Marco Polo - Khutulun
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he wasn't even looking at me and he found me
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i don't do bad sauce passes
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One Nice Bug Per Day
let's talk about Bridgerton tea, my ask is open
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@babesinarmor
Marco Polo - Khutulun
Okay I’m only gonna say this once and preface this with the fact that I am Eyak and I probably do not want to hear your opinion on the Pharah skins Raindancer/Thunderbird. This is a really soul baring post so I’m not so sure about people reblogging it, if you do just try to be respective and remember this isn’t a go-ahead to go and appropriate all native cultures.Â
They’re pretty damn clearly based on Pacific Northwest tribal cultures. The ones I can pick out being Eyak/Tlingit/Haida/Tsimshian, but we often get grouped together so that doesn’t surprise me. There are many more, but I don’t claim familiarity with all tribes and I can’t say if their art styles and myths were used.
For your comparison a little sample of the tribe’s artistic styles just to get the point across:
And I really have to get something off my chest people. I don’t have a problem with these skins, in fact I adore them. Please just chill with me for a second while I explain.
The biggest issue I see here is people (who usually arn’t ndn, let alone from pac nw tribes) yelling about cultural appropriation. Which good! I’m glad people are on guard for it! But it’s entirely possible that Pharah’s father was Eyak/Tlingit/Haida/Tsimshian or from another closely related Pacific Northwest tribe, so we can’t really call that yet. It wouldn’t surprise me if he was.
Most importantly, speaking as an Eyak. Which is all I can do despite Tlingit/Haida/Tsimshian being so closely related, our tribe’s relationship with cultural appropriation is uh, not exactly the norm.
The last Eyak fluent speaker died in 2008, her name was Chief Marie Smith Jones and she was also the last full-blooded Eyak on Earth. The very last. Please appropriate Eyak culture. It’s the only way it’s going to survive. There’s less than 500 of us remaining, and we’re scattered more and more every year. Families I grew up with in Alaska converted to Catholicism. The military took my family across the globe and left us an entire continent away. The language I learned at the dinner table in 1998 now almost exclusively exists on those cassette tapes my white father recorded that night and in reconstructive attempts from a French academic that studied our language from halfway across the globe.
It sucks shit guys, it really does.Â
When I first saw the Thunderbird skin I cried, I cried for an hour. Because Overwatch is huge. It will live on for years if not decades. And there’s Pharah with her hair in braids I haven’t seen my mother wear in over a decade. Wearing the colors that remind me of a home I no longer have. Embodying a mythic figure that I trusted to protect me during Y2K and sought out constellations in the sky for.Â
So before you spew vitriol about how racist it is that they did that. Just kind of chill out and think about different perspectives for a moment. If you really want to help us? Consider taking a poke about http://www.eyakpeople.com/ and taking a look at our language revitalization project! It’s pretty fun and you could even learn a language out of it.Â
AwA’ahdah (Thank You)
Gal Gadot in Wonder Woman dir. Patty Jenkins (2017)
Wonder Woman stars, and is being directed by a woman!
The Barbarians (1987). By Cannon Films.Â
Good evening.
Once Upon A Time - Mulan (and Merida)
                            I’ll teach you how to fight better than any man here..   I’ll teach you the most important thing you need to have to have to fight. Honour.
Hell. Yes. Once Upon A Time - Mulan
Lost in Space (Ep. 49, The Space Vikings) - Brynhilda
J.M. Yales is a queer identifying female writer currently living in Chicago, IL, but originally from Milwaukee, WI. Her start in feminist commentary came from personal blogging, but was expanded by…
Shameless self promotion: I wrote a novel last year, and it is now being publishing in serialized format by the emerging literary website Visitant. “A Coven in Essex County” is the story of three women in the Lovecraftian town of Innsmouth, Mass. I consider it a revisionist historical fantasy with strong horror elements and feminist critique.
All of us Nintendo players have shared that moment. A parent, an ignorant friend, or a well-meaning geriatric interrupts the smooth movement of our joysticks and the exacting strikes of our button-…
I’ve been without a computer, but this article was posted last month on Link’s gender in Legend of Zelda. (Oh, also I wrote it.)
Dragon Age: Origins - concept art for Women’s Heavy Chestpieces Are those chain pants?
Mail chausses were a thing, historically! Although I don’t think they were usually so… baggy. Much more fitted, from what I know.
@ that cuirass though: argh why
I love this, and I love when people share their knowledge! A little more info on Chausses, and a sweet pic of knee-high ones: https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Chausses And yes, I don’t think I could move in the cuirass, especially with that cloth overlay. Fitted armor that is enclosed and right against the skin turns you into a statue. Just ask Brigitte Helm:
Just pictures of Yara (Asha) Greyjoy, because... oh, no reason.
Game of Thrones - Yara Greyjoy
Tomyris - artist unknown. From the collection of Bocaccio, ca 1300s.
Tomyris Receiving the Head of Cyrus - Mattia Preti
Tomyris - Andrea del Castagno
This painting was created almost 900 years after Tomyris was alive. The Queen depicted was central Asian, possibly from the area of modern day Iran, and probably did not look like an Italian maiden. She is credited with killing Cyrus the Great (though there are several different accounts of his death), crucifying his body, and shoving his severed head into a wineskin filled with blood.
The Museketeers (BBC) - Emilie
Dragon Age: Origins - concept art for Women’s Heavy Chestpieces Are those chain pants?
“George R. R. Martin revealed a badass new detail about Brienne“