Not bad, but it could use some digitized Pantera guitar riffs
I won’t dignify Herr Flick with another response. I like my humour bleak and salty by default but you’re beneath interacting with
@Mr. Tea and your journey into complete self-abasement may have reached peak trough
all of this is on the understanding that invoking real life deathbed scenes is beyond ghoulishly weird and if you don’t want to actually say this level of bullshit out irl, kinda futile non
Dissensus, being an open ideas hub and platform for discussion as it is and where Rupert can shitpost about the dead in whatever context possible including Covid and eugenics and even the Grateful Dead, by all means crack on, here’s some theory
Speaking with the Dead: Histories of Memory in Sacred Space
www.exeter.ac.uk
….. but wait,
a doppelgänger was there all along …..
Event details
Sponsored by the Leverhulme-Trust-funded research project “Speaking with the Dead,” this two day symposium will explore the history of tombs and commemoration in England and Wales from the Middle Ages to the present day.
Highlights include a public lecture by Professor Douglas Davies on “Intimacies and Formalities in Notes to the Dead” (4-5pm on 1 November in the Cathedral Chapter House). The conference keynote will be delivered by Professor Miri Rubin (QMUL). Other speakers include: John Allan, Paul Bryant-Quinn, Chris Guy, Sarah Hamilton,
Oliver Harris, David Harvey, Naomi Howell, Mandy Kingdom, Christopher Knüsel, David Lepine, Ruth Nugent, Nicholas Orme, Philip Schwyzer, Christian Steer, Diane Walker, Howard Williams, and Nicola Whyte.
The symposium is open to academics and members of the general public. Please contact Professor Philip Schwyzer (
p.a.schwyzer@ex.ac.uk) by Friday 25 October to register for the symposium. There is no registration fee. Those wishing to attend the public lecture only should contact Sarah Grainger at Exeter Cathedral (
sarah.grainger@exeter-cathedral.org.uk).