• Cult of the Literary Sad Girl

  • De: sophs
  • Podcast

Cult of the Literary Sad Girl

De: sophs
  • Resumen

  • for all things literary, romantic, intellectual, and/or emotionally oppressed <3
    sophs
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Episodios
  • lolita and lana del rey, the sad girl patron saint
    Apr 14 2025

    our sad girl patron saint lana del rey's born to die is steeped in references to the novel lolita... but what is lolita? should be concerned about this 'full time daddy' and his 'pretty baby?' today we explore the connections between this classic novel and a classic sad girl <3


    suggested and further reading

    Amy Brambley, 'Escaping the Lolita Myth: Giving voice to the real Dolores Haze', Existential Analysis, vol. 35.1, (2024), pg. 134-135

    Rhiannon Lucy Cosslett, The Feminist Politics Behind Lana Del Rey’s Sad Girl Persona (2023) [accessed 14 April 2025]

    Claire Dederer, Monsters: what we do with great art by bad people (Penguin Random House, 2023)

    Christopher Hitchens, Hurricane Lolita (2005) [accessed 14 April 2025]

    Claire Kilroy, Claire Kilroy: ‘My moral compass has turned 180 degrees on Lolita’ (2024) [accessed 14 April 2025]

    Vladimir Nabokov, Lolita (France: Olympia Press, 1955)

    Kate Elizabeth Russell, My Dark Vanessa (Harper Collins, 2021)

    Luke Sayers, “A brief history of the nymphet's tribulations”: The Interpretation of Obscenity in the Early Reception of Vladimir Nabokov's Lolita', Reception: Texts, Readers, Audience, History, vol. 12 (2020), pg. 5-20 [accessed April 14 2025]

    Sarah Weinman, The Real Lolita (2018)



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    36 m
  • mini episode: the yellow wallpaper and autobiographical mining
    Feb 24 2025

    In today's (not so mini) episode we'll be looking at Charlotte Perkins Gilman's 1891 short story 'The Yellow Wallpaper,' and the dangers and benefits of what I like to call autobiographical intersectionality, or the similarities between the events of an author's life and the events in their literary works.

    There are several parallels between Perkins Gilman's life and her short story, but how does this fact fit into our reading and analysis of the text? Is it beneficial to our understanding, or does it take away from the work as a piece of literature? These are the questions we'll ask in today's episode, so let's dive in! xx


    Charlotte Perkins Gilman, The Yellow Wallpaper (1891)

    Charlotte Perkins Gilman, 'Why I Wrote The Yellow Wallpaper', The Forerunner, 1913

    Diana Martin, 'The Rest Cure Revisited', American journal of Psychiatry, vol 164.5

    Jessica Zhan Mei Yu, But The Girl (2023)


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    23 m
  • mini episode: where, as sad women and/or scholars, do we find ourselves?
    Feb 8 2025

    I want to consider where it is we find ourselves in the vast terrain of literary intrigue and legitimacy. How can we look at literature? Critically? Emotionally? Or can one not exist without the other? In this mini episode I give an overview of what inspired my thinking and how I will apply it to the texts I plan on looking at with you all! p.s. there'll be a new episode soon, I'm looking forward to it... love you all, keep reading x

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    21 m
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