1 post published by blindfieldcollective during September 2025| blindfieldjournal.com
By Yanis Iqbal As I watched the new season of Wednesday, I found myself absorbed in the majesty and mystery of Nevermore Academy. Its labyrinthine towers, shadowed corridors, and gothic facades see…| blindfieldjournal.com
By Jacob Potash “We are a religiously mad culture, furiously searching for the spirit, but each of us is subject and object of the one quest.”—Harold Bloom, The American Religion[1] 1. …| blindfieldjournal.com
By Matt Hanson Prefatory note: The affliction of ethnocentric, religious nationalism continues to ravage the inherent pluralism of human societies… Read more Tuva to Istanbul: A brief history of Buddhist Turks From Uighur roots to present day practice|
By Yanis Iqbal In KPop Demon Hunters (2025), the lore tells us that demons led by their ruler Gwi-Ma “steal souls” and draw strength from this theft, implying a form of parasitic extraction of psyc…| blindfieldjournal.com
By Aya Anzouk It is virtually impossible to conceive of Sigmund Freud without also considering the manner in which his scholarly contributions have been scrutinized, reinterpreted, and rejected by …| blindfieldjournal.com
By Mahim Lakhani The horrors of the institution of motherhood transcend time. It is an evergreen space offering fears and… Read more What’s Motherhood, When All’s Done, But the Giving and Taking of Wounds?|
By Monica Samelson On May 28 a glacier collapsed onto a village in Switzerland. With our rising global temperatures, the ice couldn’t hold onto the mountain anymore. In June heat waves ravaged a gr…| blindfieldjournal.com
By Vilna Goles The following essay, drafted by Noah Brehmer under the collective alias Vilna Goles, is an outgrowth of… Read more We Do Not Belong Here: From the Diaspora to Jalūt|
By Yanis Iqbal In Nosferatu (2024), Ellen, a young woman unwittingly caught in a supernatural bond with the vampire Count… Read more Nosferatu and the Failure of Liberal Feminism|
By Peyton Bond This piece gestated as a review of Sophie Lewis’s Enemy Feminisms, though I see now it has become something a little different. The book so struck me that I quickly joined the dialog…| blindfieldjournal.com