Jo ~ Thought Couture
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thoughtcouture.bsky.social
Jo ~ Thought Couture
@thoughtcouture.bsky.social
90 followers 50 following 29 posts
Renaissance woman in the making 💜 Essayist. YouTuber. Lifelong learner. Yarn enthusiast. Virginia Woolf devotee. Booktube: https://www.youtube.com/@ThoughtCouture
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Today’s anti-brain rot accomplishments:

🎹 90 minutes piano practice, focusing on Grieg’s “Notturno” and relearning Joplin’s “Swipesy Cakewalk”

🏺 30 minutes Latin study, mostly grammar drills

📚 15 pages of Mary Beard’s SPQR

How have you reclaimed your brain today?

#classics #booksky
Maybe an actual penguin would've done a better job 🤷‍♀️
I desperately want this to be good, in the hope that it inspires even one moviegoer to read the epic who might not have otherwise. My concern is that Hollywood will Marvel-ify Odysseus and do away with the subtleties of character…but I remain open minded 🏺

#booksky #filmsky #classics
Yes this is the post with which I’m choosing to return to this app. Completely forgot it existed 😅
PSA: You can give yourself tendinitis from knitting 2 fast 2 furious. Ask me how I know 😂
They use the Bassae frieze as a framing device, which is informative in its own right while providing a solid foundation for discussing language, architecture, academics, and culture. The best Very Short Introduction I’ve read so far! (Pictured below is a section of the Bassae frieze.)
Beard and Henderson do a fantastic job of outlining the importance of classics and its influence throughout history. Their writing is super approachable, free of jargon, and is clearly written with a new classics reader in mind. (3/4)
This year, I’m trying to work my way through the Western canon starting from the top. Given that I’m most familiar with 20th century lit, I needed a primer on ancient classics to accompany my odyssey (😉), and this one was perfect. (2/4)
Reviewing Every Book I Read #1: Classics: A Very Short Introduction by Mary Beard and John Henderson

⭐️⭐️⭐️⭐️⭐️
Nonfiction, 145 pages, published 2000 🏺

#booksky #bookreview #classiclit #classics
I’m reading Volume II now and it’s genuinely a bit anxiety-inducing. But I still can’t wait for III and IV 😅
Reposted by Jo ~ Thought Couture
T.S Eliot, “The Wasteland”—the poem that opened my third eye and made me a modernist (though I can’t say I agree about April) 💜

#poetrysky #poetry #classiclit
Reposted by Jo ~ Thought Couture
Reposting so I remember to look into this—I read Wilson’s Iliad translation last year and fell in love with it! Had no idea there were videos of her performing 🏺
i have been watching clips of the classicist Emily Wilson perform excerpts from her translations of the Odyssey and the Illiad and she is one of the most captivating speakers i have ever seen?
Glad to have come across this just as I’ve been thinking recently that I’d like to read more about nuns. Definitely checking it out!
P.S. The yarn is Knit Picks Stroll in Hollyberry and Dogwood Heather.
Behold, my latest finished object: the Trailing Daisy socks by Tiina Kuu! 🌼

One of my knitting goals this year is to improve my stranded colorwork, and I think I’ve finally found my ideal tension.

I highly recommend this pattern btw! It’s free on Ravelry 🧶 #knitsky
Reposted by Jo ~ Thought Couture
"My illustrious lordship, I'll show you what a woman can do."
-Artemisia Gentileschi (1593-1653)
Italian artist
#InternationalWomensDay
That’s pretty much exactly my experience thus far—I’m having fun, but the emotional resonance is lacking for me. And I too am not a huge Odysseus fan 😅
#currentlyreading Homer’s Odyssey, translated by Robert Fagles

Despite being familiar with the most iconic scenes of the epic (sirens, cyclops, Scylla, oh my), it’s much different from what I was expecting!

To my surprise, I think I prefer the Iliad 🏺 #classicsbluesky #booksky
I’ve finally figured out what this app feels like to me:

A college seminar, in which all of my classmates are so smart and cool that I’m too intimidated to say anything because I believe I’m neither smart nor cool.

App-induced imposter syndrome 🥲
Reposted by Jo ~ Thought Couture
Judith Slaying Holofernes (1614–20) by Artemisia Gentileschi, considered one of the most accomplished of all Italian Baroque painters #WomensArt
Reposted by Jo ~ Thought Couture
If you see this, quote with flowers from your gallery. 🪻