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http://aidanmoher.com/blog/featured...attle-and-slaves-narrative-by-kameron-hurley/
This is an excellent article, spanning through writing, historiography, gender, race, psychology and politics. With awesome pictures all around.
Some selections:
ANy thoughts? It drove me thinking about how-- well, how our perspective were made by the stories others made.
It was said that we were an agglomeration of 5 people we're the closest with.
The way our perceptions were build and our assumptions were made....... It is very convenient, isn't it?
This is an excellent article, spanning through writing, historiography, gender, race, psychology and politics. With awesome pictures all around.
Some selections:
"So you forget the llamas that don’t fit the narrative you saw in films, books, television – the ones you heard about in the stories – and you remember the ones that exhibited the behavior the stories talk about.
Suddenly, all the llamas you remember fit the narrative you see and hear every day from those around you. You make jokes about it with your friends. You feel like you’ve won something. You’re not crazy. You think just like everyone else.
It’s easier to tell the same stories everyone else does. There’s no particular shame in it.
It’s just that it’s lazy, which is just about the worst possible thing a spec fic writer can be.
Oh, and it’s not true."
"truth is something that happens whether or not we see it, or believe it, or write about. Truth just is. We can call it something else, or pretend it didn’t happen, but its repercussions live with us, whether we choose to remember and acknowledge it or not."
"Language is a powerful thing, and it changes the way we view ourselves, and other people, in delightful and horrifying ways. Anyone with any knowledge of the military, or who pays attention to how the media talks about war, has likely caught on to this.
We don’t kill “people.” We kill “targets.” (Or japs or gooks or ragheads). We don’t kill “fifteen year old boys” but “enemy combatants” (yes, every boy 15 and over killed in drone strikes now is automatically listed as an enemy combatant. Not a boy. Not a child.)."
"And when we talk about “people” we don’t really mean “men and women.” We mean “people and female people.” We talk about “American Novelists” and “American Women Novelists.” We talk about “Teenage Coders” and “Lady Teenage Coders.”
And when we talk about war, we talk about soldiers and female soldiers.
Because this is the way we talk, when we talk about history and use the word “soldiers” it immediately erases any women doing the fighting. Which is it comes as no surprise that the folks excavating Viking graves didn’t bother to check whether the graves they dug up were male or female. They were graves swords in them. Swords are for soldiers. Soldiers are men.
It was years before they thought to even check the actual bones of the skeletons, instead of just saying, “Sword means dude!” and realized their mistake.
Women fought too."
"We like our narrative. It takes overwhelming evidence and – more importantly – the words of many, many, many people around us, for us to take action.
It’s why people can get into fistfights and assault others on busy sidewalks. It’s why people are killed in broad daylight, and homes are broken into even in areas with lots of foot traffic. Most people actually ignore things out of the ordinary. Or, worse, hope that someone else will take care of it."
ANy thoughts? It drove me thinking about how-- well, how our perspective were made by the stories others made.
It was said that we were an agglomeration of 5 people we're the closest with.
The way our perceptions were build and our assumptions were made....... It is very convenient, isn't it?