Friday, August 26, 2011

‛This precious stone set in the silver sea ...’: Literal and figurative references to jewelry in the plays of William Shakespeare - DeepDyve

‛This precious stone set in the silver sea ...’: Literal and figurative references to jewelry in the plays of William Shakespeare - DeepDyve

on the search for "semiome" and ecosemiotic work that incorporates the terrestrial biome not only Kingdom Animal and Kingdom Plant - but rocks stones geographies to climates - this time the view is on the jewel references in Shakespeare and if not in art. The jewels inside a fish - an image I recall from a movie of the early 80s. The lyric of Bliss n Eso's song "Destiny Lane" - i hold this black pearl through this world's perfect storm"

actor-network and animalism? metal rock and network. energy from electricity - and a becoming-weather - becoming-microclimate.

full fathom five and the philosopher's stone - alchemy to make gold.

The amount of gold (the classical currency standard in free market commodified economies) that has and will ever be produced on this planet is equal to 3 olympic swimming pools -- ahh El Dorado and Montezuma's Revenge... and the revenge of La Malinche

http://books.google.com.au/books?id=dfesWiXwkdQC&pg=PA44&lpg=PA44&dq=the+revenge+of+malinche&source=bl&ots=Xmcn3HBC6q&sig=nsgK7fecC6lzMXZg1Y79Mvq7M1Q&hl=en&ei=zcBZTp_ILorFmAXhv9GXDA&sa=X&oi=book_result&ct=result&resnum=1&ved=0CBgQ6AEwAA#v=onepage&q=the%20revenge%20of%20malinche&f=false

(warning - academia and language R rated)

No comments:

Post a Comment