â Bertrand Russell, from âWhat Desires Are Politically Important?â (via letsbelonelytogetherr)

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@claysark
â Bertrand Russell, from âWhat Desires Are Politically Important?â (via letsbelonelytogetherr)
I really donât want to open this can of worms because Tumblr hath no fury like people called out on their political performativeness but it is literally driving me up the wall to watch people react to Serkisâ âkeep Tolkien whiteâ commentary by insisting twice as hard that Tolkien would descend down to earth and dropkick the entire Republican party to hell or whatever, just because they want to ensure that a piece of media they enjoy isnât seen as being morally impure. Case in point: I have seen at least five instances of Tolkienâs âI hate apartheidâ valedictorian address being used as a âcounterâ to Serkis being racist, including by actual news outlets.
Except itâs only ever the âI hate apartheidâ line thatâs shared, and not the actual quote in its full context. Because here it is:
If we consider what Merton College and what the Oxford School of English owes to the Antipodes, to the Southern Hemisphere, especially to scholars born in Australia and New Zealand, it may well be felt that it is only just that one of them should now ascend an Oxford chair of English. Indeed it may be thought that justice has been delayed since 1925. There are of course other lands under the Southern Cross. I was born in one; though I do not claim to be the most learned of those who have come hither from the far end of the Dark Continent. But I have the hatred of apartheid in my bones; and most of all I detest the segregation or separation of Language and Literature. I do not care which of them you think White.
Which is to say. This isnât exactly the antiracist quote of the century, to say the least. This is a white South Africa born man and a white Australian shaking hands and going âomg we relateâ and expressing what is a very, very mild âsegregation is not greatâ opinion in order to convey his thoughts on an academic subject, ie the confluence of language and literature. Using race to make a point about his own subject of interest, in his own interest, which is, amusingly enough, what a lot of ostensibly well meaning progressive seem to be doing.
I also think that some of the general surprise around âwhat do you mean large swathes of the Tolkien fandom are incredibly conservative!?â in lib/left Tolkien fandom is the result of a tendency in said parts of the fandom to transpose oneâs own progressiveness onto Tolkien and turn a blind eye to things like, say, the Shire being a very specifically mid-century British racist construct that is very, very clear in its politics, often going so far as to insist itâs anarchist or an ideal society or whatever the fuck⊠and then getting really Pikachu-meme âbut theyâre misreading itâ every single time a conservative explains exactly what it is about the legendarium that they really love, and get surprised when someone uses the Shire being a racist construct to do more racism. It is 2026 let us do away with âI donât see colourâ interpretations of media, I beg. Nobody is cancelling you for enjoying a book that is not kind to race. Most of the books I love are not kind to race.
if a character means enough to me i will truly never stop thinking about them. i just retire them into a little back room in my brain and periodically bring them out to stare at them under a little light
The roy family finds an evil baby
Roman: So do we just, fucking, bash it's head in, or?
Shiv: It isn't our problem, right? We just leave it. Hands clean.
Kendall: Very, uh, maternal, Shiv. Leave the baby.
Connor: There are a lot of uses for an evil baby. I'm not saying that's what we should do, but....
Kendall: Roman's right. We kill it, or we get someone to kill it.
Shiv: So what, you just get to be the hero who saves the world from an evil baby?
Greg: I'm worried, uh, if we find a guy to kill the baby? He must be a pretty evil guy. So he might use the baby for evil. But I'm not saying I should kill the baby? Because I don't really want those images like, in my head whenever I see another baby?
it gets to a point that is just weirder if they didn't fuck
you did all this and it was not even because you wanted to bang him? weirdo
not ppl agreeing with the Think of all the Djuna Barneses we could have had if not for slash fic tweetâŠâŠ
everyone saying âsheâs got a pointâ is similarly participating in a sort of undeserved literary snobbery that belies any actual understanding of the function and popular reception of the novel as a form since its inception.
I am saying this as someone who has never once picked up a âpopular on booktokâ canva art romance novel, and rarely reads any 21st century literature at allâwho finds a lot of contemporary anglophone lit to be banal, obnoxious, and utterly tedious. I couldnât care less about the artistic merits of fanfiction as âlegitimate literatureâ either way, and I find the âcharacter-firstâ approach to storytelling most people in fandom circles employ to be reductive and a bit exhaustingâŠ
if you seriously think that the kinds of people writing gay fanfiction on ao3 about the main characters from a mainstream hollywood production are the same kinds of people who would otherwise be experimenting with the form of the novel in artistically groundbreaking ways, then I really donât know what to tell you. and if you think the phenomenon of novels being written for the emotional (and sexual) gratification of women being derided as a perversion of an otherwise elite artform is a new phenomenon that sprung up within the past decade, then you obviously donât know enough about the history of literature to be making these kinds of claims with such dismissive arrogance.
the form of the novel, especially novels by women, especially novels by women for women involving romance, have long been trivialized in the popular consciousness for lacking the kind of artistic merit that disqualifies it from being considered âreal literature.â whether such novels are artistically lacking or not is entirely subjective and beside the point. claiming that popular entertainment primarily produced and enjoyed by women and girls has rotted their brains and debased their potential intellectual engagement with âhigherâ artforms is a notion repeated by every generation, and itâs equally ridiculous every time! least of all because there are still plenty of women in the world who care about the craft of literature and artistic experimentation within the form of the novel. and some of them even like fanfiction, also.
so many people post like they are from the dimension of No Misogyny because the misogyny all around them just registers to them as fine and normal
we are all posting from the dimension of No Misandry because we live on the planet earth
your weird obsession with moral purity is degrading your critical thinking skills and poisoning your ability to empathize with other people btw
the natural lifespan of a fandom is unlimited. when well tended a fandom can be functionally immortal. and yet everywhere you look you see newly bred fandoms withering and dying when theyâre barely a year old. barely even six months old. fans are looking at their six month old fandoms and saying i think itâs on its last legs, should i euthanise it? when with the proper care that fandom could outlive them for decades. itâs sad. sad state of affairs weâre in.
shipping has a deserved reputation of being able to nuke pplâs understanding of the source material but i would argue that ppl with intense hate boners for certain ships are very capable of matching them in this regard
a relationship and dynamic with another character can be a huge component of characters and their development and themes. it may be a fundamental part of their stories. a bias coming from the opposite direction can lead to just as laughable analysis regarding the bigger picture
"The sky takes on shades of orange during sunrise and sunset, the colour that gives you hope that the sun will set only to rise again."
Gilmore Girls | 2000 - 2007
grabbing the ao3 authors by their plump rosy little cheeks⊠being sexually submissive⊠does not make a person literally anything. not more or less powerful, or more or less competent, or more or less gendered, or more or less capable of abuse, or more or less innocent, or more or less mature, or more or less adult, or more or less violent, or more or less intelligent, or more or less responsible, or more or less any single thing on the planet. there is no correlation. please. please. for the love of god.
Actually it's super rude and problematic of you dismiss my vapid outsider critiques :/ People who have absolutely no idea what the hell they're even talking about deserve to be heard too :/
Succession (2018-2023) & the human heart in conflict with itself
imo you get the most out of engaging with media when you strike a balance between treating characters as people (reading interiority into their actions, considering the effect of various aspects of their identity, etc etc) and as vehicles for storytelling (what narrative purpose do they serve, how do their actions and personality function to convey the themes of the work, etc etc). because of course characters are literary devices but also thereâs a reason we use literary devices written to embody realistic people in order to tell stories
Sarah Snook as Shiv Roy in SUCCESSIONÂ | 3.08 âChiantishireâ