- Clementine Von Radics
— triata mateer, honeybee
‘Ghost in the Shell’ 1995, recreated in haunting still life
C.G. Jung, from Collected Works of C. G. Jung, Volume 11: Psychology and Religion: West and East
Text ID: Man is free to decide whether "God" shall be a “spirit" or a natural phenomenon like the craving of a morphine addict, and hence whether "God" shall act as a beneficent or a destructive force.
Freud said that we endlessly repeat past hurts, forever re-enacting the same patterns in a futile attempt to patch the un-healable wound. This, more than anything, is the terror of the personal, digital archive: not that it reveals some awful act from the past, some old self that no longer stands for us, but that it reminds us that who we are is in fact a repetition, a cycle, a circular relation of multiple selves to multiple injuries. It’s the self as a bundle of trauma, forever acting out the same tropes in the hopes that we might one day change.
Navneet Alang, "Terror of the Archive"
Simone Weil, Gravity and Grace
– Audrey Hepburn
Alice Notley, The Art of Poetry No.116
Yohji Yamamoto: Leather Hand Bags Hand-Painted by Junji Ito, Only 2 In Existence
Martin Buxbaum
All mythological ideas are essentially real, and far older than any philosophy. Like our knowledge of physical nature, they were originally perceptions and experiences. In so far as such ideas are universal, they are symptoms or characteristics or normal exponents of psychic life, which are naturally present and need no proof of their truth.
— Carl Jung