duckprintspress: (Default)
[personal profile] duckprintspress


10 book covers and 2 gray book cover placeholders on the background of the Rainbow Flag. The books are: Last First Kiss by Julian Winters; I Love You Don't Die by Jade Song; The Girls Will Be Okay by Linnea Peterson; Platform Decay by Martha Wells; Common Bonds 2 ed. by Claudie Arseneault, Emery Lee & RoAnna Sylver; A Long and Speaking Silence by Nghi Vo; The Last Best Quest Ever by F.T. Lukens; Is This a Cry for Help? by Emily Austin; Bridget and Gabe Are Not Okay by Lex Croucher; Smash or Pass by Birdie Schae. The cover placeholders read: A Trade of Blood cover tba; Panguan cover tba.

On December 31st, we looked back at our reading for 2025 to share our favorite queer reads of the year. Now we’re looking to the future! And the future of our bookshelves is bright and queer. Here are some of the queer books coming out in 2026 that we can’t wait to put our hands on. What books are you most excited for this year?

The contributors to the list are: polls, E. C., Rascal Hartley, Shadaras, Tris Lawrence, Nina Waters, and Linnea Peterson.

See a book you gotta get your hands on?You can pre-order all these titles through our Bookshop.org affiliate page!

Join our Book Lover’s Discord server to chat books, fandom, and more!



Garbitrage.

Jan. 5th, 2026 02:18 am
alisx: The head of a moth creature. It has dark fuzz and is grinning at you with glowing teeth teeth and eyes. (alis.mothface)
[personal profile] alisx

Tl;dr we in the West specifically make way too much garbage and there is no magic recycling bullet that’s going to fix the problem (but a lot of money going in to trying to convince us that it will).

Relatedly, I’ve noticed a lot more things coming in all-cardboard packaging recently. Which of course has its own problems, but at least those problems aren’t microplastics. So.

Leave a comment.+

[syndicated profile] languagelog_feed

Posted by Victor Mair

Sino-Platonic Papers is pleased to announce the publication of its three-hundred-and-seventy-sixth issue:

The Many Voices of Silence: The Diverse Theories of the Ineffable Dao in the Zhuangzi,” by Ming SUN.

ABSTRACT

The theorization of ineffability is a central philosophical theme in the Zhuangzi, evident in its recurring mention and the diverse modes of its argumentation. However, attempts to extract a unified philosophy of language attributed to the single hand of Zhuang Zhou often overlook the text’s complexity and result in oversimplified conclusions. This paper analyzes three key discourses from “Qiwulun” (Discussion on Making All Things Equal 齊物論), “Tiandao” (The Way of Heaven 天道), and “Waiwu” (External Things 外物), arguing that the Zhuangzi presents fundamentally different critiques of language, each rooted in different ontological premises, employing varied rhetorical strategies, addressing specific audiences, and carrying unique significance in the intellectual history. By exploring the heterogeneity of its theories of ineffability, the paper shows that the Zhuangzi’s treatment of the ineffable dao is more complex than a mysterious assertion of the unspeakable and calls for a nuanced understanding of the role of language in conveying the ultimate truth.

Keywords: Pre-Qin Daoism; Zhuangzi; Philosophy of language; Ineffability; Epistemology; Word–Meaning Relationship


—–
All issues of Sino-Platonic Papers are available in full for no charge.
To view our catalog, visit http://www.sino-platonic.org/

 

Selected readings

[syndicated profile] languagelog_feed

Posted by Victor Mair

Sino-Platonic Papers is pleased to announce the publication of its three-hundred-and-seventy-fifth issue:

How Oppenheimer Mistook Time for Death at Trinity (the A-bomb Test Site) and How the Bhagavad Gītā, Read Properly, Resonates with the Block Universe of Einstein,” by Conal Boyce.

ABSTRACT

In Part One of the essay, we review chapter 11 of the Bhagavad‑Gītā and discuss its resonance with the block universe. The block universe is an interpretation of the cosmos that is inherent in the space‑time continuum, where we find that else‑when is no more fleeting and ephemeral than else‑where. However, since the block universe is only a metaphysical interpretation of physics, and since it denies free will outright, it happens that most physicists eschew it. In contrast, Hossenfelder (2022) is happy to explain its features and philosophical significance to a general audience. As for free will, with patience and delicacy she devotes nearly twenty pages to that thorny topic as well.

In Part Two, we elaborate on Rabi’s many‑bright‑splinters view of Oppenheimer, and the concomitant folly of either criticizing or praising “him” as if he were an integrated whole. In that context, we revisit the famed utterance “Now I am become Death” and trace it back to the Sanskrit original which says: “Time I am.” The likely source of this Time/Death discrepancy is found to be a translation of the Gītā by A. Ryder. Ryder’s transmutation of the classic into a lullaby of rhyme and alliteration prevents all readers, even perspicacious RO, from seeing the block universe aspect of verses 11.32–11.33, as explored in Part One. A pity.

In Part Three, we go beyond the cartoon notion of a “tutor” upon whose desk Oppenheimer placed a poisoned apple in 1925 to reveal said tutor as the first ever to (accurately) identify proton tracks in a cloud chamber, likewise in 1925: P.M.S. Blackett. Finally, we ask: Was the point of Hiroshima to save lives by taking lives — a practicality? Was it an act of hot‑blooded retribution — a War Crime? Or, following Blackett, was it a “diplomatic message”? That of a giggly old man (President Truman) delivered in cold blood: “Know ye Soviets that never shall a Communist North Japan sully my game board.” The latter scenario would make Hiroshima a Crime Against Humanity.

—–
All issues of Sino-Platonic Papers are available in full for no charge.
To view our catalog, visit http://www.sino-platonic.org/

 

Selected readings 

Vid beta?

Jan. 3rd, 2026 09:00 pm
aurumcalendula: Claire and Bell from ClarClaire and Bell are sitting to each other and looking down at a rose plant between them. (tending roses 2)
[personal profile] aurumcalendula posting in [community profile] raikantopeni
Would anyone be interested in looking at a ClaireBell vid draft? (imho it's not spoilerly for the plot and is probably 80% kissing and/or roses)

Volts before Volta

Jan. 4th, 2026 12:06 am
[syndicated profile] languagelog_feed

Posted by Victor Mair

Sino-Platonic Papers is pleased to announce the publication of its three-hundred-and-seventy-seventh issue:

The Baghdad Battery: Experimental Verification of a 2,000-Year-Old Device Capable of Driving Visible and Useful Electrochemical Reactions at over 1.4 Volts,” by Alexander Bazes.

ABSTRACT

The “Baghdad Battery” has posed an archaeological enigma for over eighty years. Discovered at the Parthian site of Khujut Rabu (first century ce), this famous artifact’s utilitarian yet highly specific design tailors so clearly to the requirements of an electrochemical cell that it is difficult to conceive of another use for it. Although efforts have been made to recreate this battery (König 1938, Keyser 1993, MythBusters 2005), prior experiments have failed to (1) account for all aspects of the artifact’s design and (2) make a device that has enough power to be evidently useful for people two thousand years ago. The result of these previous recreations has thus been to cast doubt upon whether the Baghdad Battery was, in fact, a battery at all. The present study’s recreation dispels this doubt by accounting for two previously neglected aspects of the artifact’s design, namely the use of solder and the function of the ceramic jar, which together form a previously unrecognized second source of voltage for the device: an aqueous tin-air battery. This “outer cell,” which is integrally connected in electrical series with the device’s already well-understood “inner cell” (comprising copper and iron), enables the Baghdad Battery to generate over 1.4 volts: an electric potential capable of driving a number of useful (and highly noticeable) electrochemical reactions, including electroplating, etching, and the electrolysis of water into hydrogen and oxygen gas. The present study’s result therefore provides the strongest evidence to date for people in the Near East having had a working knowledge of electrochemistry nearly two millennia before Alessandro Volta’s experiments with the voltaic pile.

Keywords: Baghdad Battery, Parthian Galvanic Cell, tin-air battery, aqueous metal-air battery, ancient electrochemistry


 

Selected readings

Dunhuang mania nominum

Jan. 3rd, 2026 05:55 pm
[syndicated profile] languagelog_feed

Posted by Victor Mair

As has often been mentioned on Language Log, Dunhuang is a desert oasis town at the far western end of the Gansu / Hexi Corridor.  This is where the fabled Silk Road splits to head north and south around the vast Tarim Basin (filled with the extremely hot [summer] / cold [winter] / arid) Taklakamakan Desert.  Site of the Mogao Grottoes (hundreds of richly decorated medieval Buddhist caves), one of which (no. 17) housed tens of thousands of manuscripts that were sealed away more than a millennium ago.  Among them were the earliest written Sinitic vernacular narratives that I worked on for the first twenty years of my Sinological and Buddhological career (see the last three items of the "Selected readings" below).

My friend, the early medieval historian Sanping Chen, heard about this important work of Japanese scholarship roughly half a dozen years ago:

Hasseiki makki jūisseiki shoki Tonkō shizoku jinmei shūsei : shizoku jinmeihen jinmeihen / Dohi Yoshikazu hen          Editorial assistance:  Ishida Yūsaku 石田勇作
八世紀末期–十一世紀初期燉煌氏族人名集成 : 氏族人名篇, 人名篇 土肥義和編
(Index of Chinese First, Family, and Clan Names appearing in the Dunhuang Chinese Documents dating from the Late Eighth to the Early Eleventh Centuries)

Part I    First (given), Family, and Clan Names
Part II    First (given) Names (consisting of 1, 2, or more syllables)

Many of the names in this volume, though written with Chinese characters, are of non-Sinitic origin (Khotanese, Sogdian, Tuoba, Tibetan, etc.)

    • Tōkyō-to Chiyoda-ku : Kyūko Shoin, 2015.
    • 東京都千代田区 : 汲古書院, 2015.

Physical Description:
    10, 1250 pages ; 27 cm 

As will be explained below, this volume is vital for a long-term research project that Sanping has been engaged in for more than a decade.  He searched for the book for three years in libraries throughout North America.  Finally, as is so often the case, he found it at Penn.

I called the book out of storage and took it to Dallas when I went to visit Sanping last week (he was there spending the holidays with his wife at her sister's place).  The book is large and heavy, but it was the best possible gift I could have brought him.

Altogether Dohi Yoshikazu's index includes more than 30,000 names occurring on a wide variety of Dunhuang documents, scriptures, literary works, cave inscriptions, paintings, etc.  They are arranged by the Japanese pronunciation of the initial characters in a given name.

Here are some notes from Sanping about the composition of the list:

All name entries are sequentially numbered. So their counting becomes straightforward. Names with a surname attached or can be derived (as that of someone's son/daughter) are numbered from 00001 to 19765 (some entries only have a surname with no given names). Names for which the surname was written but cannot be clearly read are numbered from 19766 to 19961. Then the second category: entries with only given names are numbered from 50001 to 60402 (many of them are 法名/法號 of Buddhist monks/nuns). Therefore the total count is 19961+(60402-50000)=30363.

However, the determination of the latter group is subject to question. For instance, how is one certain that 安信 is only a given name, not a full name? Also as we have casually reviewed together, many "given names" in the first category were just titles, real or honorary.

Here is why Sanping so badly wanted to get his hands on Dohi's index (to facilitate the following research):

The Calendarized Onomasticon and the Arrival of Birthday Celebration
from the Ancient Near East to China

Today most Chinese celebrate the annual return of their birthday just like people elsewhere. However, this was not the case prior to the medieval era. There were insurmountable obstacles, both technical and ideological, to this practice in ancient China, some of which remains true to this day. We then discuss the religious and political elements of birthday celebration in the Ancient Near East starting with the Book of Genesis, especially the notion that it was an occasion to highlight the relationship to one’s guardian deity, and that it became an important part of royal cults, most prominently in the Roman Empire. As observed by Herodotus and Plato, the ancient Iranians had apparently inherited this tradition after their conquests in the ANE.

In the early medieval era, the old Chinese heartlands were conquered by various nomadic groups, culminating in the final domination of the Tuoba Northern dynasties and attracting a large number of “assistant conquerors,” mostly Iranian-speaking, from Central Asia and beyond. The new masters of northern China were quick to pick up birthday celebration in their royal cult. Meanwhile, the Chinese nomenclature underwent a process of “Iranization,” introducing heavy religious elements to an originally secular onomasticon. An important component of this transformation was the calendarization of personal names, which in the pre-Islamic, largely Zoroastrian, Iranian cultural world symbolized the religious importance of one’s birthday. These calendric onomastic data help reveal how the general Chinese population adopted the arguably ANE institution of birthday celebration. The Taoist notion of benming本命, “natal destiny,” roughly the equivalent of the ancient Greek daemon and the Roman genius, was an associated outcome. The whole process was facilitated in no small scale by the loss of cultural dominance of the traditional Confucian elite under the Tuoba and their Sui and Tang heirs.

Sanping will come to Penn (from Ottawa) to deliver a lecture on this topic, probably sometime in the latter part of February or early March.

Incidentally, each entry provides useful information about the person named there, his position, activities, and so forth, when available.

I wish to emphasize how stupendously difficult the compilation of this index would have been, since all of the names in the entries were extracted from handwritten manuscripts or inscriptions, and many of them were in "colloquial characters" (súzì 俗字).  We owe an enormous debt of gratitude to Dohi Yoshikazu and Ishida Yūsaku for making our work on medieval history, religion, literature, and art so much easier.

 

Selected readings

  • "Old Avestan lexicography" (3/11/25) — magisterial review by Hiroshi Kumamoto of a phenomenal work of Japanese scholarship on ancient Iranian language
  • "Dictionary of Dunhuang Studies" (2/6/25) — with a useful bibliography
  • "A medieval Dunhuang man" (7/17/23)
  • Victor Mair, "Reflections on the Origins of the Modern Standard Mandarin Place-Name 'Dunhuang' — With an Added Note on the Identity of the Modern Uighur Place-Name 'Turpan'", in Li Zheng, et al., eds., Ji Xianlin Jiaoshou bashi huadan jinian lunwenji (Papers in Honour of Prof. Dr. Ji Xianlin on the Occasion of His 80th Birthday) (Nanchang: Jiangxi People's Press, 1991), vol. 2, pp. 901-954 (very long and detailed study).

Works on Middle Vernacular Sinitic (MVS) by VHM:

  • Tun-huang Popular Narratives (Cambridge University Press, 1983)
  • Painting and Performance:  Chinese Picture Recitation and Its Indian Genesis (University of Hawai'i Press, 1989)
  • T'ang Transformation Texts: A Study of the Buddhist Contribution to the Rise of Vernacular Fiction and Drama in China (Harvard University Asia Center, 1989)

[Thanks to Diana Shuheng Zhang]

2025 in Review: Sewing!

Jan. 3rd, 2026 09:04 am
forestofglory: patch work quilt featuring yellow 8 pointed stars on background of night sky fabrics (Quilt)
[personal profile] forestofglory
Here’s a round up of things I sewed in 2025! It was a good sewing year for me. This a lot of pictures so I divided it up into sections.

Clothing

This year I got back into sewing garments for myself. Here’s some of what I made. (I don’t seem to have taken pictures of everything)

Jacket!


And I made three of these tunics but I only found pictures of two of them



I also made several shirts for the kid, but again didn’t photo document them very well. But here’s one picture:




Doll Clothing

I sewed a lot of clothing for my 18 inch doll! Mostly Tang dynasty inspired hanfu. I used this project to learn more about hanfu and also pattern drafting. I drafted all the hanfu patterns using a book and I feel more confident about pattern drafting now. (Maybe not confident enough to draft something for me)

Here’s the first outfit I made:


Then I decided I wanted to make a round collar robe for that hufu/crossdressing girl look. I started by making a jacket -- it took several tries to get the pattern right









All those versions really paid off though because my first try and a robe went perfectly:



Then I made a reversible robe – I wanted to do that open collar look I’ve been seeing in dramas





And here’s the second lined robe I made


I also did Tang Dynasty girl outfit:



And in not hanfu doll clothing I altered a pattern so I could make my doll a matching tunic to mine



Quilts
I didn’t sew a lot of quilts in 2025 – I was working on other things. I did send two quilt tops to a friend to quilt and then finish those quilts though. Here some pictures:



I also sewed up a quilt top which I’d cut out all the pieces ages ago but then left sitting around for a while.

Here’s some in progress shots


And the finished quilt top :



I don’t have any specific goals for 2026 sewing, but I have several quilt tops in various stages of completion that I hope to work on. I also have another top for myself cut out, and some fun fabric set aside for other garment projects. And I have plenty of ideas for more doll clothing too!

Snowflake Challenge #2

Jan. 3rd, 2026 10:41 am
stardust_rifle: A blue snowflake. (Snowflake Icon)
[personal profile] stardust_rifle posting in [community profile] snowflake_challenge
Introduction Post * Meet The Mods Post * Challenge #1

Remember that there is no official deadline, so feel free to join in at any time, or go back and do challenges you've missed.

Pets! We know them, we probably have positive associations with at least one type of pet, and they've appeared in our creative endeavors since time immemorial. Considering that, we felt that a challenge revolving around them would be appropriate.

Challenge #2: Pets of Fandom

Loosely defined! Post about your pets, pets from your canon, anything you want!


Include a link to your post if you feel comfortable doing so. Also, feel free to entice engagement by giving us a preview of what your post covers.

And please do check out the comments for all the awesome participants of the challenge and visit their journals/challenge responses to comment on their posts and cheer them on.

And just as a reminder: this is a low pressure, fun challenge. If you aren't comfortable doing a particular challenge, then don't. We aren't keeping track of who does what.

two log cabins with snow on the roofs in a wintery forest the text snowflake challenge january 1 - 31 in white cursive text

Profile

alterkrmn: Nozue from the manga Old Fashion Cupcake. His expression shows confusion. (Default)
Carm

January 2026

S M T W T F S
    12 3
45678910
11121314151617
18192021222324
25262728293031

Most Popular Tags

Style Credit

Expand Cut Tags

No cut tags