Look for any podcast host, guest or anyone
Showing episodes and shows of

Mike Perschon

Shows

The Relevance ReportThe Relevance ReportGeeks, Freaks, and FandomOn this week's episode: we learn about Dungeons, Dragons, and story making, we go back stage with Monks on Call, and we learn about some of MacEwan Griffin's fan initiatives. Dr. Mike Perschon, an expert in narrative medium, talks about the power of Dungeons and Dragons as storytelling, performance art, and personal introspection. Monks on Call (@monksoncall) and their videographers Peace Out Productions (@pceoutprod) talk about circumstances of meeting, criteria of their creative process, and play us some tunes. MacEwan Griffins (@macewangriffins) fans make a plea to fill the stands and highlight how they’ve been bringing the noise at loc...2024-02-1522 minWhere We LiveWhere We LiveFor the Connecticut steampunk fans, this episode is for you!When it comes to certain fandom and cosplay communities, getting your costume right is key, or you might get called out for not being 100% accurate. But Steampunk is a little different. It’s retro, but it’s futuristic. It’s Victorian, but you can also just go vintage. It's corsets, but also cogs, coils and gadgets. Steampunk, a subgenre of science fiction, is all about retro futuristic technology and being as creative as possible. But Steampunk is not just about fashion!  Today, we dive into the world of Steampunk and hear from the Steampunk Scholar. Lat...2023-12-1541 minTriple Bladed SwordTriple Bladed SwordConan the BarbarianWe kick off our journey through fantasy film from the 1980s to the 2020s with Conan the Barbarian, the much-maligned box-office hit that kicked off a plague of direct-to-video loincloth knockoffs. Yet it's an important moment in the history of fantasy film, with production design anticipating the "fantasy-as-history" approach of Peter Jackson's Lord of the Rings. Furthermore, it's a well-made film in its own right, championing the role of the warrior woman in adult fantasy in ways that are less reductive than other films of the decade. I mention the excellent Fan/Anim podcast in this...2022-10-1847 minTriple Bladed SwordTriple Bladed SwordFrom Dorothy to Willy WonkaIt's the start of a new series on fantasy film from the 1980s to today! This week, I deliver a brief history of fantasy film along with the reason why we're starting in the 1980s and not back in the silent era. Hosted on Acast. See acast.com/privacy for more information.2022-09-3038 minTriple Bladed SwordTriple Bladed SwordWomen Won SteampunkEarly in her career, naysayers told Gail Carriger her books "weren't steampunk enough." A little over a decade later, Carriger and a host of female writers are the "top of the pops" on Steampunk lists on Goodreads. This week, I'm talking about how we approach researching literature, and how sometimes, we're missing some of the most Important Things in the world. Hosted on Acast. See acast.com/privacy for more information.2022-03-0442 minTriple Bladed SwordTriple Bladed SwordA Crash Course in Reading (Steampunk) ComicsLeaning heavily on Scott McCloud and his excellent Understanding Comics, I give a quick breakdown of some of the tools we can use to analyze comics, using Marjorie Liu and San Takeda's brilliant steampunk fantasy, Monstress. Hosted on Acast. See acast.com/privacy for more information.2022-02-1950 minTriple Bladed SwordTriple Bladed SwordSecond Wave SteampunkWhile steampunk's first wave (or trickle?) was mostly narrative, its second wave jumped beyond page and screen and into the real world: from fashion to to music to Maker spaces, steampunk was no longer a fantastic imaginings - you could wear it, work on it, or, in the case of steampunk culture, live it. Hosted on Acast. See acast.com/privacy for more information.2022-02-1156 minTriple Bladed SwordTriple Bladed SwordMiyazaki Invented Steampunk - Anime and ”the Paris of our Dreams”Just like Disney, Hiyao Miyazaki's films represent a huge influence on the development of the steampunk aesthetic. While early American steampunk writers were developing a literary subgenre, Miyazaki was doing the same in cinema, from Nausicaa of the Valley of the Wind to Howl's Moving Castle, leading up to Steamboy, Katsuhiro Otomo's second-wave-steampunk homage to Studio Ghibli's Castle in the Sky. Hosted on Acast. See acast.com/privacy for more information.2022-02-0446 minTriple Bladed SwordTriple Bladed SwordDisney Invented SteampunkThis lecture takes a look at the influence of Walt Disney and film adaptations of Jules Verne and H.G. Wells's works as a significant influence on the growth of first and second-wave steampunk.Thumbnail Photo by Brian McGowan on Unsplash Hosted on Acast. See acast.com/privacy for more information.2022-01-2841 minTriple Bladed SwordTriple Bladed SwordSteampunk Before it Was CoolA retrospective of the first wave of steampunk, from antecedents to inception to the madcap assortment of comics, games, books, and films that formed the genre's early years. Hosted on Acast. See acast.com/privacy for more information.2022-01-1355 minTriple Bladed SwordTriple Bladed SwordSteampunk Star Wars: Defining SteampunkUsing steampunked Star Wars art, this lecture identifies three key features of steampunk narratives and art: technofantasy, retrofuturism, and hyper vintage.Thumbnail image by Bjorn HurriMusic: "Freedom Fighters" by Machinimasound Hosted on Acast. See acast.com/privacy for more information.2022-01-071h 004 Colour Radio4 Colour Radio4CR - Ep 23 - Conan The Barbarian (1982) w Mike PerschonDr. Mike returns with another unexpected musical treasure; the music of Conan! Let's dive into the musical world crafted from the Robert E Howard's short stories and made even more famous by the long-running Marvel series!2021-12-291h 05Triple Bladed SwordTriple Bladed SwordTo Write is to ReviseWhatever anyone tells you about Jack Kerouac, the rest of us need more than one draft to get it right. Revision is the last step in the writing process, and we need to make sure we give ourselves the time to do it. Photo by Edward Howell on UnsplashOpening and closing music: "Ground Control" by Andrea Baroni at Cyberleaf Studios Hosted on Acast. See acast.com/privacy for more information.2021-11-2723 minTriple Bladed SwordTriple Bladed SwordUsing Your Own VoiceThe idea that academic writing needs to be dense and difficult is outdated. While you'll always have profs who want that sort of writing, the world at large will demand that we be interesting, accessible, and direct. Instead of writing in a way that obscures meaning, let's focus on communicating! Thumbnail image by Matt Botsford on Unsplash!Opening and closing music: "Ground Control" by Andrea Baroni at Cyberleaf Studios Hosted on Acast. See acast.com/privacy for more information.2021-11-2229 min4 Colour Radio4 Colour Radio4CR - Ep 5 - Popeye TMP w Mike PerschonScholar and nerd extraordinaire, Dr. Mike, brings us music from a 1980s film based on a character from the 1930s! Pop open a fresh can of spinach and enjoy!2021-11-161h 01Triple Bladed SwordTriple Bladed SwordWhat‘s Your Point?We've likely all either told a story or heard one where we kept thinking, "Is there a point to this?" I've asked the same question while writing papers in my undergrad and while reading student papers as a professor of English. We need to do more than have a great thesis and solid evidence - we need a point to our argument!Thumbnail Photo by Patrick Fore on UnsplashOpening and closing music: "Ground Control" by Andrea Baroni at Cyberleaf Studios Hosted on Acast. See acast.com/privacy for more information.2021-11-1123 minTriple Bladed SwordTriple Bladed SwordHow to write a Research Paper - PlanningNow that we've spent a semester writing a research paper in slow motion, it's time to speed things up and write one in real time. This lecture breaks down some of the first steps to writing a research paper: namely, gathering sources, reading them, and then determining our focus to come up with a thesis. Thumbnail Photo by Rabie Madaci on UnsplashOpening and closing music: "Ground Control" by Andrea Baroni at Cyberleaf Studios Hosted on Acast. See acast.com/privacy for more information.2021-11-0143 minTriple Bladed SwordTriple Bladed SwordWriting Introductions and ConclusionsHere's my new and improved lecture on how to write introductions and conclusions for essays! Now with fancy slides and examples based on Godzilla and the history of the Hiroshima bombing. Thumbnail Photo by Raimond Klavins on UnsplashOpening and closing music: "Ground Control" by Andrea Baroni at Cyberleaf Studios Hosted on Acast. See acast.com/privacy for more information.2021-10-2933 minTriple Bladed SwordTriple Bladed SwordCoherence in WritingWe've got all the right words in all the wrong places, and we need to get them in the right ones. How do we do that? How do we go about guiding our reader through our ideas as though our written argument were a journey? It's all about transitions! Thumbnail photo by yns plt on Unsplash!Opening and closing music: "Ground Control" by Andrea Baroni at Cyberleaf Studios Hosted on Acast. See acast.com/privacy for more information.2021-10-2333 minTriple Bladed SwordTriple Bladed SwordPlanting a NaysayerWhen we're arguing a point in our research papers, why would we choose to include a skeptic? Why would we give voice to our opposition? As it turns out, planting a naysayer in our writing not only helps us kick off our arguments, but it can also strengthen how convincing that argument is. Thumbnail Photo by Sushil Nash on UnsplashOpening and closing music: "Ground Control" by Andrea Baroni at Cyberleaf Studios Hosted on Acast. See acast.com/privacy for more information.2021-10-1533 minTriple Bladed SwordTriple Bladed SwordThree Ways to RespondAfter several weeks focused on what "they say," we're finally talking about how we bring our voice to a paper. How can what "I say" respond to what "they say"? The answer is far simpler than you assume, though there's lots of room for complexity in these four little words: Yes, No, and Okay, But. Link to Monty Python's argument sketch: https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=xpAvcGcEc0k Thumbnail image by by Alison Pang on Unsplash.Opening and closing music: "Ground Control" by Andrea Baroni at Cyberleaf Studios Hosted on Acast. See acast.com/privacy for more...2021-10-1428 minTriple Bladed SwordTriple Bladed SwordHow to Write a SynthesisHow do we write a paper when we only have two sources to work with and we're told to craft our thesis from what they say rather than our own opinion? How do you build an argument while delivering information someone else has said? That's what writing a synthesis is all about! It's all about weaving your sources together, turning two arguments (or more) into one!Thumbnail photo by Bilal O. on Unsplash!Opening and closing music: "Ground Control" by Andrea Baroni at Cyberleaf Studios Hosted on Acast. See acast.com/privacy for more information.2021-10-0433 minTriple Bladed SwordTriple Bladed SwordThe Writing Process, Part 1: PlanningToo often, students will rush ahead of the Planning phase of the Writing Process, constructing a thesis, writing their paper, and then finding sources to jam into their writing as support for their views. This isn't reseach, though -- it's prooftexting. And if we take time to properly Plan our research by first Gathering Information and then determining our focus, we'll produce better work, and even get an education in the bargain!Apologies for the crummy audio this week!Thumbnail photo by Photo by Diego PH on Unsplash!Opening and closing music: "Ground...2021-09-3039 minTriple Bladed SwordTriple Bladed SwordStarting With What Others Are SayingAs we begin a research paper, it's crucial to start with what others are saying, rather than just rushing to create a thesis based solely on our opinions or limited knowledge. This week, I talk about the first step in research using Chapter 1 of They Say I Say: Starting with What Others Are Saying. Opening and closing music: "Ground Control" by Andrea Baroni at Cyberleaf StudiosThumbnail Image credit: " David Lezcano - @_thedl - from Unsplash Hosted on Acast. See acast.com/privacy for more information.2021-09-2336 minTriple Bladed SwordTriple Bladed SwordEntering the ConversationAnalysis and Argument, Part 2 - Entering the Conversation. Literary theorist Kenneth Burke compared scholarly writing and research to an ongoing conversation. This week, we talk about the first stage of writing a research paper, when we gather ideas and determine focus, and how that's easier to do when we read and listen to what others have to say.Photo credit: @alexisrbrown on Unsplash Hosted on Acast. See acast.com/privacy for more information.2021-09-1744 minTriple Bladed SwordTriple Bladed SwordHow to Write a SummaryA lecture from my English 102 Analysis and Argument course about how to write a summary, based on A Brief Guide to Writing From Readings by Stephen. W. Wilhoit and They Say, I Say by Gerald Graff and Cathy Birkenstein. Hosted on Acast. See acast.com/privacy for more information.2021-09-1042 minTriple Bladed SwordTriple Bladed SwordThe Book ISN‘T Always BetterOne year of podcasting! This is my first anniversary episode, and I'm devoting it entirely to the triple blades that make up Linda Hutcheon's adaptation theory: telling, showing, and interacting, or as I always say here, read, watch, and play. You'll learn why the book isn't always better than the movie and that sometimes, adaptations aren't interested in being true to "the original." I dance around the IPs of Harry Potter, Star Wars, the Lone Ranger, and the Wizard of Oz, to name just a few.  Hosted on Acast. See acast.com/privacy for more information.2021-09-0850 minTriple Bladed SwordTriple Bladed SwordSpoiler Alert! Spoilers don't Spoil: Office Hours 2021 Episode 10This may come as a surprise, but surprises aren't as big a deal to your enjoyment of a movie or book as you might think. Taking a look at our spoiler-obsessed culture through the lens of the Alien franchise of films, books, and games.  Hosted on Acast. See acast.com/privacy for more information.2021-08-1626 minTriple Bladed SwordTriple Bladed SwordLittle Green Men and Fire-Breathing Dragons: Office Hours 2021 - Episode 9This week I bore you all to tears by explaining my approach to course design, using a Speculative Fiction course on aliens and dragons as a case study.  Hosted on Acast. See acast.com/privacy for more information.2021-07-3036 minTriple Bladed SwordTriple Bladed SwordWhat Can You Do With an English Degree? Office Hours 2021 - Episode 8I thought I'd answer this perennial question for my commencement speech to our English grads this year. Bonus poetry and Terry Pratchett!  Hosted on Acast. See acast.com/privacy for more information.2021-07-2311 minTriple Bladed SwordTriple Bladed SwordDungeons and Detentions: Office Hours 2021 - Episode 7With a new Dungeons and Dragons movie in production, I got thinking about why movies about games often fail as adaptations, while shows like Critical Role and Harmonquest succeed. What do the streamers have that Hollywood doesn't? The answer lies in an unholy synthesis of '80s teen flicks and that D&D Saturday morning cartoon!  Hosted on Acast. See acast.com/privacy for more information.2021-07-1618 minTriple Bladed SwordTriple Bladed SwordDopamine and Dragons: Office Hours 2021 - Episode 6Contrary to what the madness of the "Satanic Panic" of the 1980s taught me, it turns out tabletop roleplaying games like Dungeons and Dragons don't cause suicide, but might just be a really great prescription for robust mental health. How can a game involving mind flayers and intellect devourers do this? Jane McGonigal's book, Reality is Broken has some answers for you!  Hosted on Acast. See acast.com/privacy for more information.2021-07-0926 minTriple Bladed SwordTriple Bladed SwordIndigenous Voices: Short Fiction and Uncertainty: Office Hours 2021 - Episode 5This week I'm contemplating the question I've been asking myself, "Should I celebrate/observe/cancel Canada Day" through the lens of Indigenous writer Richard Van Camp's brilliant short fiction. As with some of the great literary short stories, the epiphanies are left to the listener! Hosted on Acast. See acast.com/privacy for more information.2021-07-0224 minTriple Bladed SwordTriple Bladed SwordSuperheroes Bright and Shiny, Dark and Gritty: Office Hours 2021 - Episode 4Today I'm talking about the last two DCEU movies, Wonder Woman 1984 and Zack Snyder's Justice League, and how both work to give us epic meditations on loss and grief.  Hosted on Acast. See acast.com/privacy for more information.2021-06-2522 minTriple Bladed SwordTriple Bladed SwordTo Boldly Go From Homophobe to Ally: Office Hours 2021 - Episode 3In honour of Pride Month, a reflection on my journey from homophobia to allyship via Star Trek: The Next Generation, Clive Barker's dark fantasy novels, and Gandalf!  Hosted on Acast. See acast.com/privacy for more information.2021-06-1817 minTriple Bladed SwordTriple Bladed SwordPaperback Crush: Children's Fiction beyond Narnia: Office Hours 2021 - Episode 2This week, I'm talking about Gabrielle Moss's totally tubular Paperback Crush: The Totally Radical History of '80s and '90s Teen Fiction, teaching Children's fiction in University, and how looking at teenage paperbacks might lead us to learning about really important moments in the representation of marginalized voices.  Hosted on Acast. See acast.com/privacy for more information.2021-06-1119 minTriple Bladed SwordTriple Bladed SwordHow to Do Nothing: Office Hours 2021 - Episode 1I'm back! I needed a break, and while I was doing nothing for a while, I was reading Jenny Odell's How to Do Nothing.  It got me thinking about my days as a pastor, but also how painting fantasy minis is how I currently practice Sabbath, or the art of doing nothing. This is the first in my "Office Hours" series for 2021, shorter episodes that are meant to emulate the sorts of conversations I have with students when they visit me in my office.  Hosted on Acast. See acast.com/privacy for more information.2021-06-0319 minTriple Bladed SwordTriple Bladed SwordStation Eleven Part 11: "After the Plague" and "Station Eleven"We come to the end of our journey in the postapocalyptic wastelands of books, comics, films, and games with T.C. Boyle's short story "After the Plague" and the final part of Station Eleven. Hosted on Acast. See acast.com/privacy for more information.2021-03-2752 minTriple Bladed SwordTriple Bladed Sword100 Years of Horror, Part 11: It Follows:This week, we look at David Robert Mitchell's brilliant twist on so many conventions of earlier horror films, from the slasher to the zombie to the supernatural curse in It Follows. Hosted on Acast. See acast.com/privacy for more information.2021-03-2750 minTriple Bladed SwordTriple Bladed SwordStation Eleven Part 10: "The Prophet" and Mad Max: Fury RoadAnother study of film language, this time using George Miller's high-octane masterwork, Mad Max: Fury Road. We'll see how the movie and Station Eleven share the same story while looking at how each narrative addresses the theme "Survival is Insufficient." Hosted on Acast. See acast.com/privacy for more information.2021-03-1950 minTriple Bladed SwordTriple Bladed Sword100 Years of Horror, Part 10: The RingGhost stories and an adaptation of Japanese Horror this week as we hit the 2000s. Relying exclusively on film language, I analyze the way Gore Verbinski's The Ring hems in its narrative to provide the ultimate fake out ending. Hosted on Acast. See acast.com/privacy for more information.2021-03-1959 minTriple Bladed SwordTriple Bladed SwordStation Eleven, Part 9": The Terminal" and Stranger PlanetThis week, we look at making the familiar unfamiliar in the seventh part of Station Eleven, bringing it into conversation with Craig Raine's riddle poem "A Martian Sends a Postcard Home" and Nathan Pyle's webcomic, Stranger Planet.  Hosted on Acast. See acast.com/privacy for more information.2021-03-1343 minTriple Bladed SwordTriple Bladed Sword100 Years of Horror, Part 9: ScreamWhen I originally envisioned my 100 Years of Horror, I didn't think I'd include a film, to underscore that many see it as a low point in the history of the horror film. But by popular acclaim, friends and student wore me down with the question, "What about Scream?" The answer is finally here, and it has to do with media-savvy '90s teens, the guy who wrote Dawson's Creek, and one of the "movie brats" of the '70s reinventing himself for a new generation. Hosted on Acast. See acast.com/privacy for more information.2021-03-131h 04Triple Bladed SwordTriple Bladed Sword100 Years of Horror, Part 8: The ThingIn this episode, I get to talk about one of my favourite movies of all time, John Carpenter's The Thing. And as you might expect, I go on a little long about body horror, great edits, shooting on location, and a discussion of how the direct horror of showing the Thing results in a little suggestive horror, since seeing the Thing isn't the same thing as knowing what it is we're seeing.  Hosted on Acast. See acast.com/privacy for more information.2021-03-051h 11Triple Bladed SwordTriple Bladed SwordStation Eleven Part 8: Game Narrative and "The Airplanes"This week I get reflective about possible worlds and forking paths with a discussion of part 7 of Emily St. John Mandel's Station Eleven and a few apocalyptic and postapocalyptic games, including the video game Plague Inc., the board game Pandemic, and the storytelling game The Quiet Place along with some ideas from Jorge Luis Borges. Hosted on Acast. See acast.com/privacy for more information.2021-03-0542 minTriple Bladed SwordTriple Bladed SwordStation Eleven, Part 7: "Toronto" and The Walking Day: Days Gone ByeSince Station Eleven is about comics and a few critics compare Emily St. John Mandel's novel to more violent postapocalyptic narratives like The Walking Dead, I thought it would be worth taking a look at Robert Kirkman and Tony Moore's brilliant graphic novel, Days Gone Bye. Hosted on Acast. See acast.com/privacy for more information.2021-02-2748 minTriple Bladed SwordTriple Bladed Sword100 Years of Horror, Part 7: The ExorcistDirector William Friedkin, Screenwriter William Peter Blatty, and actor Linda Blair have all called The Exorcist a "theological thriller," refusing to admit that the top grossing horror movie of all time is really a horror film. Looking at how the film using editing to build a narrative of transformation from innocence to malevolence, I argue that ultimately, it still deserves the title of one of the scariest horror movies of all time. Hosted on Acast. See acast.com/privacy for more information.2021-02-2759 minTriple Bladed SwordTriple Bladed SwordThe Texas Chain Saw Massacre: 100 Years of Horror, Part 6This week we hit the 1970s, which for my money, is the greatest decade of horror film yet. So great, that I had to examine two movies, starting with Tobe Hooper's notorious The Texas Chain Saw Massacre. What makes this film one of the greatest horror movies ever? And why was it banned in Britain for over 20 years when it never really shows any explicit gory violence? Hosted on Acast. See acast.com/privacy for more information.2021-02-1951 minTriple Bladed SwordTriple Bladed SwordStation Eleven Part 6: "The Starship," Calvin and Hobbes, and How to Read ComicsThis week, I don't really talk much about Station Eleven, but instead talk about one of its great moments of intertextuality (besides every other academic's favourite from this novel, Shakespeare): Bill Watterson's beloved and brilliant comic strip, Calvin and Hobbes. I use some strips to discuss what comics are, how Station Eleven references them, and then how to read them. Hosted on Acast. See acast.com/privacy for more information.2021-02-1647 minTriple Bladed SwordTriple Bladed SwordStation Eleven Part 5: ”I Prefer You with a Crown” and James P. Blaylock’s ”War of the Worlds”This week we explore the idea of "everyday apocalypse" at length by reading Part 3 of Station Eleven, "I Prefer You With a Crown" in concert with James P. Blaylock's short story "War of the Worlds." Hosted on Acast. See acast.com/privacy for more information.2021-02-0542 minTriple Bladed SwordTriple Bladed Sword100 Years of Horror, Part 5: Night of the Living DeadWe arrive at the point that many horror film scholars have called the beginning of the modern horror film: George A. Romero's seminal zombie flick, Night of the Living Dead. This time, the blood is chocolate syrup, but the guts are real, and the monsters are the neighbors--literally. Come find out about the movie Romero made with friends, family, and real cops!SHOW LESS Hosted on Acast. See acast.com/privacy for more information.2021-02-0554 minTriple Bladed SwordTriple Bladed SwordStation Eleven Part 4: "A Midsummer Night's Dream" and "The Portable Phonograph"This week we learn about Alfred Korzybski's idea that "The Map is Not the Territory," as we head into the postapocalyptic future of Station Eleven, comparing the second part, "A Midummer Night's Dream" with Walter Van Tilburg Clark's dark short story, "The Portable Phonograph." Hosted on Acast. See acast.com/privacy for more information.2021-01-3050 minTriple Bladed SwordTriple Bladed Sword100 Years of Horror, Part 4: Horror of DraculaWelcome to the 1950s, the decade of atomic horror in America, and Hammer Horror in the UK! This week, we look at Hammer Films' Dracula (1958) aka Horror of Dracula in the United States. We've got full-colour gore! Low budgets and low necklines! And Grand Moff Tarkin at his most energetic. Spoiler: Peter Cushing is the greatest Van Helsing ever, and Christopher Lee was pure evil before he ever touched that Palantir in Lord of the Rings. Hosted on Acast. See acast.com/privacy for more information.2021-01-301h 08Triple Bladed SwordTriple Bladed SwordStation Eleven Part 3: The Stand and The TheatreThis week, we turn to the prologue to Stephen King's post-apocalyptic epic, The Stand to act as a contrast to Emily St. John Mandel's Station Eleven. We also learn about Poe's Theory of the Unity of Effect and delve further into the joys of Intertextuality.  Hosted on Acast. See acast.com/privacy for more information.2021-01-2247 minTriple Bladed SwordTriple Bladed Sword100 Years of Horror, Part 3: Cat PeopleThis week's installment of 100 Years of Horror takes us into the 1940s and a discussion of the studio system, and how that system was instrumental in Val Lewton's decision to use "suggestive horror" in an innovative shift away from a European Gothic Past into the American Urban Present of Cat People.  Hosted on Acast. See acast.com/privacy for more information.2021-01-2253 minTriple Bladed SwordTriple Bladed Sword100 Years of Horror, Part 2: The Bride of FrankensteinJumping from the silent era to the 1930s, this week's selection from a century of horror film is the pinnacle of the Universal Monsters films, James Whale's masterpiece, The Bride of Frankenstein.  Hosted on Acast. See acast.com/privacy for more information.2021-01-1654 minTriple Bladed SwordTriple Bladed SwordStation Eleven Part 2: Contagion and The TheatreThis week, we learn more about the way Narrative Theory approaches Story and Narrative by comparing Steven Soderbergh's film Contagion with "The Theatre," the first part of Emily St. John Mandel's novel, Station Eleven. After a crash course in film language using Contagion as our case study, I look at how the intensity of the film helps us understand how Mandel is creating a kinder, gentler apocalypse in Station Eleven.  Hosted on Acast. See acast.com/privacy for more information.2021-01-1649 minTriple Bladed SwordTriple Bladed Sword100 Years of Horror, Part I: NosferatuWe embark on a journey of terror, looking at 100 years of horror movies. We begin our journey with F.W. Murnau and Albin Grau's classic silent film, Nosferatu: A Symphony of Horror. This episode discusses some misconceptions about the film, the ways in which it is like (and unlike) Stoker's Dracula, and how we can be a "sympathetic audience" to old horror movies that no longer have the power to scare a contemporary viewer.  Hosted on Acast. See acast.com/privacy for more information.2021-01-0857 minTriple Bladed SwordTriple Bladed SwordThe Christmas Episode 2020My first Christmas episode, in which I probably say "whimsy" too much, but make some recommendations for you to read, watch, and play over the Holiday season (which goes until January 6 if you want it to).  0:00 - Introduction (with festive music!) 2.43 Reading Recommendations         3:09 Doomsday Book by Connie Willis (Science Fiction)      10:23 Hogfather by Terry Pratchett (Fantasy)      17:25 All the Bells on Earth by James P. Blaylock (Horror)26:20 Watching Recommendations       26:30 Doctor Who: "A Christmas Carol" (Science Fiction)       28:50 Jingle Jangle (Fantasy)       33:08 Rare Exports (Horror)35:02 Playing Recommendations - Heroic Maps (Holidays ones!) for Fantasy Roleplaying Hosted on Acast. See acast.com/privacy for more information.2020-12-2244 minTriple Bladed SwordTriple Bladed SwordStation Eleven Part 1 - Judging A Book by its CoverThis episode introduces a new season/course, Media Across Narrative. Our focus is Emily St. John Mandel's novel Station Eleven, which we will use as our central pillar to a semester-long investigation of the apocalyptic and post-apocalyptic genres. In this episode, I take judge Station Eleven by its cover -- or rather, covers, and explain the difference between story and narrative using Noah's Ark, one of the first apocalyptic works of written narrative in the world!  Hosted on Acast. See acast.com/privacy for more information.2020-11-2347 minTriple Bladed SwordTriple Bladed SwordGravity - SoundThe final episode of the Narrative in Film series! This week, I'm looking at how sound works as cinematic language, with Alfonso Cuarón's Gravity as our case study. Rabbit trails include why Gravity isn't science fiction, and why Neil DeGrasse Tyson needs to stop punching holes in the fabric of film reality.  Hosted on Acast. See acast.com/privacy for more information.2020-11-171h 01Triple Bladed SwordTriple Bladed SwordStar Wars: EditingThis week, I'm standing on the shoulders of giants Will Brooker and Linton Davies as we discuss how editing contributes to cinematic language, with Star Wars as our case study. Hosted on Acast. See acast.com/privacy for more information.2020-11-0246 minTriple Bladed SwordTriple Bladed SwordGet Out: ActingIn this lecture, we're talking about that aspect of cinematic language everyone thinks they're an expert on: acting! Our case study for the week is Jordan Peele's excellent horror flick, Get Out. Just in time for Halloween! Hosted on Acast. See acast.com/privacy for more information.2020-10-2650 minTriple Bladed SwordTriple Bladed SwordFellowship of the Ring: CinematographyThis week, I'm looking at Peter Jackson's Fellowship of the Ring with a focus on cinematography, which is one of the areas this film won an Academy Award for. It's an epic episode for an epic film! Hosted on Acast. See acast.com/privacy for more information.2020-10-201h 07Triple Bladed SwordTriple Bladed SwordMoulin Rouge! Mise-en-scèneThis week, a discussion about production design, costuming, lighting, and so many other aspects that get dumped under the term  mise-en-scène, as mediated through the spectacular "real artificiality" of Baz Luhrman's Moulin Rouge! Hosted on Acast. See acast.com/privacy for more information.2020-10-1351 minTriple Bladed SwordTriple Bladed SwordBlacKkKlansman - Elements of NarrativeThis week, we get a little bit of film history about D.W. Griffith, I swear about Griffith, get uppity about documentaries, and talk about how "true" any films based on true stories can ever really be. Hosted on Acast. See acast.com/privacy for more information.2020-10-051h 00Triple Bladed SwordTriple Bladed SwordThe Shape of Water: Types of MoviesThis week, I talk about genres, rabbit trailing to giant monsters, Sweeney Todd, and Harry Potter films on an airplane before finally discussing the hybrid genre wonder that is The Shape of Water. Hosted on Acast. See acast.com/privacy for more information.2020-09-2959 minTriple Bladed SwordTriple Bladed SwordLittle Women - Principles of Film FormThis week. we're looking at "Principles of Film Form," Chapter 2 of Looking at Movies, using Greta Gerwig's 2019 adaptation of Little Women as our case study. You'll learn about film form, about how much I love Florence Pugh in this film, and hear me cry! Hosted on Acast. See acast.com/privacy for more information.2020-09-2250 minTriple Bladed SwordTriple Bladed SwordRaiders of the Lost Ark - What's a Movie?The first lecture from my Introduction to Film Narrative course in fall of 2020, this episode uses the adventure classic Raiders of the Lost Ark to answer the question, "What's a Movie?" Raiders acts as the case study for an initial investigation into the formal elements of cinematic language.  Hosted on Acast. See acast.com/privacy for more information.2020-09-1451 minTriple Bladed SwordTriple Bladed SwordThe Sword and the SorcererIn this inaugural episode, Mike explains the name of the podcast, identifies the triple blades of speculative fiction and adaptation, and argues why the 1982 B-movie The Sword and the Sorcerer isn't just a Conan wannabe.  Images referenced in the podcast can be seen over at the Triple Bladed Sword Instagram.  Hosted on Acast. See acast.com/privacy for more information.2020-09-0441 minThe Last Alliance: University of Alberta Tolkien Society PodcastThe Last Alliance: University of Alberta Tolkien Society Podcast2016 Guest Lectures: Dr. Mike Perschon – “Dungeons and Dickens: Steampunking a Middle-Earth Tabletop RPG”Originally recorded February 25, 2016: Link to archive.org page where this podcast can be downloaded.2019-09-0300 minThe Last Alliance: University of Alberta Tolkien Society PodcastThe Last Alliance: University of Alberta Tolkien Society Podcast2016 Guest Lectures: Dr. Mike Perschon – “Dungeons and Dickens: Steampunking a Middle-Earth Tabletop RPG”Originally recorded February 25, 2016: https://archive.org/download/DrMikePerschon-GuestLecture_Feb-25-2016/DrMikePerschon-GuestLecture_Feb-25-2016.mp3 Link to archive.org page where this podcast can be downloaded. 2019-09-0300 minStorypunks PodcastStorypunks Podcast#40 (Part 2): Steampunk SALON With Author and Reviewer Mike Perschon AKA the Steampunk Scholar - Morlock Night by K.W. JeterIn Part 2 of 2, the Steampunk Scholar, Dr. Mike Perschon, chats with me further about character, theme, and more in this unique Arthurian tale. Join us as we further celebrate and explore K.W. Jeter's classic Morlock Night! www.SteampunkScholar.blogspot.com www.facebook.com/AuthorK.W.Jeter/ Join our Salon and Reading Room! www.Storypunks.World/newsletter www.facebook.com/groups/storypunks2019-05-1000 minStorypunks PodcastStorypunks Podcast#39 (Part 1): Steampunk SALON With Mike Perschon AKA the Steampunk Scholar - Morlock Night by K.W. Jeter Dr. Mike Perschon AKA the Steampunk Scholar joined me to chat about K.W. Jeter's classic Morlock Night. Dr. Perschon has a lot of cool insight about this follow-up to H.G. Wells' The Time Machine. Perschon wrote a non-fiction guide to steampunk titled Steampunk FAQ and we talk quite a bit about steampunk itself in this first of two parts. www.SteampunkScholar.blogspot.com www.facebook.com/AuthorK.W.Jeter/ Join the book club: www.Storypunks.World/newsletter www.facebook.com/groups/storypunks  2019-05-1000 min