I’m wondering if anyone has any recommended academic texts regarding Skeuomorphism? I’m in the middle of writing an essay for a book on modular synthesis, and several of the manufacturers I’m interviewing have mentioned that concept in relationship to the simulation of analog media in eurorack, and I’d like to discuss it intelligently.
Been on an Alan Moore kick lately, read most of his stuff as a teenager, but never read Lost Girls, Promethea, or Miracleman. Finished Miracleman (book 1), and I’m about half way through Lost Girls. Over the last few years I’ve been revisiting my favorite authors/composer/filmmakers from high school and early college, and had recently read Moore’s Providence, which I liked. I think he’s overly didactic at times (which as a young person reading these was probably nice, but as some one a bit more familiar with the allusions, I’d prefer less hand-holding). Miracleman was interesting, although there was this one-off story included in the collection that reminded me of all the confusing superhereo dreck I was exposed to in the 90s. Lost Girls is, to my mind, mostly sad. I guess it’s controversial, but I didn’t find it pornographic as much as I found frank examinations of sexuality and the trauma surrounding it in some instances. I’m not finished with it, so I will reserve judgment.
Just began Musimathics, which seems promising, although I wish he (and all of electrical engineering literature as well) would dispense with the water metaphors. I don’t find them helpful at all.
I’m just finishing a monograph on David Lynch, The Unified Field, which, as expected, is mostly interesting for the images. Also pick up Twisted Visions, The Art of Junji Ito, which is nice, but probably skippable. Really curious when we’re finally going to get Daijiro Morohoshi in english. I’d really like to get a version of The Dark Myth that’s not an anime with unending expository narration.
Finally, I’ve gotten fairly deep into Clark Ashton Smith lately, particularly the Averoigne stories. I still prefer his poetry, but I can finally see why he’s help up along with H.P. Lovecraft and Robert E. Howard as a horror/fantasy writer.