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Chia

@marscia / marscia.tumblr.com

Partly Jane Fonda, partly Jane Austen
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Joan Didion writes, in On Keeping a Notebook, that the purpose of keeping a notebook, or a journal for that matter, isn’t because you simply want keep a personal record of things; but because you want to remember the person you were at that specific moment. we write things down on our notebook/journal/diary (whichever one of those you keep) because we want to remember. we want to remember what specific people meant to us on a particular day or hour. or minute. we want to remember our first impression of something (or of doing that something), possibly of someone, too. sometimes we think we’ll “always remember” important events: “I’ll make a mental note of that” etc etc. but in reality everything is fleeting. so Didion says write it down. keep a journal. that way, people, places, and certain events will always be there in case you ever want to come back to them sometime in the future. but also so that they don’t ever haunt you.

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reblogged

What I am about to say could be considered so evil to some but like... the fact of the matter is that you need to be a certain level of thoughtful and intelligent to understand TTPD and it is very evident that the people who are very vocal about it being "bad" just... aren't that thoughtful or intelligent. And that's okay! But maybe don't say something is bad if you just don't personally want to take more than 2 seconds to understand a piece of art.

Hi! TTPD isn't bad. It's just the end result of someone used to not having to work very hard lyrically or linguistically stretching her muscles for the first time.

Equating liking something to understanding it, as you've done here, is already pretty cringe. Claiming that you need to be thoughtful and intelligent to understand what Taylor has made herself into deliberately-- the most common denominator, the most famous person on Earth, one of the most beloved pop stars in the history of time, the White Woman Ever-- is a bold statement that I won't dismantle.

I understand TTPD fine. I just can't bring myself to be invested in the life of a woman who's so boxed herself into the performance of White Feminine that it's become part of her like a bad cybernetic graft in a horror movie, who was an industry plant placed by her rich parents, who is so far divorced from our normal lives that it's an exercise in futility to go SHE'S JUST LIKE ME OMG. And because I cannot get invested in the artist, I cannot enjoy TTPD, because it predicates itself on being a Taylor Swift Album, and not a new, interesting piece of media. If anybody else had released something like Fortnight, with its complete lack of emotion, delivery like the singer is on novocaine and slightly drunk, its lack of key changes or time signature shifts, it would've shuffled away to the annals of history and been forgotten about in five minutes.

I don't think it's bad. There's nothing wrong with liking french fries or Taylor Swift. They're two extremely common, popular things. I just think it's more of the same, and it's weird to insist that it's some great work of revolutionary art in the same way it'd be weird to insist french fries are gourmet.

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reblogged

What I am about to say could be considered so evil to some but like... the fact of the matter is that you need to be a certain level of thoughtful and intelligent to understand TTPD and it is very evident that the people who are very vocal about it being "bad" just... aren't that thoughtful or intelligent. And that's okay! But maybe don't say something is bad if you just don't personally want to take more than 2 seconds to understand a piece of art.

The fact of the matter is that people who listen to Taylor Swift just..... aren't that thoughtful or intelligent. And that's okay! Some people need to be spoon-fed bad metaphors and casual allusions to history and mythology which resurfaces long forgotten facts from the humanities course they were required to take in community college in order to feel intelligent and superior.

Personally, I choose not to join the cult of talentless white woman and that's okay! We are all different!

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so excited for my japan trip!!!!!

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Academic weapon turned corporate girlie

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Anonymous asked:

Hi can you give tips into organization for uni? I’ve been struggling a lot with catching up with my readings and everything

hey. when i was at uni i used to time-block my hours and allot specific chunks of time for each reading that i had to do and tried my best to stick to my outline. i used to do this on sundays and would just plot out my entire study schedule for the week. i didn't really do anything special, just lots of self discipline. planning in advance will save you a lot of stress during exam week

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Anonymous asked:

Hello

I am student

And passing 12th, 2023and also I was applying for B. tech-CSE

But 2standard I was facing too much problem

1is Whenever I was learn anything things after 2or 3 days ya 6or 7hour I was forget all the things

Flash cards really helped me out back then at uni whenever I had to memorize stuff for classes

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Anonymous asked:

hi, what do you consider must reads in theatre/performance theory?

I took special interest in feminist theatre when I was at uni so I’d say anything by Elaine Aston is a good start if you want to study performance theory. Though preferably Restaging Feminisms and A Good Night Out for the Girls

Is there a specific branch of performance theory you’re interested in? Generally when you say theatre/performance theory there’s lots of subcategories and it can be very vague, let me know if there are specific topics you have in mind (i.e. semiotics, feminist, contemporary, materialism, postcolonial theatre, etc.)

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Hi, do you have a goodreads account? And what is your top three book recommendations?

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Sorry this is sooo late! Here’s my goodreads: https://www.goodreads.com/marscia

And top 3 book recommendations:

  • Norwegian Wood - Haruki Murakami
  • The Secret History - Donna Tartt
  • The Days of Abandonment - Elena Ferrante
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