biweekly links 8-29-2018

Book review: ‘Shakespeare and the Resistance’ is a tale of a real-life Elizabethan plot: until I read this review about another linking of Shakespeare to covert politics I’d never heard of Clare Asquith. I gather from sniffing around the web that her previous book on Shakespeare’s coded commentaries on Elizabeth I’s regime is lauded in some circles and virulently ridiculed in others. I don’t know enough to judge either way, so I just present this as “interesting” in the same spirit as Shakespeare’s mooted connections to Dee and Kelley’s possible spying in Bohemia.

Not-So-Silent Cinema presents “Häxan”, Witchcraft Through the Ages: if you can get to the Mütter Museum for Halloween, this looks like a fun way to spend it (depending on your definition of “fun”. I’d be all in).

Spellbound: Magic, Ritual and Witchcraft: if you’re in Oxford UK between now and January you might want to check this out at the Ashmolean Museum. The rest of us will have to make do with the website photos, including one of John Dee’s famous shewstones.

biweekly links 8-20-2017

I spent the eclipse with Asheville’s witches: I know Asheville mostly as the home of Biltmore House and former home of Moogfest, and while it seems an artsy, crunchy granola college town I didn’t know much about their pagan community. They seem fairly large but their interpretations of the eclipse are as varied as the pagan community itself. (Additional weird resource: Asheville Raven & Crone. No online shopping but a decent overview of their stock, plus event calendar).

Keeping secrets in sixteenth-century Istanbul: Holy Roman vs Ottoman Empires with ciphers and invisible ink! Of interest to me because Rudolf II managed his war with the Ottoman Empire so poorly that the rest of his family switched their support to his brother Matthias, thus beginning the end of Rudolfine Prague’s moment as art/occult capital of Europe.

Make America Ghostly Again: The Demon Cat of Washington D.C.: one of my favorite ghost stories ever! Said to have predicted both Lincoln’s and Kennedy’s assassinations, the cat also evidently enjoys scaring people to death (which, let’s face it, all cats would do if they could).

Orange cat sitting in cardboard box
Spice, the demon cat of my household, is bigger and scarier than her DC counterpart. She is very certain of this. Author’s own.

Witches Allegedly Stole Penises and Kept Them as Pets in the Middle Ages: but did they get along with the witches’ cats? Seriously though, this myth says more about the witch-hunters than the witches. Link includes possibly NSFW medieval penis-tree imagery, so don’t say you haven’t been warned.