackle queer life performance head on without reducing it to the absurdity our enemies see in us. This blog is a review of Danny Ramadan (2023) ‘The Foghorn Echoes’. Info @TheDannyRamadan

‘I feel myself at some undefined point, insane for my own safety and wanting to hide’. ‘Love, Leda’ by Mark Hyatt (written probably in 1965 but only just published) is a not a novel about the repression of gay male identity in the 1960s and its consequences in anomie, mental ill health, and suicide, though, of course, it is that too. At its heart is the concept of the ‘truest non-loving lover’; because it is a term impossible to define outside of those questions.

‘I feel myself at some undefined point, insane for my own safety and wanting to hide’.[1] Love, Leda (written probably in 1965 but only just published) is a not a novel about the repression of gay male identity in the 1960s and its consequences in anomie, mental ill health, and suicide, though, of course, it … More ‘I feel myself at some undefined point, insane for my own safety and wanting to hide’. ‘Love, Leda’ by Mark Hyatt (written probably in 1965 but only just published) is a not a novel about the repression of gay male identity in the 1960s and its consequences in anomie, mental ill health, and suicide, though, of course, it is that too. At its heart is the concept of the ‘truest non-loving lover’; because it is a term impossible to define outside of those questions.