Episode 115: Tales of Margaret Brundage

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In the 1930s Margaret Brundage was the hottest pulp fiction magazine illustrator. She primarily painted covers for Weird Tales magazine, which published the works of Robert E. Howard, H.P. Lovecraft and other pioneering genre writers. I talk with experts George Hagenauer, Lauren Stump and Steve Korshak of the Korshak Collection about why Brundage’s work was so alluring, and how it taps into current questions about how women are depicted in fantasy worlds. And tattoo artist Mary Joy Scott explains why Brundage had an influence on the art of tattooing.
Tales of Margaret Brundage transcript
MUSIC LSIT
  • Detective by Sono Sanctus
  • Daybird by Broke for Free  ​
  • ​Backed Vibes by Kevin MacLeod
  • ​KHalf Noise by Mum
  • ​My Kind of Illusion by Niklas Gustavsson
  • Stories Left Untold by Rand Aldo
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Episode 116: Slaughterhouse at Fifty

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Episode 114: The Man Behind the Sword