this just makes it sound like akio is the demiurge. which. you know. probably
I dont know how to phrase this thought i just had but this picture of ohtori school reminds me a lot of a church, and also that gothic churches were built that tall to represent how powerful and big god was, making people feel small there.
Also in some latim-derived languages like spanish Dios mean God, which makes sense when he falls from the castle in the sky and "bless" utena with strenght because of her 'faith' in him (as she sees him as a hero and is her biggest inspiration) and that makes me think of the religious (catholic i believe) symbolism of utena.
Dios is God, as he falls from heaven to bless the faithful. He comes from a castle on the sky that promises miracles such as the eternity of your happiness and innocence. Ohtori academy is the church, as everyone there is a small thing compared to the creator of everything: Akio. The students are children, Akio is an adult there conditioning them in following his schemes (like the boys are powerful princes and girls are helpless princesses and if they refuse that theyre witches), which would make him the God of his own illusions.
The students are just believers, Akio controls them in his own mysterious ways as the end of the world, but them when someone is defying him he has to take the matters in his own hands.
Akio could truly believe he is a God, shaping students as he wishes in his endless timeless illusion, but he isn't. Dios, the real Prince, God, doesn't exists. Akio just thinks they are the same, but in reality, Akio means Lucifer, and his Godly version of himself is only what the people who blindly loved him (anthy, utena) saw
manticore
cockatrice
medieval parchment repairs
in a psalter, south-western germany, late 12th/early 13th c.
source: Hermetschwil, Benediktinerinnenkloster, Cod. membr. 37, fol. 19r, 53r, and 110r
Jonah, illumination from the Qisas al Anbiya, 1577
The gay twin struggle
Create your Monstersona! You need to explain three things. 1. what you're doing in Central Europe in the '90s. 2. your connection to the cast. 3. why your wife left you.
Let's get this started.
Mine is Sylvia, an American photojournalist who's vacationing Prague to find out more about her family, the majority of which was killed in the Holocaust or moved to America. She begins finding evidence that one remaining cousin suppressed evidence of his Jewish background and worked for the Czechoslovakian secret police as a subordinate of someone who did not have any consistent name, but who often went by "Franz Bonaparta." Her wife left her over internalized homophobia. Even though she's not religious she was perpetually delaying marrying her partner on account of commitment issues, a belief that it would be against Halacha (which, again, neither she nor anyone in her immediate family keeps) and a feeling that without legal status the ceremony would be pointless.
mon oncle
cant forgive one of my coworkers because our advisor came into the office and was giving us a very sad speech that he had to make us work more hours and he was very upset about this fact and we all had to be very somber listening to him when to my right this guys computer flashes into sleep mode which happens to reveal this image that i then had to look at and not lose my shit over even a little bit
waving a spring onion around is pretty fun. the blue haired dame was onto something