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did a human genji bc he’s totally a japanese history otaku that loves karate and calligraphy
by reddit user The_Bibliophagist
Cat Logic
flowery cottagecore borders for stone and brick paths
To all my freshman babies who are panicking right now about how much your college textbooks cost: Yeah, you’re right, that’s some highway robbery. No, you don’t have to lie down and take it. You have options. Follow my advice and fly on your own debt free wings.
1. Forgoe the bookstore entirely. Sometimes you can get a good deal on something, usually a rental, but it’s usually going to be considerably more expensive to go through official channels. Outsmart them, babies.
2. Does your syllabus call for edition eight? Get edition seven. Old editions are considered worthless in the buyback trades, so they sell for dirt cheap, no matter how new they are. It’s a gamble, sure; there might be something in edition eight you desperately need, but that never happened to me. However, I’ve only ever pulled this stunt for literature/mass comm/religious studies books, so I don’t know it would work in the sciences.
3. Thriftbooks.com, especially for nonfiction and fiction. Books are usually four or five dollars unless they’re really new, and shipping is 99 cents unless you buy over 10$ in books, in which case shipping is free.
4. Bigwords.com. It will scan every textbook seller on the internet for the lowest price available, and will do the same to find the highest price when you try to sell your books back at the end of term. Timesaver, lifesaver.
5. In all probability, your library offers a service called interlibrary loan which is included in your tuition. This means if your library doesn’t carry a book you can order it for free from any library nationwide in your library’s network and it will be shipped to you in a number of days. Ask a librarian to show you how to search for materials at your library as well as though interlibrary loan; you’ll need to master this skill soon anyway. If you get lucky you can just have your required reading shipped to you a week before you need to start reading, then renew vigorously until you no longer need to item. I’m saving over 100$ on a History of Islam class this way.
You professors might side-eye you for bringing an old edition or a library copy, but you just smile right back honey, because you can pay your rent and go clubbing this month. You came here to win. So go forth and slay.
Can I add to this? 6. Find PDFs of your book to store on your computer. I managed to find an up-to-date edition of my textbook for sociology by doing this, and other books for other classes. It may be risky to have to look high and low for them, but it’s a godsend trust me
don’t even think about pulling number 1 for math classes. they change problems and examples between editions. get your butt to Amazon the SECOND you know what book you need. the earlier the better. put in the ISBN number and you’ll get the right edition. buy it used. you don’t need that damn CD. buy it used. I used to get two hundred dollar math books for twenty bucks.
for the record I would recommend a lot of caution with math/science/psych books, the editions generally have a lot of changes to them (also email your professors; I had one explicitly tell us to buy an older edition bc the publisher made a new one every year regardless of if there were any changes. and they understand books cost a lot so they’re generally on board with you saving money; another professor actually had a student who managed to get a free pdf of the textbook share it with the whole class)
one time i tried to get a previous edition for a humanities class and there were like 10+ stories that weren’t included that the teacher referenced often so make sure that there’s not a huge discrepancy in content also if your uni uses ~custom textbooks~ like mine does for entry level courses then you my friend are fucked
ALSO please check with your professor—some of them have extra copies of textbooks that they loan out to students approaching them with financial problems. A lot of us younger ones also know that textbooks are a huge financial burden and choose the ones we use (if we get to) with cost in mind (and when we’re reviewing possible textbooks, this is a question the publishers ask about!)
Ask about course reserves—these are books that the library sets aside for students in specific classes that only they can check out (usually for a shortened period of time—sometimes two hours, sometimes a week) and that you can usually count on being there, and definitely a LOT sooner than interlibrary loan.
There are times (ie, me last semester) where we just don’t get to choose the textbook because we’re following a set curriculum, but also, you might be able to find people/your professor who are able to help you out with a PDF or something.
Like for reals. Textbook authors don’t get paid shit for sales (the contract i signed recently was something like one-third of 7% of the sales, because I’m one of three authors and it’s the publisher who makes money, not the author). They don’t get publishing advances. It does not matter to us, the professor, if you’re getting a used/illegal/sketchy version as long as you get the info we’re talking about and can also tell us about it and do the assignments. Be careful with older editions; make friends in the class and you can share a textbook or double-check the questions you have to do, and sometimes profs will know where the differences are in different editions to help you out.
Well my week has been exciting so far.
I had some other work to do this morning (Figuring out some algae stuff involving 1000 L mesocosm up a mountain) so mystery species has been sitting alone in the lab all morning…..
Made it up to the lab today to find this. It’s probably from the fridge defrosting and not the creepy “algae”.
June 13th Update.
According to a few colleagues it’s either a plant, an algae, or a fungi. So that’s been helpful.
After a day with some sunlight I think I might be seeing some chloroplasts.
It seems to like the nutrient solution I added yesterday though!
I for one welcome our new plant, algae, or fungi overlords.
I was about to say “in a sensible lab people wouldn’t waste time with this, they’d autoclave the bottles and move on” but on reflection I can’t think of a single bio lab I’ve been in that wouldn’t immediately go “ooh, mystery algae, that sounds like a fun challenge; let’s devote multiple hours to identifying it for no reason”.
I need updates tell me about the algae
The mystery algae/plant/fungi/alien is stuck in the university growth chamber. With everything going on I probably won’t get to check in on it until September, possibly not until 2021.
So by that time it will have developed what, writing?
God I hope so, then I can train it to write my thesis!
This entire post is the most on-brand biologist thing I have seen in my entire godforsaken life. The moment this pandemic is over these guys have another crisis ready for us.
just follow your heart and keep smiling
kiki & tombo cosplay for lbcc! my feet hurt!!
THIS IS SO CUTE 😍
Positive parts of 2016
- the rise of old friends senior dog sanctuary - Hamilton - pokemon go - female ghostbusters - i don’t give a fuck im outta here Obama - captain america civil war - girl, black guy and latino guy leads in new star wars - deadpool - lemonade - literally???! Nothing??? Else????
WELL ACTUALLY SINCE YOU ASKED:
- Starbucks actually did the hard work of figuring out how to donate perishable food in a foodsafe way.
- 500 elephants were relocated to a better, safer and bigger home.
- “Unadoptable” cats (who are usually killed) may have a really important place in the world in their traditional area of work, given we’re thinking maybe poisoning stuff all over the place is a bad plan.
- We made massive strides in Alzheimers’ prevention.
- We found out that the ozone layer is repairing itself and that all the work we did to get rid of those aerosol chemicals was actually worth it.
- This therapy could cure radiation sickness.
- The Anglican church resolved to solemnize same-sex unions the same as opposite-sex unions, which required a super-majority of all three orders of the church (lay, clergy, bishop) and got MORE than that from both lay and bishop.
- The Rabbinical Assembly issued a resolution affirming the rights of transgender and non-conforming individuals.
- The Liberal gov’t changed the Canada Child Benefit so that it’s actually helping people who NEED THE FUCKING HELP. (I am sorry if you are a six figure income you do not actually fucking need this make some fucking lifestyle adjustments for fuck’s sake.)
- Highway of Tears is finally getting some regular fucking bus service.
- Eastwood donated a bunch more land to the Carmel River restoration project.
- We have developed gene-therapy for autoimmune disorders.
- Precision treatments for cancer are hitting clinical trials and WORKING.
- Dentists are once again providing free care to veterans who need it.
- The Anglican bishop on the Islands made an Eastern pilgrimage walking from Alert Bay to Victoria to stop at every First Nations community and personally, unequivocally apologize for his church’s involvement in fucking them up.
- Canada is actively attempting to increase and improve refugee resettlement.
- It has been determined that the manatee population has bounced back so much (500%) that it can be moved from “endangered” to “threatened”.
- This guy got to see his kids again.
- The Orlando Shakespeare Festival showed up with angel wings to block funeral-goer’s view of hate group so they wouldn’t be disrupted.
- Net Neutrality has been upheld by the appeals court. (No that fight isn’t over BUT THIS IS STILL A FUCK OF A GOOD THING.)
- We may have cured MS. (LET ME REPEAT: WE MAY HAVE CURED MS.)
- New short-treatment-period cure for HepC is huge success.
- Rise Women’s Legal Centre opened.
… . and this is just what I came up with in a pretty lazy google search in an hour, including distractions where I went down the research rabbit-hole for a bit because holy crap some of that stuff’s NEAT, guys!
And I know I’m missing stuff, because I wanted a citation for every single thing I put on there.
Yes, there have been some really bad things that have happened in 2016. There have also been a number of huge fucking miracles, and SIMILAR bad things have always happened, just about every damn year - maybe not to you, or maybe they didn’t make the news, and maybe you just don’t remember any of the good because of that whole massive Negative Bias problem that human brains have, but?
A lot of good shit happened. A lot.
And like I do actually get the sudden overwhelmed feeling of EVERYTHING SUCKS? but that mindset is, at this point, literally our worst enemy. “Everything is terrible somebody do something” helplessness is what will in fact consign us to everything BEING terrible.
Everything is not terrible. In fact there are new ways, every single month, wherein new opportunities and miracles are happening and no that does not balance out the bad shit but it gives every reason to FIGHT the bad shit, and to get past the bad shit, and to make sure the bad shit ISN’T the overwhelming stain.
So.
I want EVERY single one of my followers to read this. PLEASE I know a lot of bad things happened this year and it’s ok to be upset but all of this pessimism is only making things worse
This Is Fantastic and a Ton of folks need some positivity in their lives right now, Its always darkest before the dawn. Sure things can be REALLY shitty Now but it really makes you appreciate all the good the world can be capable of so while it may be a bumpy ride. Lets ride it out together
Ahem, THE CUBS WON THE WORLD SERIES FOR A FIRST TIME IN 108 YEARS. It’s the joy I needed in this crappy year.
CALLING ALL FAT PEOPLE OF COLOR!!!
Are you Fat?! Are you a person of color?! Are you sick and tired of being made to feel bad about either or both of those things?! If you answered YES to the above WE WANT TO HEAR FROM YOU!! The It Gets Fatter Project is looking for submissions - video, text, drawings, audio, and other! - that discuss your personal journey to loving your body. We don’t just want to hear from folks who are well on their way - we also want to hear from folks who are just starting out. One of the main goals of this project is to create a community (virtual or real) of like-minded individuals so that all of us feel a little less isolated and alone when we face the many different forms of fatphobia that manifest in our lives. We want to hear about all the different ways fatness intersects with the other isms we already face in our lives - for instance, fatness & desire, fatness & ability, fatness & gender, fatness & queerness etc etc etc. If you don’t feel comfortable submitting publicly, you can also drop us a line via the tumblr ask or at [email protected] and let us know that you are out there. We hope one day we will all feel safe sharing our stories on the interwebs with this big wide world. XOXO IGF!!
@elysianeternity !!!!!
Signal boost! @riotsnotdiets
Here’s How Fatphobia Is Being Marketed to You – And Why So Many of Us Buy Into It
June 15, 2016 by Kaila Prins
This may come as a surprise to you, but weight loss is a potential side effect – and not a definite goal or marker – of health.
But if you were to pick up a magazine, listen to an infomercial, or even watch the news, you’ll be bombarded with images of lean, “healthy” people who wanted to sell you their products, services, or lifestyle to help you definitely reach that goal.
Even when weight loss isn’t the explicit outcome of investing in some kind of healthy habit or practice, it’s often used as the main marketing message. Because skinny (or strong, depending on who you ask) sells.
And it sells because people have been trained to be afraid of fat.
We’re afraid of it because it’s associated with the cause of ill-health (erroneously, thank you very much). We’re afraid of it because, due to its association with ill-health, we see it as a lack of personal responsibility and moral failing. We’re afraid of it, and marketers need fear in order to sell.
Fatphobia is a great selling point, but what we need to understand is that it’s only that: a selling point.
It keeps us engaged in buying “health” without actually understanding that healthy behaviors don’t have aesthetic outcomes. It empties our wallets and feeds a system that preys on our insecurities, and then empties our emotional reserves by setting us up, constantly, for failure.
As long as we are a) afraid of being unhealthy, b) afraid of getting fat, and c) willing to pay anything to stop “b” from happening (believing that it has anything to do with “a”), then diet marketers can sell to us.
And sell to us, they do.
And while we may conceptually know that fatphobia isn’t serving anyone, at the end of the day, we still take out our credit cards and fork over our hard-earned cash in order to put down a deposit on an impossible commodity.
Why?
Well, I submit to you four examples of fatphobia being marketed to you for profit.
Example #1: The Biggest Loser: Selling Fat Loss as Health
Recently, the mainstream media lost its collective cool over the results of a study that followed the long-term success (um, failure) of former Biggest Loser contestants in keeping weight off.
The TL;DR of the study is this: These bodies, which began as “obese” were resistant to long-term extreme weight loss. Their metabolisms rioted, slowing down until weight suppression tactics like dieting and excessive exercise stopped working. The weight piled back on.
The media was shocked by this because the possibility that extreme weight loss might not be achievable for a portion on the population went against everything that it’s been saying for years.
This “surprising finding” is actually a conversation that health at every size (HAES) activists and advocates have been having for years: Our nation’s conversation about weight loss is broken, much like our actual metabolisms.
Dieting doesn’t work, and sustainable weight loss isn’t actually possible or healthy for every body – especially bodies that had yo-yo dieted or had other metabolic damage.
Yet nearly every single article written on the subject has ended with a sort of wishy-washy apology: “Sure, this study proves that long-term weight loss through dieting isn’t sustainable – but there has to be a way to lose weight that we just haven’t found yet. Don’t stop striving for weight loss just yet – we have more marketing to do!”
But the media misses the point in ending every single article with the desperate exhortation “DON’T STOP TRYING TO LOSE WEIGHT.”
I’d like to think that they have our best interests at heart (although, goodness knows that best interests are tied to monetary gain first and foremost).
What they want to mean is this: Don’t stop striving to introduce sustainable, healthful changes to your nutrition and exercise if you want to improve your metabolic function.
But because before-and-after photos of changes in your metabolic function aren’t marketable, what they’re really saying is: Don’t stop focusing on forcing or struggling to maintain a visible change in body size or shape (and, more important, don’t stop buying the products that allow you to keep forcing and struggling!).
In other words, when the media (and marketers) talk about health, what they’re really discussing is weight suppression.
This reifies fatphobia as a legitimate fear, which can then be used for marketing and profit later on (often by the same media outlet) when weight suppression inevitably fails.
But fat is not the problem. (And if you find that you’re overly concerned about fat people’s health, please read this.)
The belief that fat is bad is the problem.
It’s a problem because, in order to make a profit, fatness is portrayed as disease, personal failure, and lack of morality.
And people suffer. In the case of The Biggest Loser, we’ve been watching people suffer for twelve years. We’ve been cheering for their suffering and using their suffering as “inspiration” to suffer ourselves (and buy products with Biggest Loser branding because they were “proven” to “work.”)
We’ve literally bought The Biggest Loser’s lies. And our own bodies have been a part of that sale.
Example #2: Weight Watchers: Selling Fat Loss as Pride
I’m sure you’ve read all of the angry reaction pieces to Oprah’s announcement that she joined (and bought and is making money from) Weight Watchers.
Despite being one of the most influential women in America, we apparently haven’t seen the “real” her. And once the thin person she “really” is gets out, well, look out, America, Oprah is gonna make a household name of herself!
But it’s interesting how Weight Watchers has recently begun trying to rebrand itself as the non-shaming, non-diet “lifestyle” of choice.
Those who have invested in Weight Watchers don’t see the irony. They honestly don’t believe that counting points is a diet, since they can “eat whatever they want” – within their daily points allotment.
They also don’t see Weight Watchers as fatphobic or shaming, because they believe that, by losing weight, they’re being taught to take pride in their bodies.
Recently, Weight Watchers published a magazine spread featuring eleven cis women posing nude in order to “celebrate natural beauty.”
Again, the irony was lost on those posing for these ads. One of the models said, “I felt special, I felt positive. I took control of my body, and I took what it meant to be beautiful into my own hands.”
Fatphobia here is being marketed as “becoming proud” instead of “being ashamed.” (Note: There’s no reason to be proud of “earning” a new body shape if you don’t ascribe shame to the current or former shape.)
Weight Watchers, like clean eating, multilevel marketing, and “lifestyle” diets, all use fatphobia and shame as a selling point, even if they don’t explicitly say it in their marketing.
If, in order to sell a “lifestyle,” you need to rely upon the dichotomy between “becoming proud” and “being ashamed” in relation to your former, current, and future size and mass, then it’s a diet.
Don’t be tricked into spending money for a “lifestyle” that is primarily fixated on whether or not you’ve lost weight.
A lifestyle requires a lifetime investment of time and money into products and services. And in order to keep you coming back to your lifestyle choices, marketers need you to invest in a lifetime of self-hate, even if it’s hidden in a message of self-love.
Example #3: #BetterForIt: Selling Fat Loss as Fitness Inspiration
Last year, Nike came out with a campaign meant to encourage people to exercise when they didn’t want to.
The concept behind the campaign was simple: A thin woman struggles through an exercise, and her inner monologue reveals that she feels silly, awkward, or in pain. She completes the exercise anyway, and she is “better for it.”
Concern trolls will say that a campaign like this is meant to motivate fat people to exercise (and therefore become healthy). But, watched critically, these commercials are actually ways to get people who have already invested themselves in a fitness-centric lifestyle to justify their continued expenditure of time, energy, attention, and – oh yes – money.
Here’s my favorite example:
A thin woman sits on a bike in spin class. Her inner monologue tells us that she likes sitting in the middle row – until a group of “model-slash-actresses” sit in front of her with their “perfect model-slash-actress butts.”
Then, our protagonist decides that having to stare at these “perfect” bodies (in Nike gear, of course) is “oddly motivating.” She pedals on.
In this ad, Nike is blatantly marketing fatphobia to us. The subtext literally says: “You need us to motivate you with pictures of ‘perfect’ models-slash-actresses in our clothing. Without this marketing, you will never fit in, be able to wear clothes like this, or be ‘better’” – where “better” implies thinner/leaner/more muscular/more toned than you are now.
If you already look something like the protagonist (who is, ironically, actually a model-slash-actress), then it’s a reminder to “Keep on investing in your lifestyle, sister! You’re so close to looking like the cis women in the front row!”
If you don’t look like her, though, it just widens the gap between “fit people” and you.
It puts pressure on you to invest more to change how you look. Extreme weight loss plans, restrictive diets and over-exercise become the norm, something to hold up proudly as an example of how you are a “good fatty.”
Which then becomes demotivating when your metabolism catches up (see example #1) and thwarts rapid weight loss. On the wagon, off the wagon. Spend more money and hop back on.
Were “fitspiration” actually about fitness, we would see people of all sizes, shapes, and abilities moving successfully in a given environment. Instead, we’re shown people who have already achieved an aesthetic “ideal” (one that was achieved through about twelve weeks of extreme dieting and several days of dehydration, actually).
Fitspiration, like Nike’s #betterforit ads, is about aesthetics. Because aesthetics sell.
And aesthetics sell Nike athletic gear – which apparently looks great on a model-slash-actress’ butt.
Example #4: Thinking Makes You Fat: Fat Loss as Political Sedative
“Dieting is the most potent political sedative in history; a quietly mad population is a tractable one.”
If you don’t believe this Naomi Wolf quote, I submit to you the following:
As someone who writes and podcasts in the health and wellness space, I get a lot of e-mails from public relations reps about new health products and weight loss plans.
But the other day I received the coup de grâce of absurd and blatant diet marketing.
Nestled among the “Fifteen Fascinating Fat Facts” promised in the subject line was this gem:
“Thinking can make you fat! Brand new research conducted at Laval University in Canada has shown that, although thinking hard and concentrating doesn’t require any extra calories, it does stimulate the body to feel hungrier.”
(Note: saying “getting fat” as if it is inherently a bad thing is, itself, a way of reinforcing fatphobia. Fat – and fatness – is not bad. It, along with thinness and any other size-specific descriptor, is neutral.)
Read critically, this “fascinating fat fact” from a weight loss company – positioned before the actual product details as a way to “make the case” for bringing the product with you to work – is telling you that you should stop thinking critically.
In order for you to keep buying into the ideology of fatphobic marketing, companies need you not to think too hard about what they’re saying. If you just buy into the assumption that fat is bad and needs to be erased, then all of their marketing falls into line from there.
If you stop to think about it, the real “fat facts” tell you something completely different.
For example, a recent study on BMI let us know that “nearly half (47.4%) of overweight people and 29% of obese people were, from a metabolic standpoint, quite healthy.” On the flip side, more than 30% of individuals with “normal” weights were metabolically unhealthy.
Thinking critically, you might have pause to wonder why you, who might be metabolically healthy, need a weight loss product in the first place.
But if you’re afraid of even thinking because it will make you fat, then you will never recognize that you don’t need to be afraid that you will be fat – and you’ll be caught in a feedback loop that keeps you vulnerable to fatphobic marketing.
I know that, with this fascinating fat fact in mind (dangerous!), you might be afraid to read on, but I urge you to take the risk – and if you “get fat” as a result of reading this article, I’ll take responsibility for it.
***
This is just scratching the surface. Every day, I encounter another opportunity (or twenty) to critically assess the messages I’m being sent about how to take care of my body.
Every day, upon assessment, I find that the overall message is not “get healthy,” but “equate your health behaviors with whether or not you’re fat.”
Every day, upon assessment, I have to face this message and ask myself, “Is this message serving me or hurting me?”
The answer is inevitable. If a product, service, diet, “lifestyle,” or helpful bit of advice seems to be selling you something, ask, “What emotions is this asking me to feel? Why is the message positioned the way it is? Does this company want me to actually invest in healthful behaviors, or is it more interested in buying my shame?”
Your mental, emotional, and (yes) physical health is worth so much more than what the marketers will buy it from you for.
Invest in your health, sure – but do so with eyes wide open and (whenever necessary) wallet shut.
Your body is not for sale.
http://everydayfeminism.com/2016/06/fatphobia-marketed-to-you/
I always loved this article. I recognized it the minute I read the first few sentences.
-V
The shop is back up and infested with insects! http://etsy.me/2dw9wsm
Good morning, magical ones! Here where we are after the first day. I know I’ve said thank you about a million times, but let’s go for a million and one! THANK YOU SO MUCH, everyone! Keep sharing! Keep spreading the word! Keep pledging and encouraging others to do so! Let’s have a great second day :)
Kickstarter: https://www.kickstarter.com/projects/204000735/magnifiquenoir-book-one-i-am-magical
Eye'll be seein ya! (Terrible pun intended) trying my best at the oddball kawaii look 😊 #alternativecurves
black and asian vikings 100% definitely existed (also, saami vikings)
you know how far you can get into eurasia and africa by sailing up rivers from the baltic and mediterranean seas? pretty fucking far, and that’s what vikings liked to do to trade
then, you know, people are people, so love happens, business happens, and so ppl get married and take spouses back home to the frozen hellscape that is scandinavia (upon which i’m guessing the horrorstruck new spouses went “WHAT THE FUCK??? FUCKING GIVE ME YOUR JACKET???????”)
and sometimes vikings bought thralls and brought them home as well, and i mean, when your indentured service is up after however many years and you’re a free person again, maaaaaaaaaaaaybe it’s a bit hard to get all the way home across the continent, so you make the best out of the situation and you probably get married and raise a gaggle kids
so yeah
viking kingdoms/communities were not uniformly pure white aryan fantasy paradises, so pls stop using my cultural history and ethnic background to excuse your racist discomfort with black ppl playing heimdall and valkyrie
Also we KNOW they got to Asia and Africa.
Why?
Because Asians, Africans, and Vikings TOLD US SO.
I know a fantasy book that actually has a diverse Viking crew sailing to Africa.
The book features a chapter about a Viking voyage, which is set just after a Norman invasion of England. A pair of knights from England head off for retirement, evading capture from Moors and joining up with a Viking captain named Witta. Witta’s crew includes:
“Kitai”, a Viking navigator from China. Kitai is described using stunningly racist terminology, in order to make it really clear that this person is Definitely An Asian Person From Asia.
An African Grey parrot, which originates from the Congo.
Warrior “Thorkild of Borkum,” who was once a slave to a “King in the East”
References to “Hlaf the Woman” who wrote the manual, or Ship-book, that they use to navigate. We are told that she “robbed Egypt.”
Witta’s father traded on the African coast: “Witta told us that his father Guthrum had once in his life rowed along the shores of Africa to a land where naked men sold gold for iron and beads.”
Witta decides to repeat this journey. They put in somewhere near equatorial Africa and the locals hire them to kill some gorillas for them (?!) rewarding them with gold. The encounter is successful, and the crew splits up in England, with the knights bringing their share of the gold back to Sussex and the main plot of the book, and Witta going back to Stavanger.
The book also has scenes set on Hadrian’s wall in Scotland, somewhere around the year 400, in which the Roman soldiers battle the “Winged Hats” from Scandinavia. The Romans are explicitly described as a multiracial bunch, with men from all over the Roman empire, naturally including soldiers from Africa and Asia. I think a lot of people forget about the interactions between the native Celtic peoples of Britain, the Roman empire, and the Scandinavians.
The book was written by a Nobel Laureate 110 years ago. It is the seminal fantasy novel Puck of Pook’s Hill, by Rudyard Kipling, and it was published in 1906.
It is a problematic text, but it serves to demonstrate that “racist discomfort” is an artifact of more recent colonial history - previously, diversity in fiction was an exciting demonstration of the Rich and Varied Heritage of the Glorious British Empire. Because Kipling was, of course, the definitive Great White Colonialist.
Now, if an imperialist colonial propagandist writing 110 years ago decided he wanted to tell a fantasy story about how African gold brought to England by Vikings was responsible for the signing of the Magna Carta, and he did this by having his Vikings sail to Africa with a Chinese navigator, and his intention in doing so was to show off the might and diversity of the British Empire and how its Ideals of Justice were thus knitted together “as natural as an oak growing,” then I think modern fantasy fans can probably take a seat and listen to their own great-granddaddy.
If we’re talking about history’s relationship to certain genres of Fantasy Fiction:
The Vikings and Islam by Egil Mikkelsen
Ibn Fadlan and the Russiya by James E. Montgomery