AnarchaGLAM SPELL

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they called her witch because she knew how to heal herself.  
Here We Are, Reflections of A God Gone Mad
Mm6 anarchaGLAM.png

lenguas orgiásticas

"The purpose of literature is to turn blood into ink."
T.S. Eliot

Términos hechizantes

3Gs: Glamour - Grimorio - Glándula = Gynepunk

GLAMOUR

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Women healers.jpg

“a magic spell”. Originally it was believed that witches possessed the power of glamour, Malleus Maleficarum, witches by their glamour could cause the male “member” to disappear

glamour (n.) at Dictionary.com

1720, Scottish, "magic, enchantment" (especially in phrase to cast the glamor), a variant of Scottish gramarye "magic, enchantment, spell," alteration of English grammar (q.v.) with a medieval sense of "any sort of scholarship, especially occult learning," the latter sense attested from c.1500 in English but said to have been more common in Medieval Latin. Popularized by the writings of Sir Walter Scott (1771-1832). Sense of "magical beauty, alluring charm" first recorded 1840. Jamieson's 1825 supplement to his "Etymological Dictionary of the Scottish Language" has glamour-gift "the power of enchantment; metaph. applied to female fascination." Jamieson's original edition (1808) looks to Old Norse for the source of the word. Zoega's Old Icelandic dictionary has glám-sýni "illusion."

Origin of glamour

The word glamour (magic charm, alluring beauty or charm, a spell affecting the eye, a kind of haze in the air) comes from the Scottish term gramarye (magic, enchantment, spell), an alteration of the English word grammar (any sort of scholarship) from the latin grammatica, which is a transliteration of the Greek word grammatice (grammar; γραμματική).

Note: Others etymologize the Scottish gramarye from the Greek grammarion (gram; weight unit; γραμμάριο).

From the same root. glamorize, glamorous, grammar, grammatical, grammatic

In modern Greek (Romeika, the language of Romei/Romans/Ρωμηοί)

  1. gramma: letter [γράμμα]
  2. grammateas: secretary [γραμματέας]
  3. grammatia: secretariat [γραμματεία]
  4. grammatici: grammar [γραμματική]
  5. grammaticos: grammatical [γραμματικός]
  6. grammatio: note, bill, bond [γραμμάτιο]
  7. grammatocivotio: letter-box [γραμματοκιβώτιο]
  8. grammatosimo: stamp [γραμματόσημο]

Η λέξη glamour (γοητεία, θέλγητρο, σαγήνη, γόητρο, λάμψη) προέρχεται από το λατινικό grammatica, το οποίο αποτελεί μεταγραφή του ελληνικού γραμματική.

"Poetry is a kind of witchcraft. We have the power to manifest, to call forth, to make what didn’t happen, happen. I think of the griots who delivered stories from town to town, the soothsayers and playwrights and brujas, all the ceremonies and dedications and incantations and proclamations, everything that starts with the word. And how the word gains its power by being spoken and handed to the next person and how what we write will last longer than our skins, our poems are the truest husks of our former selves." 'Rachel McKibbens, from the interview “What We Write Will Last Longer Than Our Skins” by Leah Umansky for Tin House

as ideas son como las pulgas, saltan de unos a otros pero no pican a todos".

George Bernard Shaw

gLAM V: maldición fulminante vamos a quitar sus dedos para meter nuestros puños ahora las brujas tenemos las llamas y no para autoinmolarnos.

Grimorios

libros mágicos. La palabra grimorio deriva del francés grimoire, y éste del latín grammaire, que significa "gramática". Para otros, grimorio proviene del italiano rimario, es decir, una colección de rimas. Sea cual sea su origen, los grimorios fueron mutando de libros académicos a libros esotéricos, anchos y gruesos volúmenes que contienen un saber poco ortodoxo, ocultista, prohibido.

Grammar (n.)

early 14c., gramarye (late 12c. in surnames), from Old French gramaire "learning," especially Latin and philology, "grammar, (magic) incantation, spells, mumbo-jumbo," "irregular semi-popular adoption" [OED] of Latin grammatica, from Greek grammatike tekhne "art of letters," with a sense of both philology and literature in the broadest sense, fem. adjective from gramma "letter," from stem of graphein "to draw or write" (see -graphy). An Old English word for it was stæfcræft (see staff (n.)). Form grammar is from late 14c. Restriction to "rules of language" is a post-classical development, but as this type of study was until 16c. limited to Latin, Middle English gramarye also came to mean "learning in general, knowledge peculiar to the learned classes" (early 14c.), which included astrology and magic; hence the secondary meaning of "occult knowledge" (late 15c.), which evolved in Scottish into glamor (q.v.). A grammar school (late 14c.) originally was "a school in which the learned languages are grammatically taught" [Johnson, who also has grammaticaster "a mean verbal pedant"]. In U.S. (1842) the term was put to use in the graded system for "a school between primary and secondary where English grammar is taught."

GLOSSary

SPELL

early 14c., "read letter by letter, write or say the letters of;" c. 1400, "form words by means of letters," apparently a French word that merged with or displaced a native Old English one; both are from the same Germanic root, but the French word had evolved a different sense. The native word is Old English spellian "to tell, speak, discourse, talk," from Proto-Germanic *spellam (cognates: Old High German spellon "to tell," Old Norse spjalla, Gothic spillon "to talk, tell"), from PIE *spel- (2) "to say aloud, recite."

But the current senses seem to come from Anglo-French espeller, Old French espelir "mean, signify, explain, interpret," also "spell out letters, pronounce, recite," from Frankish *spellon "to tell" or some other Germanic source, ultimately identical with the native word.

Related: Spelled; spelling. In early Middle English still "to speak, preach, talk, tell," hence such expressions as hear spell "hear (something) told or talked about," spell the wind "talk in vain" (both 15c.). Meaning "form words with proper letters" is from 1580s. Spell out "explain step-by-step" is first recorded 1940, American English. Shakespeare has spell (someone) backwards "reverse the character of, explain in a contrary sense, portray with determined negativity."

Old English spell "story, saying, tale, history, narrative, fable; discourse, command," from Proto-Germanic *spellam (see spell (v.1)). Compare Old Saxon spel, Old Norse spjall, Old High German spel, Gothic spill "report, discourse, tale, fable, myth;" German Beispiel "example." From c. 1200 as "an utterance, something said, a statement, remark;" meaning "set of words with supposed magical or occult powers, incantation, charm" first recorded 1570s; hence any means or cause of enchantment.

The term 'spell' is generally used for magical procedures which cause harm, or force people to do something against their will -- unlike charms for healing, protection, etc. ["Oxford Dictionary of English Folklore"]

http://www.etymonline.com/index.php?term=spell

WITCH

"Bruja" y "mujer sabia" tuvieron sus orígenes en el antiguo Kemet (verdadero nombre de Egipto, que significa Tierra de los Negros). Wadj (o Uadj) es una palabra Kemetic que significa "poder, salud, verde, agua". Un cetro wadj representa un paquete atado de hierbas para la salud y la prosperidad. Una variante de la palabra es Udja (pronunciado WOO-jah), donde el término tablero Ouija también deriva Wadjet (Uadjet, Uachet) es un término para una mujer magica fuerte que puede de repente curvar la energía para la curación.

The terms "witch" and "wise woman" actually had their origins in ancient Kemet (Egypt's true name, meaning Land of the Blacks). Wadj (or Uadj) is a Kemetic word meaning "power, health, green, water." A wadj scepter represents a tied bundle of herbs for health and prosperity. A variant of the word is Udja (pronounced WOO-jah), where the term Ouija board is also derived from.  Neb-t Het). Wadjet (Uadjet, Uachet) is a term for a strong magickal woman who can suddenly bend energy for healing.

ASHE!: African Origins of the Word "Witch"

Herejía

“Como feminista sólo se puede ser hereje, bastarda, aberrante, abyecta, monstrua. El feminismo sólo puede ser anti-sistema. Últimamente tengo muy presentes a nuestras antepasadas brujas. El 85% de quienes fueron conducidas a la hoguera eran mujeres. Y todavía la historia oficial no habla de feminicidio, en fin. Ya sólo por ellas, me llamo hereje. Y por no comulgar con el falso feminismo del poder, por supuesto. Y por atea, anticlerical, hija de Lilith”. Itziar Ziga


En el año 325, en la ciudad de nicea, se celebro el primer concilio ecuménico de la cristiandad, convocado por el emperador Constantino. Durante los 3 meses que duro el concilio, 300 obispos aprobaron algunos dogmas necesarios en la lucha contra las herejías y decidieron que la palabra herejía, del griego hairesis, que signoficaba “elección”, pasaría a significar “error” O sea: comete error quien elige libremente y desobedece a los dueños de la fe Herejias (EDUARDO GALEANO De Los hijos de los días)

HAG-OGRAPHY

As we write/live our own story, we are uncovering their history, Creating Hag-ography and Hag-ology. Women traveling into feminist. Time/space are creating Hag-ocracy, the place where we govern.

PHARMACON

la cura o el veneno

«Este pharmakon, esta« medicina »actúa como remedio y veneno, ya se introduce en el cuerpo del discurso con toda su ambivalencia». De la misma raíz deriva "Pharmakos" (Griego: φαρμακος), que se convierte más tarde en el término "pharmakeus", que significa droguerx, envenenadorx, por extensión, maga o hechicera.

Pharmakeia: el uso de medicamentos, drogas o hechizos

pharmakeia: the use of medicine, drugs or spells Original Word: φαρμακεία, ας, ἡ Part of Speech: Noun, Feminine Transliteration: pharmakeia Phonetic Spelling: (far-mak-i'-ah) Short Definition: magic, sorcery, enchantment Definition: magic, sorcery, enchantmen pharmakeía (from pharmakeuō, "administer drugs") – properly, drug-related sorcery, like the practice of magical-arts, etc. (A. T. Robertson).


φαρμακεία (WH κια, so T (except in Galatians 5:20; cf. the Proleg., p. 88); see Iota), φαρμακείας, ἡ (φαρμακεύω); a. the use or the administering of drugs (Xenophon, mem. 4, 2, 17). b. poisoning (Plato, Polybius, others): Revelation 9:21 (here WH text Tr marginal reading φαρμακῶν; many interpretations refer the passage to the next entry). c. sorcery, magical arts, often found in connection with idolatry and fostered by it: Galatians 5:20 (where see Lightfoot) (Wis. 12:4 Wis. 18:13; for כְּשָׁפִים, Isaiah 47:9; for לָטִים, Exodus 7:22; Exodus 8:18; for לְהָטִים, Exodus 7:11); tropically, of the deceptions and seductions of idolatry, Revelation 18:23. STRONGS NT 5331: φάρμακον [φάρμακον, φαρμάκου, τό, from Homer down, a drug; an enchantment: Tr marginal reading WH text in Revelation 9:21 (R. V. sorceries), for φαρμακεία, which see (in b.).


http://biblehub.com/greek/5331.htm https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Pharmakon_(philosophy)

PLACER

Pleasure is The Last Revenge” Lydia Lunch
“Un orgasmo al día mantiene lejos al médico” Mae West

RADICAL

“Radical simply means "grasping things at the root." Angela Davis

CREAR

Crear es, también, un acto poético (del griego “poieo= crear”, pero también es “kreas = carne”, en suma, el bíblico “crear la carne”)

ANATOMIA

Etimología de anatomía Origen, historia o formación Este término es de origen latino, a través del griego. En latín encontramos el vocablo “anatomĭa”, que a su vez procede del griego”ἀνατομία” (anatomia), y  que significa “disección o “cortar a lo largo” o, “cortar hacia arriba“,  del verbo ἀνατέμνειν (anatémnein). Los componente léxico son “ἀνά” (aná), que significa “hacia arriba”, y “τέμνειν (témnein), que significa “cortar”. En el caso de “anatomía”, el sufijo “nomia” indica “ciencia”, “regulación”, “que entiende”. De este modo, la “anatomía” no es otra cosa que la “ciencia del corte hacia arriba”, “ciencia del corte superior”


CHARM

Middle English (in the senses ‘incantation or magic spell’ and ‘to use spells’): from Old French charme (noun), charmer (verb), from Latin carmen ‘song, verse, incantation.’

charm (n.) c. 1300, "incantation, magic charm," from Old French charme (12c.) "magic charm, magic, spell; incantation, song, lamentation," from Latin carmen "song, verse, enchantment, religious formula," from canere "to sing" (see chant (v.)), with dissimilation of -n- to -r- before -m- in intermediate form *canmen (for a similar evolution, see Latin germen "germ," from *genmen). The notion is of chanting or reciting verses of magical power. A yet stronger power than that of herb or stone lies in the spoken word, and all nations use it both for blessing and cursing. But these, to be effective, must be choice, well knit, rhythmic words (verba concepta), must have lilt and tune; hence all that is strong in the speech wielded by priest, physician, magician, is allied to the forms of poetry. [Jacob Grimm, "Teutonic Mythology" (transl. Stallybrass), 1883] Sense of "pleasing quality" evolved 17c. Meaning "small trinket fastened to a watch-chain, etc." first recorded 1865. Quantum physics sense is from 1964. To work like a charm (figuratively) is recorded by 1824. charm (v.) c. 1300, "to recite or cast a magic spell," from Old French charmer (13c.) "to enchant, to fill (someone) with desire (for something); to protect, cure, treat; to maltreat, harm," from Late Latin carminare, from Latin carmen (see charm (n.)). In Old French used alike of magical and non-magical activity. In English, "to win over by treating pleasingly, delight" from mid-15c. Related: Charmed; charming. Charmed (short for I am charmed) as a conventional reply to a greeting or meeting is attested by 1825.

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