Weird Fiction Robert E Howard, Conan Stories

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  • Опубликовано: 8 июн 2017
  • Lecture on Robert E. Howard's Conan cycle, particularly 'The Phoenix on the Sword' and 'The Tower of the Elephant.' Focus is on Howard's invention of the 'sword-and-sorcery' genre and the centrality of the conflict between civilization and barbarism to his work.

Комментарии • 40

  • @cesorcery
    @cesorcery 10 месяцев назад +2

    Wow. Your teaching style is IMPECCABLE. FLAWLESS. An English teacher that knows THE lore and does not twist or distort ANYTHING at all. Awesome EXCELLENCE.

  • @wheelmanjosh1982
    @wheelmanjosh1982 6 лет назад +17

    I love your presentation about Conan. I wish Robert E Howard would have gotten to write more.

  • @daddystabz
    @daddystabz 5 лет назад +12

    Fritz Leiber coined the term "Sword & Sorcery."

  • @rickbase6587
    @rickbase6587 6 лет назад +7

    Just outstanding... And thank you so much for pronouncing Conan's name correctly.

  • @megamonstercookies
    @megamonstercookies 6 лет назад +10

    With Conan: Exile’s success, we see that he lives on.

    • @DonWoschto
      @DonWoschto 6 лет назад +2

      Yes. But I wish someone finally made a really good game!

    • @Rahab111222
      @Rahab111222 5 лет назад +3

      I'm listening to this video as my Pictiish warrior builds an insulated wooden house by the northern aqueduct, before heading off to capture thralls in New Asgarth.

  • @goatman3057
    @goatman3057 3 года назад +1

    One of my favorites is the black stranger, that story rocks! I can’t believe it didn’t get published

  • @callmeishmael3031
    @callmeishmael3031 8 месяцев назад

    The first paperbacks were published by Lancer Books and had Frazetta covers with the painting going edge to edge of the cover. Ace picked up these editions and changed the cover paintings, giving them a white border.

  • @terrainmancer6272
    @terrainmancer6272 6 лет назад +2

    Terrific job, sir!

  • @darrenrenna
    @darrenrenna 5 лет назад +1

    Awesome lecture Michael, really enjoying your series

  • @darkwielder2088
    @darkwielder2088 4 года назад +3

    Thank you I've been trying to figure out what I'm working with in the sword and sorcery genre. I'm trying to write stories in a way similar to the genre but change things to my tastes but still keep the same feeling.

  • @ShmoopyLongnuts
    @ShmoopyLongnuts 6 лет назад +1

    I really enjoyed this lecture, thanks for posting!

  • @godfreyofbouillon966
    @godfreyofbouillon966 5 лет назад +2

    Term was coined by Fritz Leiber not Michael Moorcock. Michael Moorcock himself preferred term "heroic fantasy" instead.

  • @ericadler9680
    @ericadler9680 6 лет назад +1

    Great lecture, thanks

  • @davepowell7168
    @davepowell7168 2 года назад +1

    Not strictly historical = fantasy fiction.

  • @turtleanton6539
    @turtleanton6539 3 года назад +1

    🐢approved🏆

  • @Sora744
    @Sora744 3 года назад +1

    17:06 not to take the wind out of your sails but aren't Howard's version of the Picts during his Hyborian age actually analogous to the Native Americans? I thought most of the inspiration was from Texas natives like the Comanche, Qualiltecans and Apache

    • @Plague_Archangel
      @Plague_Archangel 2 года назад

      I am not that sure on this one.
      Perhaps minor traits were fetched out from native Americans and then added to the "Picts" as Howard wrote them, mainly towards the stories involving the "Picts" in a more "modern-era" figured in his stories.
      The "Picts" is a very broad subject when studying Howard's writings--as they are depicted in different stages as they evolved/devolved throughout time. The "Picts" is, arguably, the most continuous develop aspect binding Howard's universe--you can find the different stages as you go through tales of Bran, Kull, Conan.
      In a letter to H. P. Lovecraft, Howard wrote:
      ". . . to me, “Pict” must always refer to the small dark Mediterranean
      aborigines of Britain. This is not strange, since when I first read of these aborigines, they were referred to as Picts. But what is strange is my unflagging interest in them. I read of them in Scottish histories--merely bare mentionings, usually in disapproval."
      As well, it seems Howard--initially--was heavily influenced by Scott
      Elliot’s theories of the Picts of early England, in order to develop his "Picts" with a 'feet-in-reality', despite of the fantastic settings.

    • @Sora744
      @Sora744 2 года назад +1

      @@Plague_Archangel well I definitely understand that before writing his fictional hyborian "picts" Howard spent a long time reading about the real life Picts that were native to Britain but these aren't really anything like the hyborian "Picts". Real life Picts were like very pale skinned and a lot of them were had ginger hair and colored eyes. Howard's Picts are like actually closer to the descriptions of the Comanche native to northern Texas. I also think it's ironic that real life Picts were know for being short but most natives American tribes from Texas were actually known for being really tall.

  • @nunyabizness6595
    @nunyabizness6595 Год назад

    Are there any, im wanting to say, students? in the foreground. I dont hear even anyone coughing.😮😮😮

  • @anonymike8280
    @anonymike8280 3 года назад

    I'm more worried whether there is anything worth studying in Harold Robbins, Sidney Sheldon, Jackie Collins and Jacqueline Susann. Oh, and never forget Grace Metalious, the creator of Peyton Place, the metaphor that will never die. When Metalious has the rich boy Rodney Harrington scores on graduation night with the millworker's daughter Betty Anderson, she pens the immortal line, "She moved her hips like an expert."
    Against the wishes of his mill owner father, Harrington decides to marry Betty Anderson instead of the secretly illegitmate middle class girl Allison MacKenzie, daughter of the supposedly widowed Constance MacKenzie. He enlists in the service immediately after Pearl Harbor and dies in the world war. The town is a real Peyton Place. Maybe that's why the novel is called Peyton Place. It's an event when anything becomes its own metaphor.

  • @punkfacexo6066
    @punkfacexo6066 11 месяцев назад

    Hell yeah Manowar the fitness gods

  • @iancassidy5789
    @iancassidy5789 5 лет назад +1

    Armies with knights in full plate armor on horseback and longbowmen is not the Dark Ages or the Bronze Age sorry

  • @bigmetzer
    @bigmetzer 3 года назад

    IT'S HIGH ADVENTURES.Movie wise.

  • @justinw947
    @justinw947 6 лет назад +10

    why even try to explain how he dealt with race in this day and age lol people dont even want to crush their enemies anymore, let alone see then driven before them

    • @paysonterhune290
      @paysonterhune290 6 лет назад +7

      Justin W or even hear the lamentation of their women

    • @VRShow
      @VRShow 5 лет назад +3

      Yep they mostly act like they just want the open steppe, a fleet horse, falcons at their breast and the wind in their hair...

  • @bobbymarcum772
    @bobbymarcum772 4 года назад +1

    A term penned by Michael M...come again?

  • @pavelyankouski4913
    @pavelyankouski4913 2 года назад

    Howard made suicide ? Woah

  • @thorkalel2851
    @thorkalel2851 5 лет назад +1

    Crom....

  • @radiozelaza
    @radiozelaza Год назад

    ManowaR are the Kings of Metal and you should leave the hall!

  • @joshuaclark1930
    @joshuaclark1930 5 лет назад

    faux

  • @toralm6974
    @toralm6974 3 года назад +1

    This gay don't understand Manowar. They made songs about fighting, whatever the battle is, against authorities, personal problems and you name it. Manowar do the same as Conan FIGHTING!!!!!!!