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DAVID LAPADAT
WRITER · RESEARCHER · SONGWRITER · CULTURAL JOURNALIST

David Lapadat holds degrees in music and history, earned a PhD in Music from the National University of Music Bucharest, and has published more than 150 cultural essays for Actualitatea Muzicală. His essays bring literature, philosophy, music, and history into one house.


The Gilded Vacuum: Sylvia Plath, the Paralysis of Choice, and the Only Shield Worth Wearing
In this L.U.C. Literary Shadows essay, Sylvia Plath’s Bell Jar meets David Goggins’ philosophy of mental callousing. Through Plath’s fig tree, Kierkegaard’s despair, and the somatic reality of creative paralysis, this monograph explores the Gilded Vacuum of the modern creative industry—and the only survival mechanism worth building inside it. A noir-intellectual meditation on will, asphyxiation, and the margin between collapse and continuation.
David Lapadat | Music PhD


Han Kang’s Greek Lessons: The Body as a Dead Language
Han Kang’s Greek Lessons is often read as a quiet story of wounded people finding connection. But its deeper force lies elsewhere: in the body as a damaged instrument of speech, sight, memory, and transcendence. This essay reads the novel through silence, Ancient Greek, Borges, Plato, bodily trauma, and the fragile moment when touch becomes language.
David Lapadat | Music PhD


When Snow Becomes Form: Sjón's The Blue Fox
In The Blue Fox, Sjón’s coldness becomes structure. Snow is not background; it is narration, morality, metaphysics, and the hidden logic of the book.
David Lapadat | Music PhD


Sjón's Beautiful Fractures: Moonstone, Red Milk, and the Pressure That Fails to Gather
Sjón’s Moonstone and Red Milk are powerful in image, violence, and historical wound — but both reveal the same problem: the fragment burns brighter than the atmosphere around it.
David Lapadat | Music PhD


Heidegger on Retirement Planning: Being-Towards-Death and the Life You Keep Postponing
Retirement planning often looks prudent because it hides the one fact that gives prudence its meaning. Through Heidegger's being-towards-death, this essay argues that saving becomes honest only when it serves a finite life rather than sedating it.
David Lapadat | Music PhD


Fernando Pessoa’s False Stoic: The Baron of Teive and the wound of the unfinished opus
Fernando Pessoa’s The Education of the Stoic is not really a book of Stoic discipline. It is a cold, brilliant fragment about artistic failure, metaphysical exhaustion, and the impossible desire to turn inner plenitude into a complete work.
David Lapadat | Music PhD


Bora Chung’s Cursed Objects: How Cursed Bunny Turns Modern Life into Folklore
A deep reading of Bora Chung’s Cursed Bunny, where rabbit lamps, toilet heads, rings, scars, houses, ghosts, and machines turn modern life into folklore, body horror, and social curse.
David Lapadat | Music PhD


The Fall of Google: Illich, Counterproductivity, and the Economics of Digital Decay
No one can name the date the search began to fail. The first result is no longer the right result. The user has learned to skip, to append reddit, to open three tabs — and the labor of finding has migrated from the platform to the person so gradually that most users absorb it as a personal skill rather than recognizing it as a systemic failure.
David Lapadat | Music PhD


3 French Classics That Built the Modern Literary Mind
Three French classics, three literary machines: Hugo’s cathedral of mercy, Balzac’s Paris of ambition, and Camus’s courtroom of meaning.
David Lapadat | Music PhD
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