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Ink & Acid

Ink & Acid

De : Harmonie de Mieville
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Ink & Acid is a sharp, witty podcast exploring pop culture, media, identity, and the beautiful mess of modern life. Hosted by Harmonie, it blends cultural analysis, storytelling, and unapologetic commentary to unpack the trends, obsessions, and contradictions shaping our era. From K-pop and digital culture to books, branding, ambition, and collective anxiety, Ink & Acid cuts through the noise with insight, irony, and zero tolerance for emptiness. For listeners who want substance, style, and thoughts that actually leave a mark.Harmonie de Mieville Politique et gouvernement
Épisodes
  • Glinda, respectability, and the soft violence of being likable.
    Apr 9 2026

    In this episode of Ink & Acid, Harmonie explores Glinda as more than a beloved blonde archetype or a soft counterpoint to Elphaba. Through Wicked, this episode unpacks popularity, femininity, respectability, the halo effect, conformity, and the unsettling way charm can help unjust systems remain socially acceptable. This is a closer look at how softness becomes political, how likability becomes power, and why being loved by a system is never as innocent as it seems. Start with the main Wicked episode already available, then come back to this extension of the analysis. To go further, explore the full Ink & Acid universe on my website: books, essays, music, and full episode scripts.


    Keywords : Wicked, Wicked analysis, Glinda, Glinda analysis, Elphaba, Wicked movie, Wicked explained, respectability, likability, femininity, halo effect, conformity, social conformity, normative conformity, social psychology, gender bias, likability penalty, women and power, soft violence, charm and power, political technology, social capital, moral psychology, cultural criticism, pop culture analysis, film analysis, character analysis, Ink & Acid, Harmonie.

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    11 min
  • Why Elphaba had to be hated: Wicked, social discipline, and the punishment of women who won’t behave
    Apr 7 2026

    In this episode of Ink & Acid, Harmonie explores why Elphaba is not hated because she is evil, but because she is impossible to discipline. Through Wicked, this deep dive unpacks social labeling, respectability, gendered punishment, collective bias, and the way societies prefer useful lies over unsettling truths. This is not just about Oz. It is about the real-world mechanics that decide who gets called difficult, dangerous, excessive, or too much. Start with the main Wicked episode already available, then come back to this sharper extension of the conversation. To go further, explore the full Ink & Acid universe—books, essays, music, and full episode scripts—on my website.


    Keywords

    Wicked, Wicked analysis, Elphaba, Elphaba analysis, Wicked movie, Wicked explained, Wicked themes, social discipline, labeling theory, deviance, stigma, social stigma, gender bias, women and leadership, respectability politics, symbolic violence, conformity, social conformity, collective psychology, sociology, propaganda, narrative framing, social order, moral comfort, hypocrisy, pop culture analysis, film analysis, cultural criticism, feminist analysis, media analysis, Ink & Acid, Harmonie

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    11 min
  • Wicked Explained: Propaganda, Conformity, and the Making of a Monster
    Mar 31 2026

    In this episode of Ink & Acid, Harmonie dives into Wicked as more than a film, more than a musical, and far more than a story about a misunderstood witch. This is a sharp cultural analysis of propaganda, conformity, social stigma, respectability, and the way societies manufacture monsters in order to protect their own moral comfort.


    Through Elphaba, Glinda, and the political machinery of Oz, this episode explores how public enemies are created, why charm so often softens violence, and why audiences love stories that expose hypocrisy without ever feeling personally implicated. From collective psychology and social bias to narrative framing, halo effect, and the seductive power of social readability, this is a deep dive into what Wicked reveals about power, image, exclusion, and us.


    If you love pop culture analysis, film essays, psychology in media, literary thinking, and cultural commentary with actual teeth, this episode is for you.


    Music :

    1. It's always been you (TFVC vol.2 : Crescendo)

    2. Apocalypse With a Side of Toast (TFVC vol.3 : GLITCH)

    3. Who Am I ?! (TFVC vol.3 : GLITCH)

    Explore the full world of Ink & Acid on Maison de Mieville: books, essays, music, and full episode scripts. If this episode stayed with you, go further — read, listen, annotate, quote, and step deeper into the universe behind the microphone.Keyword : Wicked, Wicked movie, Wicked analysis, Wicked explained, Elphaba, Glinda, Wizard of Oz, propaganda, conformity, social stigma, social psychology, halo effect, implicit bias, scapegoat theory, René Girard, Erving Goffman, narrative framing, collective hypocrisy, public enemy, respectability politics, soft violence, charm and power, pop culture analysis, film analysis, movie essay, cultural criticism, media psychology, social bias, storytelling, symbolic violence, collective narratives, morality and power, Ink & Acid, Harmonie, Maison de Mieville

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    47 min
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