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Lint Roller? I Barely Know Her

#extradirty
NASA
Alisa U Zemlji Chuda
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Game of Thrones Daily
Mike Driver
YOU ARE THE REASON
Misplaced Lens Cap
let's talk about Bridgerton tea, my ask is open

tannertan36
Stranger Things

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almost home
One Nice Bug Per Day

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@onemindonevoice
Do you ever think you'll stop drawing fanart? No offense it just seems like the kind of thing you're supposed to grow out of. I'm just curious what your plans/goals are since it isn't exactly an art form that people take seriously.
Ah, fanart. Also known as the art that girls make.
Sad, immature girls no one takes seriously. Girls who are taught that it’s shameful to be excited or passionate about anything, that it’s pathetic to gush about what attracts them, that it’s wrong to be a geek, that they should feel embarrassed about having a crush, that they’re not allowed to gaze or stare or wish or desire. Girls who need to grow out of it.
That’s the art you mean, right?
Because in my experience, when grown men make it, nobody calls it fanart. They just call it art. And everyone takes it very seriously.
It’s interesting though — the culture of shame surrounding adult women and fandom. Even within fandom it’s heavily internalized: unsurprisingly, mind, given that fandom is largely comprised by young girls and, unfortunately, our culture runs on ensuring young girls internalize *all* messages no matter how toxic. But here’s another way of thinking about it.
Sports is a fandom. It requires zealous attention to “seasons,” knowledge of details considered obscure to those not involved in that fandom, unbelievable amounts of merchandise, and even “fanfic” in the form of fantasy teams. But this is a masculine-coded fandom. And as such, it’s encouraged - built into our economy! Have you *seen* Dish network’s “ultimate fan” advertisements, which literally base selling of a product around the normalization of all consuming (male) obsession? Or the very existence of sports bars, built around the link between fans and community enjoyment and analysis. Sport fandom is so ingrained in our culture that major events are treated like holidays (my gym closes for the Super Bowl) — and can you imagine being laughed at for admitting you didn’t know the difference between Supernatural and The X Files the way you might if you admit you don’t know the rules of football vs baseball, or basketball?
“Fandom” is not childish but we live in a culture that commodified women’s time in such away that their hobbies have to be “frivolous,” because “mature” women’s interests are supposed to be marriage, family, and overall care taking: things that allow others to continue their own special interests, while leaving women without a space of their own.
So think about what you’re actually saying when you call someone “too old” for fandom. Because you’re suggesting they are “too old” for a consuming hobby, and I challenge you to answer — what do you think they should be doing instead?
#I love the fact I’m ‘weird’ for writing fic but some guy painting a team logo on his beer belly is normal
[x] [x]
This whole modern approach is also seriously undermining just how important fanfiction is - from a historical standpoint.
The concept of fanfiction formed and forged the earliest stages of literature in Europe. Because the majority of authors in France, Germany and Great Britain looked at that funky little Celtic dude Arthur and thought “hey, he’s neat. I wanna write about him”.
The entire concept of a book outside of religious purposes was born out of fanfiction in my country.
There is no “first canon” for Arthur where he came as the prince of Camelot, with his sidekicks Lancelot and Merlin and his endgame love interest Gwen.
Arthur was some random hunter when he started out.
Someone’s fanfiction made him a prince.
Someone else’s fanfiction gave him a round table.
Someone else’s fanfiction gave him Merlin at his side.
Someone else’s fanfiction gave him Morgana, gave him Gwen, gave him his swords.
And, to this day, we still write Arthurian fanfiction. Literally last year there was a movie adaptation that is, by all intends and purposes, fanfiction, because it wasn’t even close to a literal adaptation of the source material (The Kid Who Would Be King). Heck, BBC’s Merlin, itself an Arthurian fanfiction, remains one of the biggest fandoms that people today write for on AO3.
You were a joke in the middle ages if you tried to write your own stuff. Who’s interested in your stuff? You were only a respected author if you wrote fanfiction. The most famous medieval German authors are famous because they wrote fanfiction about some knightly OCs they created who served on Arthur’s court. That is the literary legacy of the middle ages. Arthurian fanfiction.
Yet somewhere along the way, this concept of “I find x story/element cool and want to elaborate on it more, shift the focus onto an aspect of this original source material” has gotten this “eh, it’s fanfiction” connotation and lost respect.
Even though this very concept is still being used - even outside of the actual medium of fanfiction - and it is still being used for the very same purpose it was used for in medieval times. Original movies often don’t get as much recognition as adaptations of existing source material that the audience is familiar with. People see a movie about a character they’re familiar with and seem more inclined to buy a ticket to see the 10th new interpretation of Batman or Superman or Snow White. How are these new interpretations of familiar source material that usually add to the lore, reinterpret characterizations and dynamics, any different from fanfiction?
But heaven forbid we call The Dark Knight Nolan’s Batman fanfiction. No, fanfiction is that silly thing that we can’t take seriously, but that new Joker movie, that however is high-end art.
SO IMPORTANT
This. Fanfiction is variations on an existing theme, simultaneously making use of and satisfying people’s existing love for a story that they’re happy to consume more of, and cultivating the synergy between an existing story/mythos and a new author who, in interacting with characters they’d never have created themselves, creates something that neither they nor any of the story’s previous tellers could have made all by themselves.
Fanfiction is the new whole being greater than the sum of its parts, and fanfiction is the story being made limitless, retelling by retelling, and it is wonderful.
It’s also worth noting that Batman himself only came into being because of The Scarlet Pimpernel, a series of books about an extravagantly rich foppish playboy by day, daring hero in disguise by night (I mean, loosely. He also fopped by night and heroed by day, but you get my drift). Written by a woman no less.
Batman is a transformative work with a modernised crime-fighting SP but also borrowing strongly from earlier comic books, and yet it is seen as definitive.
Coming back here to say that I think the derision for fanart also has some of its roots in our capitalist hellscape.
It’s the age old “If thing not make you money, why you care about thing?” that’s so prevalent in the system. Of course some people do make money with their fanart, but I think that is still part of the scorn.
It’s supposed to be something you do not just for fun, but for practice, people like this think. Once you’re good at it, you can drop it and make money by focusing on your OCs and original work!
**smashes reblog**
Couldn’t agree more. Fan art and fic are absolutely valid. We really need to stop putting an age limit on fun as well!
Funnily enough, my Mum sent me this just today. It was in the front of the Doctor Who book she’d just purchased. (My Mum’s in her 70btw… tell her she’s too old for fandom, I dare you…)
Fandom, fanart, and fanfiction is for everyone. No, it isn’t something you “have” to grow out of. If it brings you joy, then who cares?
Always reblog
As much as I understand the impulse to link modern-day fanfic and fanart to earlier forms of iterative or transformative storytelling, I actually don’t think it’s a necessary justification.
In modern fandom, in some ways the subversion is the point. The stolen-ness is the point. There’s a reason the book was called Textual Poachers, and not Textual Inheritors Of A Totally Legtimate Literary Tradition.
Fanfic fandom as we experience it today exists because of modern IP and copyright laws which simply weren’t a factor in how earlier stories were written and published. It’s a reaction to a system where you can’t just jump in with your cool new Knight of the Round Table, because their modern-day equivalents are private property. The cultural sandbox is no longer open to anyone who wants to play; the commons of story has been enclosed.
So we built our own. We said, okay, you don’t want anyone else to play with your toys? Your action figures have to stay in the box? Well, fine. We’ve made our own, out of rags and play-doh and ratty old Barbies, and we’re going to play with them how we like. We’re going to make them kiss! There’s nothing you can do about it!
We looked at an environment where the stories we wanted were not being told, where we could only find them in fragments at the edges and interstices of mass culture. we built a space and a community where those stories could exist. The owners of mass culture can’t confer or withdraw legitimacy to those stories; legitimacy is irrelevant here. We don’t need it from them, and we don’t need to appeal to older literary traditions for it either.
🇨🇴 What's happening in Colombia? 🇨🇴
More than half our population lives in absolute poverty, less than two dollars a day. Our people are starving and the government just wants to have more money to steal.
The people in power don't even know the price of these things. How with minimal wage you can't afford to survive. They don't care about us.
Our right wing government stole more money just last year than what they hope to raise with the tax reform.
This is happening in the mist of the worst spike of covid-19 we have had so far. There are no more hospital beds, the ogyxen supply is running out, people are dying by the hundreds each day. And still our people are protesting, we are more angry at our government than we are scared of the virus.
All of these in FOUR days.
We continue protesting, marching, seeking justice.
🇨🇴 WHAT IS HAPPENING IN COLOMBIA? 🇨🇴
(picture ID: they don't even know the price of an egg, nor a river, nor a life)
The Colombian government decided to present a Tax Reform in the midst of a pandemic. When the deaths are an all time high, there's a shortage of oxygen, and no open beds at the hospitals.
This tax reform pretends to raise taxes that would affect thousands of Colombians (especially middle and lower class) because the costs of their basic needs would become very high.
Our corrupt government last year alone stole more money than what they are hoping to raise from this reform. We don't need more taxes, we need them to stop stealing from us and to stop killing us.
Thousands of Colombians came out to protest against the reform. Showing that we are more scared of our government than we are of dying from the virus.
The police and government response to the will of their people? They are KILLING us! They are killing us for exercising our constitutional rights. They do not let us march or protest, they are shooting against unarmed civilians just because we dare to call out their corruption.
🚨🚨🚨 ESMAD has the order to attack the protesting citizens with everything they have. There are multiple cases of abuse of authority against human rights defenders, the elderly, children, EVERYONE. There are not enough shelters, doctors and defense equipment for citizens.
Please help us spread the news, no one is talking about this!! Let it go viral. We should all share these hashtags:
#onucolombia #DuqueAsesino #NosEstanMantando #HumanRightsViolations #humanrightswhithoutfrontiers #SOSColombiaDDHH #soscolombiaendictadura
sexual repression of women by religious conservatives is a long-standing form of female oppression. however, the solution is not the oversexualized image of women that pop culture promotes. a woman is not a man’s private or public property.
i think it should be the norm to send people to the seaside for their health again
homosexual? oh no, you misheard me. i’m homersexual. im only attracted to the abstract concept of a collection of oral poets who can recite thousands of lines about the rage of achilles and the journeys of odysseus from memory
Oh thank God I thought you meant Simpsons porn
one fear
Peer Jongeling
“I have led a toothless life, he thought. A toothless life. I have never bitten into anything. I was waiting. I was reserving myself for later on—and I have just noticed that my teeth have gone.”
— Jean-Paul Sartre, The Age of Reason
I really dislike how women in period movies are made up according to modern beauty trends. Im tired of seeing Roman women with perfect eyeliner and Marie Antoinettes with peachy blush. I'm sick of contoured Cleopatras and 1920s flappers with 21st century lipstick.
Its not just about historical accuracy, it's a matter of female class consciousness. If the women in these movies were made up according to the trends of previous epochs, it would really throw the fleeting (and frankly grotesque) nature of make up and beauty trends into the spotlight. Renaissance women with plucked foreheads, Elizabethan women with glaze-like egg whites smeared on their faces, Japanese women with blackened teeth, Aztec women with ochre on their skin to make it look yellow...
From our 21st century pov, these things sound disgusting - not to say completely ridiculous. With the hindsight of a couple centuries, it's easy to point out how grotesque these trends were. How grotesque women had to look. And we might think that our standards are better, but this will be us in a couple of centuries too! How will people in 200 years think of our make up trends? How will they perceive our contoured faces, our hairstyles, etc? I don't think they'll be fawning over pouty looks and structured eyebrows.
Making women up according to our modern trends in period pieces airbrushes the past and prevents us from realizing not only how ridiculous previous trends were but also how ridiculous our modern ones are. This isn't just about historical accuracy, it's about women realizing the many forms misogyny has been taking throughout time, and not being fooled by its current shape.
Blatant homophobia
Hey! I’m opposite sex attracted only!
Where’s the request for me to unfollow?
…
Thought so.
Being A Girl: A Brief Personal History of Violence
1.
I am six. My babysitter’s son, who is five but a whole head taller than me, likes to show me his penis. He does it when his mother isn’t looking. One time when I tell him not to, he holds me down and puts penis on my arm. I bite his shoulder, hard. He starts crying, pulls up his pants and runs upstairs to tell his mother that I bit him. I’m too embarrassed to tell anyone about the penis part, so they all just think I bit him for no reason.
I get in trouble first at the babysitter’s house, then later at home.
The next time the babysitter’s son tries to show me his penis, I don’t fight back because I don’t want to get in trouble.
One day I tell the babysitter what her son does, she tells me that he’s just a little boy, he doesn’t know any better. I can tell that she’s angry at me, and I don’t know why. Later that day, when my mother comes to pick me up, the babysitter hugs me too hard and says how jealous she is because she only has sons and she wishes she had a daughter as sweet as me.
One day when we’re playing in the backyard he tells me very seriously that he might kill me one day and I believe him.
2.
I am in the second grade and our classroom has a weird open-concept thing going on, and the fourth wall is actually the hallway to the gym. All day long, we surreptitiously watch the other grades file past on the way to and from the gym. We are supposed to ignore most of them. The only class we are not supposed to ignore is Monsieur Pierre’s grade six class.
Every time Monsieur Pierre walks by, we are supposed to chorus “Bonjour, Monsieur Sexiste.” We are instructed to do this by our impossibly beautiful teacher, Madame Lemieux. She tells us that Monsieur Pierre, a dapper man with grey hair and a moustache, is sexist because he won’t let the girls in his class play hockey. She is the first person I have ever heard use the word sexist.
The word sounds very serious when she says it. She looks around the class to make sure everyone is paying attention and her voice gets intense and sort of tight.
“Girls can play hockey. Girls can do anything that boys do,” she tells us.
We don’t really believe her. For one thing, girls don’t play hockey. Everyone in the NHL – including our hero Mario Lemieux, who we sometimes whisper might be our teacher’s brother or cousin or even husband – is a boy. But we accept that maybe sixth grade girls can play hockey in gym class, so we do what she asks.
Mostly what I remember is the smile that spreads across Monsieur Pierre’s face whenever we call him a sexist. It is not the smile of someone who is ashamed; it is the smile of someone who finds us adorable in our outrage.
3.
Later that same year a man walks into Montreal’s École Polytechnique and kills fourteen women. He kills them because he hates feminists. He kills them because they are going to be engineers, because they go to school, because they take up space. He kills them because he thinks they have stolen something that is rightfully his. He kills them because they are women.
Everything about the day is grey: the sky, the rain, the street, the concrete side of the École Polytechnique, the pictures of the fourteen girls that they print in the newspaper. My mother’s face is grey. It’s winter, and the air tastes like water drunk from a tin cup.
Madame Lemieux doesn’t tell us to call Monsieur Pierre a sexist anymore. Maybe he lets the girls play hockey now. Or maybe she is afraid.
Girls can do anything that boys do but it turns out that sometimes they get killed for it.
4.
I am fourteen and my classmate’s mother is killed by her boyfriend. He stabs her to death. In the newspaper they call it a crime of passion. When she comes back to school, she doesn’t talk about it. When she does mention her mother it’s always in the present tense – “my mom says” or “my mom thinks” – as if she is still alive. She transfers schools the next year because her father lives across town in a different school district.
Passion. As if murder is the same thing as spreading rose petals on your bed or eating dinner by candlelight or kissing through the credits of a movie.
5.
Men start to say things to me on the street, sometimes loudly enough that everyone around us can hear, but not always. Sometimes they mutter quietly, so that I’m the only one who knows. So that if I react, I’ll seem like I’m blowing things out of proportion or flat-out making them up. These whispers make me feel complicit in something, although I don’t quite know what.
I feel like I deserve it. I feel like I am asking for it. I feel dirty and ashamed.
I want to stand up for myself and tell these men off, but I am afraid. I am angry that I’m such a baby about it. I feel like if I were braver, they wouldn’t be able to get away with it. Eventually I screw up enough courage and tell a man to leave me alone; I deliberately keep my voice steady and unemotional, trying to make it sound more like a command than a request. He grabs my wrist and calls me a fucking bitch.
After that I don’t talk back anymore. Instead I just smile weakly; sometimes I duck my head and whisper thank you. I quicken my steps and hurry away until one time a man yells don’t you fucking run away and starts to follow me.
After that I always try to keep my pace even, my breath slow. Like how they tell you that if you ever see a bear you shouldn’t run, you should just slowly back away until he can’t see you.
I think that these men, like dogs, can smell my fear.
6.
On my eighteenth birthday my cousin takes me out clubbing. While we’re dancing, a man comes up behind me and starts fiddling with the straps on my flouncy black dress. But he’s sort of dancing with me and this is my first time ever at a club and I want to play it cool, so I don’t say anything. Then he pulls the straps all the way down and everyone laughs as I scramble to cover my chest.
At a concert a man comes up behind me and slides his hand around me and starts playing with my nipple while he kisses my neck. By the time I’ve got enough wiggle room to turn around, he’s gone.
At my friend’s birthday party a gay man grabs my breasts and tells everyone that he’s allowed to do it because he’s not into girls. I laugh because everyone else laughs because what else are you supposed to do?
Men press up against me on the subway, on the bus, once even in a crowd at a protest. Their hands dangle casually, sometimes brushing up against my crotch or my ass. One time it’s so bad that I complain to the bus driver and he makes the man get off the bus but then he tells me that if I don’t like the attention maybe I shouldn’t wear such short skirts.
7.
I get a job as a patient-sitter, someone who sits with hospital patients who are in danger of pulling out their IVs or hurting themselves or even running away. The shifts are twelve hours and there is no real training, but the pay is good.
Lots of male patients masturbate in front of me. Some of them are obvious, which is actually kind of better because then I can call a nurse. Some of them are less obvious, and then the nurses don’t really care. When that happens, I just bury my head in a book and pretend I don’t know what they’re doing.
One time an elderly man asks me to fix his pillow and when I bend over him to do that he grabs my hand and puts it on his dick.
When I call my supervisor to complain she says that I shouldn’t be upset because he didn’t know what he was doing.
8.
A man walks into an Amish school, tells all the little girls to line up against the chalkboard, and starts shooting.
A man walks into a sorority house and starts shooting.
A man walks into a theatre because the movie was written by a feminist and starts shooting.
A man walks into Planned Parenthood and starts shooting.
A man walks into.
9.
I start writing about feminism on the internet, and within a few months I start getting angry comments from men. Not death threats, exactly, but still scary. Scary because of how huge and real their rage is. Scary because they swear they don’t hate women, they just think women like me need to be put in their place.
I get to a point where the comments – and even the occasional violent threat – become routine. I joke about them. I think of them as a strange badge of honour, like I’m in some kind of club. The club for women who get threats from men.
It’s not really funny.
10.
Someone makes a death threat against my son.
I don’t tell anyone right away because I feel like it is my fault – my fault for being too loud, too outspoken, too obviously a parent.
When I do finally start telling people, most of them are sympathetic. But a few women say stuff like “this is why I don’t share anything about my children online,” or “this is why I don’t post any pictures of my child.”
Even when a man makes a choice to threaten a small child it is still, somehow, a woman’s fault.
11.
I try not to be afraid.
I am still afraid.
- By Anne Thériault
Neither land nor women are territories of conquest
wild how like PCOS, endometriosis, vaginismus & hell, even frequent yeast infections are “mysterious” with no well known cause and little to no decent treatment, but we have tons of supposedly well researched body fat removal methods, about 20 different kinds of breast implants, laser hair removal, and 100 different dermatologist recommended anti aging creams. we sure had the money and brainpower to cure those “diseases”
When all this libfem bullshit is over I’m gonna look back and be forever haunted by the fact that libfems actually promoted prostitution to a generation of teenaged girls. They did that, they actually did that.
not only promoted - told them it was the ultimate way to claim ownership of their sexuality and liberate themselves of male objectification
In a Facebook group, I once saw a 20 years old girl ask if entering prostitution was a good idea for her. She was a bit scared. Dozens of self proclaimed feminists responded with “you go girl!” “it’s your choice!” “that’s so cool!” and I was the only person who told her not to.
Later in that same group I saw a young gay man asking for advices on how to help a prostituted woman and get her off the streets. A complicated situation as these women usually have pimps. He said he could offer her a safe job at his workplace but didn’t know how to approach her. The responses he got were: “this is whorephobia” “how do you know she identifies as a woman?” “Sex workers know what they’re doing, they don’t need a man to save them”. He left the group completely baffled and I had to contact him privately to have a serious conversation on the issue.
Later that same year, I read an article about a 16 years old girl who had started a BDSM relationship with an older man she had met online. She ran off to live with him, her “dom”, and they put “safe words” into place. Within a few days she ended up locked in cage against her will, she was kept there and tortured for a year while her parents looked for her. When she finally escaped, the man was not prosecuted because she had consented to the abusive relationship.
Resenting the male gaze but also being obsessed with how you’re perceived by others
Margaret Atwood /// Susan Sontag /// Real Men - Mitski /// Shame is an Ocean I Swim Across - Mary Lambert /// Birds of Prey (2020) /// post by jitterati /// Liquid Smooth - Mitski /// Jennifer’s Body (2009) /// Bravado - Lorde /// Diagnosis - Cynthia Cruz