Ibid (short story) explained

Ibid
Author:H. P. Lovecraft
Country:United States
Language:English
Genre:Parody
Publication Type:Periodical
Published In:O-Wash-Ta-Nong
Media Type:Print (Magazine)
Pub Date:January 1938
Wikisource:Ibid

"Ibid" is a parody by American horror fiction writer H. P. Lovecraft, written in 1927 or 1928, and first published in the January 1938, issue of O-Wash-Ta-Nong.[1] [2]

Summary

"Ibid" is a mock biography of the Roman scholar Ibidus (486–587), whose masterpiece was Op. Cit., "wherein all the significant undercurrents of Graeco-Roman thought were crystallized once and for all". The piece traces the skull of Ibidus, once the possession of Charlemagne, William the Conqueror and other notables, to the United States, where it travels via Salem, Massachusetts and Providence, Rhode Island to a prairie dog hole in Milwaukee, Wisconsin.

Satire

The story is prefaced with the epigraph "'...As Ibid says in his famous Lives of the Poets.'--From a student theme". But S. T. Joshi and David E. Schultz report that the "target of the satire in 'Ibid' is not so much the follies of students as the pomposity of academic scholarship."[1]

Notes

  1. Book: Joshi . S.T. . Schultz . David E. . An H.P. Lovecraft Encyclopedia . 2004 . Hippocampus Press . 978-0974878911 . 122.
  2. Web site: Loucks. Donovan K.. Ibid. The H.P. Lovecraft Archive. 1 September 2021.

References