admin

Write up on Derrick Albert Bell, Jr’s Space traders

Introduction Derrick Albert Bell, Jr., was born in Pittsburgh, Pennsylvania, on November 6, 1930. Bell was offered a scholarship to Lincoln University but was unable to attend because he did not receive enough financial aid. Becoming the first member of his family to go to college, Bell chose to attend Duquesne University, earning his A.B. […]

Write up on Derrick Albert Bell, Jr’s Space traders Read More »

Write up on a Kenyan Epic: The Perfect Nine

Literature Review The Perfect Nine is an epic poem about Gĩkũyũ, Mũmbi, their daughters and the ninety nine suitors. Gĩkũyũ and Mũmbi are traditionally believed to be the first man and woman. The daughters are referred to in this book as the Perfect Nine (Wanjirũ, Wambũi, Njeri, Wanjikũ, Mwithaga, Wairimũ, Waithĩra, Wangarĩ, Wangũi and Warigia).

Write up on a Kenyan Epic: The Perfect Nine Read More »

Write up on Tech Geek History: Lotus Notes

                                    Significance of Study Peer to Peer Journal Articles| Knowledge Based Topics in Database Management Chapter 1 Lotus Notes is an application suite that includes the following components: Unlike other application suites (like Microsoft Office) that split these pieces of functionality into separate products (like Outlook, Access, Front Page, etc.), Lotus Notes presents all of

Write up on Tech Geek History: Lotus Notes Read More »

Write up on Black Vulcan(Alex Toth)| African American inside Super Friends(Hanna-Barbera)

Literature Review Hanna-Barbera created Black Vulcan for the Super Friends show in 1977 as a substitute for Black Lightning, another DC superhero with similar abilities. Black Lightning’s creator, Tony Isabella, had disputes with DC over the rights to use his character in spin-off media, so Hanna-Barbera decided to create their original character instead. Black Vulcan’s

Write up on Black Vulcan(Alex Toth)| African American inside Super Friends(Hanna-Barbera) Read More »

Write up on NIBELUNGENLIED (germanic epic ) (Revision 2)

Literature Review The kings Gunther, Gernot and Giselher, and their sister Kriemhild live at the court in Worms, which is the capital of the kingdom of Burgundy.They are surrounded by loyal liegemen such as Hagen of Troy, the minstrel Folker from Alzey, Ortlieb of Metz, Dankwart and many others. One night, beautiful Kriemhild dreams of a falcon rent

Write up on NIBELUNGENLIED (germanic epic ) (Revision 2) Read More »

Write up on The Song of the Cid(Poema del Cid or Cantar del Mio Cid)

                                    Literature Review The Song of the Cid (Poema del Cid or Cantar del Mio Cid) is the great epic of medieval Spain. It chronicles the life of Rodrigo (or Ruy) Diáz de Vivar, a commander under King Alfonso VI of Castile in the eleventh century. Diáz de Vivar fought for Alfonso against the Moors, fought for the

Write up on The Song of the Cid(Poema del Cid or Cantar del Mio Cid) Read More »

Write up on Johnston McCulley’s ZORO (Revision 2) / Alex Toth

Background of Study In 1919, Johnston McCulley began to write a series of popular novels about a swashbuckling champion of justice. Dressed in black, disguised by a mask over his eyes, this adventurer was a master horseman and an expert swordsman, who moved silently and swiftly by night. He left a unique calling card, a

Write up on Johnston McCulley’s ZORO (Revision 2) / Alex Toth Read More »

Write up on Aleksey Tolstoy’s The novella Vampire (1841)

Background of Study Alexey Konstantinovitch Tolstoy, the nineteenth-century Russian writer who introduced the vampire into Russian literature, was born in St. Petersburg, Russia. Tolstoy was educated at home and, at the age of 16, entered government service at the Moscow Archives of the Ministry of Foreign Affairs. While in Moscow, he was able to study at Moscow University where he absorbed German idealistic philosophy. He received his diploma from the university in 1835. At the beginning of his literary career, influenced by E. T. A. Hoffmann’s tales, Tolstoy wrote several fantastic/horror stories, the first of which was “Upyr” (“The Vampire”). “Upyr” was the story of a young couple, Runevsky and Dasha. The story opened in nineteenth-century Moscow with a group at a ball. Runevsky conversed with a pale young man, Rybarenko, on the subject of vampires. He predicted that if Dasha went to visit her grandmother she would die. Eventually, after a series of adventures and some visionary experiences, Runevsky learned the truth. The problem in Dasha’s family stemmed from previous generations, to an unfaithful wife who killed her husband. As he was dying, he pronounced a curse of madness and vampirism upon her and their heirs. She eventually went insane and committed suicide. Dasha’s grandmother inherited the curse. As a vampire, she had already killed Dasha’s mother and was prepared to kill Dasha. In the end he became a believer in the supernatural, although Dasha dismissed everything that happened and believed a more naturalistic explanation. Tolstoy first read the story at one of the local salons and then, after passing a censor, had it published under the pseudonym Krasnorogsky in 1841. It was followed by a second supernatural tale, “The Reunion After Three-Hundred Years,” a ghost story. Tolstoy returned to the vampiric theme in his third story, “The Family of the Vurkodlak”. (The vurkodlak was the vampire of the southern Slavs.) Written in French, it began with the Congress of Vienna in 1815 where the Marquis d’Urfé entertained some aristocratic friends with his story. While traveling through Serbia, d’Urfé stopped for the night. The family he stayed with was upset as the father had left to fight the Turks. Before he left, d’Urfé told the family to beware if the father returned in less than ten days—it was a sign that he had become a vurkodlak and should be impaled with an aspen stake. Almost ten days passed before the father returned. The older son was about to kill him but was overruled by the family, although the father refused to eat or drink and otherwise behaved strangely. The father then attacked the family, including the daughter to whom d’Urfé had been attracted. D’Urfé continued on his journey but returned to the village some months later. He was told that the entire family had become vampires. He sought out the young girl but soon discovered that, in fact, she was now a vampire. He barely escaped from the family. After writing “The Family of the Vurkodlak,” which was not published during his lifetime, Tolstoy wrote a fourth supernatural story, “Amena.” These four stories formed a prologue to his formal literary career that was really thought to have begun when he started writing poetry in the late 1840s. The high point of his career as a poet came in the late 1850s, the period after his service in the Crimean War (1855–1856). In 1861, he resigned from the Imperial Court and devoted the rest of his life to his writing. Tolstoy has been hard to classify, as his works do not readily fit into any of the major schools of nineteenth-century Russian writing. A loner, he rarely participated in the literary circles of his time, and, after leaving the court, settled on his estate in the Ukraine. Tolstoy approved of some Westernization but did not like the more radical activists. He did inject the vampire theme into Russian writing, a theme that would later be picked up by Nicol Gogol and Ivan Turgenev. In 1960, Italian director Mario Bava brought “The Family of the Vurkodlak” to the screen as one of three Russian stories in his La Maschera del Demonio (released in the United States as Black Sunday). Boris Karloff, who narrated the breaks between the stories, Literature Reviews The first story is “The Vampire”, penned by Tolstoy in 1841. This is a rollercoaster of a tale. We get the vampires or oupyr, who can be destroyed by ramming a stake between their shoulder blades, reveal themselves to each other with clicks of the tongue and, in

Write up on Aleksey Tolstoy’s The novella Vampire (1841) Read More »