Did I mention my German is terrible, and I got through most of the classes by finding various ways to work "Ich habe keine Kartoffelsalat" into my writing assignments? ^_~ I am awful at languages.
So I had a closer look. The print set used is that of the old German lettering called “Fraktur” which is some sort of gothic letter print. That makes the thing hard to read for non Germans
( ... )
You, madame, are fantastic! ♥ It's no wonder I couldn't look up the last word, since I was reading the long s as an f. *facepalm*
Oh, wow, you know, the information about the print as pre-war writing is amazingly helpful in an unexpected way, too, since I've been doing a lot of dating work, placing various narratives in various time periods. *hugs tight*
In case you're curious, this panel is from The Curious Sofa, A Pornographic Work by Ogdred Weary which is basically about playing with reader expectation. Everything in it is a sexual innuendo without ever actually saying anything sexual. They're a bunch of English upper class folks enjoying a weekend of delights, probably in the 1920s. ^_^ I think I'm definitely going to have to look up the "Free body culture," since there's echoes of it in The Curious SofaYep, I've given the title a quick Google and come up with nothing, but that's not a big surprise. Gorey has a habit of making up texts within his texts -- later on the guests read Volume Eleven of the "Encyclopedia of
( ... )
J Flatterman is right. :) It says Wollüste - Desires. The modern way to write it is Wolluste (I think. It's been some time since I had German in school.)
Well, that explains why I couldn't look up "Wollüfte!" ^_~ Thank you for that! The 37 Lusts/Desires would make sense in the context of the work, The Curious Sofa, A Pornographic Work by Ogdred Weary. (It is exactly and not at all what it sounds like. *G*)
Hey, you know there's a big Gorey exhibit at Columbia, right? It's up until . . . July, I think? mortalwombat731, who will be at ICFA, was at the opening; she has a Gorey tattoo and she said she ended up posing for pictures half the time. ;-) Hopefully she can tell you all about the exhibit -- I won't have time to go until after the conference.
Oooh, I didn't know. I doubt I'd be able to get there, but I'd love to hear about it, if mortalwombat731 doesn't mind, and if you're in a sharing mood after you see it, that would be great too!
Comments 14
Let me have a look at it and I shall come back with your translation.
Reply
Did I mention my German is terrible, and I got through most of the classes by finding various ways to work "Ich habe keine Kartoffelsalat" into my writing assignments? ^_~ I am awful at languages.
Reply
Reply
Oh, wow, you know, the information about the print as pre-war writing is amazingly helpful in an unexpected way, too, since I've been doing a lot of dating work, placing various narratives in various time periods. *hugs tight*
In case you're curious, this panel is from The Curious Sofa, A Pornographic Work by Ogdred Weary which is basically about playing with reader expectation. Everything in it is a sexual innuendo without ever actually saying anything sexual. They're a bunch of English upper class folks enjoying a weekend of delights, probably in the 1920s. ^_^ I think I'm definitely going to have to look up the "Free body culture," since there's echoes of it in The Curious SofaYep, I've given the title a quick Google and come up with nothing, but that's not a big surprise. Gorey has a habit of making up texts within his texts -- later on the guests read Volume Eleven of the "Encyclopedia of ( ... )
Reply
Reply
Reply
Reply
Reply
Reply
Reply
Leave a comment