Updates – The Epicurean Cure A celebration of thinking – rigorously, critically, and enthusiastically – about and through the media we love. 2020-06-08T13:49:02Z https://www.epicureancure.com/feed/atom/ WordPress Tetra <![CDATA[Black Lives Matter]]> https://www.epicureancure.com/?p=730 2020-06-08T13:49:02Z 2020-06-08T13:49:01Z Black Lives Matter. That should go without saying, and it’s awful that it doesn’t; we recognise the cost so many BAME people have paid and are paying as a result.

The Epicurean Cure is a celebration of thinking critically and robustly about the media we love. Further down you’ll find a selection of works by BAME authors: those that sit with worn spines on our bookcases; that we’ve read to the children in our lives; that we’ve pressed into the hands of friends; that we’ve sat up into the wee hours consuming. We’ve also included a series of links to other media created by BAME people or that give context to the current protests (those aren’t mutually exclusive!). Buy them from your local bookseller, borrow them from your local library, watch them, play them.

However, that’s not all you can do. We can’t speak to the lived experience of BAME people so must defer to those who can, and the overwhelming message we’re hearing is to donate, so that’s what we’ve done. Here are some resources with suggestions of where you can direct your time and funds:

A screenshot of Reni Eddo-Lodge's twitter feed, where Reni recommends people donate to the MN freedom fund instead of (or in addition to) buying their book. https://twitter.com/renireni/status/1266675371904323584

Our favourites

Poems by Maya Angelou

The philosopher’s well-worn copy collects four volumes of Maya Angelou’s poetry: Just Give Me a Cool Drink of Water ‘Fore I Diiie; Oh Pray My Wings Are Gonna Fit Me Well; And Still I Rise; Shaker, Why Don’t You Sing?

Cover of Maya Angelou's Poems and a photo of a page with a left dot in the top corner

Her 17-year-old self marked favourites with dots in the corner of the pages, but every time she opens the book something new resonates. Zen Pencils' Gavin Aung Than illustrated “Phenomenal Woman”, and it’s well worth a look.

Young, Gifted and Black by Jamia Wilson, illustrated by Andrea Pippins

This gorgeous picture book depicts fifty-two black legends – one for each week of the year. It’s brightly coloured, uplifting and covers musicians, politicians, athletes and other important figures from all over the world.

Book cover of Young, Gifted and Black

You can find more picture books celebrating BAME people in Quarto’s "Anti-racist books for kids” list.

Binti by Nnedi Okorafor

The first in a trilogy of stories about Binti, the linguist defies anyone not to read it in a single sitting (also it’s a novella, so you really don’t have an excuse). Tense, textured, thoughtful – Okorafor’s gift for characterisation keeps this story in your thoughts long after the last page.

Book cover of Binti

Rosewater by Tade Thompson

The first of a sci-fi trilogy set in Nigeria, Rosewater is widely acclaimed and it’s not difficult to see why. Both the philosopher and the linguist amongst us read and enjoyed it, and we tend to disagree about books, so that speaks for itself.

Cover of Rosewater by Tade Thompson

The Broken Earth Trilogy by N. K. Jemisin

These are excellent, simpliciter. The trilogy is described as ‘science fantasy’ and has fascinating world-building and multi-layered female characters. Jemisin was the first African-American author to win the Hugo Award for Best Novel, which she did for the first in the trilogy: The Fifth Season. She went on to win the Hugo for both sequels, The Obelisk Gate and The Stone Sky.

Book covers of the Broken Earth Trilogy

The only reason our own copies don’t feature in the image at the top of the page is that they’re constantly being loaned out to friends. The web dev waxes lyrical about how great they are – the rest of us agree.

The Icarus Girl by Helen Oyeyemi

This is a phenomenally easy-to-enjoy read. Oyeyemi took time off school to finish it and the linguist is glad she (temporarily) said screw you to maths. A coming-of-age (sort of ghost) story set against the background of cultural upheaval; it was a pleasure to read.

Cover of Icarus Girl

Why I’m No Longer Talking To White People About Race by Reni Eddo-Lodge and The Good Immigrant edited by Nikesh Shukla

We’re grouping these two together for two reasons: (1) they’re both accessible, important insights into current society, history, and the lives of people of colour in the UK; and (2) there’s currently a petition to have them added to the GSCE reading list (which you can sign here). There’s an American version of the latter – The Good Immigrant USA – edited by Nikesh Shukla and Chimene Suleyman.

Covers of Why I'm No Longer Talking to White People About Race and The Good Immigrant

The Fat Black Woman’s Poems by Grace Nichols

We’d be remiss not to include Grace Nichols’s poetry: often hilarious, regularly moving, and always powerful. It was, and continues to be, an important joy to read.

Cover of The Fat Black Woman's Poems

More Options

If anyone has further suggestions we’re happy to share them, and if there’s anything in particular we can do, we’d appreciate hearing it.

Tetra the Octopus wearing a t-shirt with the slogan #BLM
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The Doctor http://www.stephrennick.com <![CDATA[Halloween Art Contest: Dress Up Tetra!]]> http://www.epicureancure.com/?p=315 2017-08-11T21:06:00Z 2016-10-10T16:33:11Z In celebration of Halloween, the Epicurean Cure is hosting our first annual DRESS-UP-TETRA ART CONTEST!

Using whichever visual medium you prefer, depict Tetra (the EC’s octopus mascot) in a new trope-related Halloween costume (e.g. the damsel in distress, the squishy wizard, the time traveller)!

TetraAbout

Rules:

  1. Entries should be submitted to contest@epicureancure.com, no later than midnight on Halloween (Monday 31st October, GMT).
  2. In your email, be sure to include your name/nickname, email address, and the name of your trope (for trope inspiration, see tvtropes.org, or epicureancure.com/tropes/).
  3. Entries should be attached as a high-quality .jpg or .png file.
  4. You can submit as many entries as you like, but separate emails please!
  5. The winner will be chosen by us, and announced the week after Halloween (giving Tetra sufficient time to try on her new outfits).
  6. Your entry must be your own original work and not defame or breach any copyright.
  7. In submitting an entry, you give consent to its being published on epicureancure.com.
  8. You needn’t base your entry on an existing picture of Tetra – let your creativity show!

Our favourite entries will be published on www.epicureancure.com (on the relevant trope pages), and promoted on social media. In addition, one winner will be chosen to receive a selection of our recent best reads.

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Tetra <![CDATA[Transcending Tropes: And the winner is...]]> http://www.epicureancure.com/?p=210 2016-08-22T23:02:24Z 2016-08-22T23:02:05Z Hi lovelies,

We’re delighted to announce, after careful consideration, that the winner of our Transcending Tropes Microfiction Contest is Pen Tynan, with Universal Non-Translation – a story that manages to demonstrate just how absurd one trope is, while playing with another. A hearty congratulations!

The editors also picked three entries for special mention and display on the site:

  • Luca Saitta, The Consumptive Heroine (for a laugh-out-loud last line)
  • Tired & Tireder, Working Beauty (for playing with format and subverting expectations)
  • Mini Darth, The Mini Darth of Firetop Mountain (for its choose-your-own adventure format, that in fact gives you only one choice)

All four of these splendid creations will be posted in the coming days.

The winner will receive an assortment of Nine Worlds Geekfayre goodies, pictured below:

Picture of prizes (books, a t-shirt, and other bits

And our special mentions will receive limited edition Epicurean Cure contributor badges and stickers (we’re big fans of stickers here at the EC).

Thank you so much to everyone who contributed - we had some excellent entries. If you missed out on a prize this time, please don’t be discouraged: we’d love to see more of your creations in future.

Until then,
Tetra.

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Tetra <![CDATA[Nine Worlds Wrap-Up]]> http://www.epicureancure.com/?p=194 2017-08-11T21:00:04Z 2016-08-20T22:27:57Z Hi lovelies,

We’re back! We survived! For those of you not in the know, those exclamations are in relation to Nine Worlds Geek Fest, which took place last weekend, and was fabulous.

The Doctor ran four sessions:

Philosophy & Dragon Age

The Doctor was joined by The Master, Alice Bell, Daniel Nye Griffiths and Hazel Monforton to discuss the deeper side of Dragon Age, including its treatment of sexuality, gender, class, religion and ethics. The populous audience made a series of astute observations and asked fascinating questions, and a merry time was had.

If you missed it, or want more, never fear: there will be Dragon Age-related posts on the site soon, including interviews with Hazel and Daniel.

Feminist Issues in Jessica Jones

In this panel, BAFTA-award winning TV writer Debbie Moon, Filmmaker Sarah Barker, comics expert and academic Jude Roberts, and writer and critic Roz Kaveney joined the Doctor to critically engage with feminist themes in Netflix's Jessica Jones. Questions considered included: what makes a strong female character, and muscles aside, does Jessica fit the bill? Is she a hero? How does the show handle intersectionality, and what could it do better? How does the TV show compare to the comics?
The Feminism &amp; Jessica Jones panel

Time Travel & Film

The Doctor got to wax lyrical about her favourite subject - time travel - and to her surprise and delight it was one of the most popular events at Nine Worlds! The focus: what a philosopher thinks makes good time travel fiction, a field guide of sorts for creators and consumers alike. Find out more in the Epicurean Cure's ongoing time travel series.

Lessons for Academia from (Video) Games

Our resident philosopher was joined by evolutionary linguist Sean Roberts (soon to be from Bristol, but currently the Netherlands) and Game Studies ‘Person’ Matt Barr (University of Glasgow). Each gave a short talk on their research and the potential of video games to shape, inform and improve academic practice. Academics often theorise about video games, but this was a chance for video games to talk back.
We&#039;re this enthusiastic all the time.
The trio spoke about what we can learn about so-called ‘folk intuitions’ from the tropes in games, how video games impact learning, and what Minecraft and chimpanzees (not together, sadly, no chimps played Minecraft) can tell us about the evolution of language and cognition. You can read about the latter here. If you’re interested in more events like this, consider checking out the new Relating Philosphy & Games (RPG) series, which you can find out more about on facebook and twitter.


If you missed any of the above, or would like further info, let us know. And if you’d like to host similar events, or are running something we could usefully be a part of, do give us a shout.

The Epicurean Cure team also had the pleasure of attending other people’s sessions, including the splendid Catherine Sangster – head of pronunciation at the Oxford English Dictionary – talking about words from geek culture that are making their way into the dictionary; Classicist Nick Lowe’s fabulous insights into historical fiction and fan culture; and a fascinating panel on gaming and neurodiversity, including some superb development tips:

(As you can see, we did a lot of our interacting via twitter, so do follow us there or on facebook for more regular updates).

One last thing on the Nine Worlds front: we’ll be announcing the winner of our microfiction contest on Monday 21st August, so stay tuned for that!

Tetra the Octopus, wearing her new Nine Worlds shirt

Finally, what to expect in the coming weeks: interviews from some excellent folks (both academics and fiction creators, sometimes both at once!), new instalments in our existing time travel and foreknowledge series, and more reviews. If there’s anything in particular you’re hoping to see, do comment below. And, as always, if you’re interested in getting involved, there are plenty of ways to participate.

High eight (tentacles are better than fingers, y’know),
Tetra

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Tetra <![CDATA[Microfiction Contest: Transcending Tropes]]> http://www.epicureancure.com/?p=179 2017-08-11T20:58:15Z 2016-08-11T09:43:30Z The Epicurean Cure team will be at Nine Worlds GeekFest, with The Doctor running sessions on Dragon Age, Jessica Jones, time travel films, and lessons for academia from video games. In celebration, we're hosting a microfiction contest.

The theme is TRANSCENDING TROPES: pick a trope (e.g. the damsel in distress, prophecies are always right, you can't change the past, free will requires choice, the squishy wizard, and so forth) and subvert it, flip it, exaggerate it, transcend it!

Tetra the Octopus, wearing her new Nine Worlds shirt

Rules:

  1. Entries must be no longer than 300 words (or, if in visual format such as a comic, 1 x A4 page).
  2. Entries should be submitted to contest@epicureancure.com, no later than midnight on Monday 15th August (GMT).
  3. Your entry should include your name/nickname, email address, and the name of your trope (for trope inspiration, see tvtropes.org - but we're happy to see non-listed tropes too).
  4. Entries can be copy/pasted into the body of the email, or attached as a .doc/.docx, .rtf, .txt, .jpg, .png, or .pdf.
  5. You can submit as many entries as you like, but separate emails please!
  6. We’re open to all genres, including fanfic.
  7. The winner will be chosen by us, and announced on
    Monday the 21st of August.

Prizes:

The winner will receive an assortment of delights from the Nine Worlds Expo. Our favourite entries will be published at www.epicureancure.com and promoted on Twitter, Tumblr, and Facebook.

From scribbles on a beer coaster to your magnum opus: if it's 300 words or less and on-theme, we want to see it!

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The Doctor http://www.stephrennick.com <![CDATA[Greetings, lovelies!]]> http://epicureancure.nfshost.com/?p=7 2016-07-04T01:15:31Z 2016-07-03T18:50:17Z Welcome to the Epicurean Cure! Here we celebrate thinking – rigorously, critically, and enthusiastically – about and through the texts we love: from literature to video games, films, comics, poetry, television, and everything in between. Our goal here is to bring together academics and the creators and consumers of pop culture, to engage in dialogue and collaboration, and recognise the value of bi-directional exchange: that texts are worthy of our time and analysis (whether over a glass of wine with friends, in the classroom, or in our offices), and that rigorous thinking and academic tools can shine light on the stories we adore, and help us shape new ones. We’re particularly interested in tropes and patterns, and you’ll see discussions of philosophical and linguistic tropes in addition to the commonly recognised literary ones (damsels, knights and squishy wizards). In addition to our musings, you’ll find reviews, interviews with a variety of interesting folk, and going forward, new creative pieces that play with the ideas explored here.

A philosopher, a linguist, and a web developer walk into a bar. The bartender says, "What is this, some kind of trope?"

We bring a bunch of enthusiasm, a variety of expertise, and some helpful analytical tools: new ways to think about the media we consume, to challenge our perceptions and misconceptions, reveal our assumptions, and subvert and transcend the old tropes. The content should be accessible, readable, navigable – there’s no reason academia should be elitist or jargon-heavy, and we’ll be trying to avoid that here (where there is jargon, it should be explained and purposeful). But we believe in precision, clarity and rigour, as well as occasionally making people smile – accessible needn’t mean oversimplified, and academic needn’t mean humourless.

There’s more info on our about page, but this site isn’t just about us and the research we do, it’s also about you! If you’d like to get involved, there are plenty of ways to do so. Otherwise, have a browse, and let us know in the comments what you've found interesting, and what you'd like to see explored in future instalments.

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