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Culture War Roundup for the week of September 23, 2024

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I don't think our understanding of what "doublespeak" means is the same.

When someone refers to Lovecraftian architecture as "curious and strange", but does not mention the "driving normal people to insanity" part, there can be two primary readings of that.

  1. They're a supervillain who is plainly stating that they want to drive people insane, except that for some reason their plain statement did not mention the insanity part except for by association with Lovecraft.
  2. They disagree with Lovecraft on the mood his architecture must evoke, and believe it is (for example) very cool rather than maddening.

If I'm being the best faith possible, I'm going to assume 2. You might interpret it as "misreading" Lovecraft, but I do not hold the man in such high authority as to be indisputable.

They disagree with Lovecraft on the mood his architecture must evoke, and believe it is (for example) very cool rather than maddening.

If you read both of the descriptions that I posted, you'll notice that the descriptions don't actually describe the buildings in any real detail. Instead they describe how you're supposed to feel about them, and let you do your own imagination about what they are supposed to look like. So if I'm imagining something that's a "tangible substance of earth’s supreme terror," "nightmare corpse-city," or "monstrous perversions of geometrical laws and attaining the most grotesque extremes of sinister bizarrerie," and the architect in question expresses an interest in bringing these to real life, it's not an easy sell to then downgrade them into "curious" or "strange."