has someone thought of a stardial yet and if so what does it look like i need to know
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has someone thought of a stardial yet and if so what does it look like i need to know
Geisha Goblin at your service!
Twitter post: https://twitter.com/MizunoSuzuka/status/1188257571204816896
It's a frightening thought, that in one fraction of a moment you can fall in the kind of love that takes a lifetime to get over.
Don't I know.
intentandinvention replied to your post: You know, as much as I love Tolkien, these days...
Agreed! It’s possible, though. There are all sorts of ways you can amend the original concept of divine right - make the family pass down the concept that they have to earn it / work for it / instead of primogeniture it’s whichever sibling does the most work for the kingdom / incorporate the idea that whilst the god(s)/higher power gave it, they can take it away. Divine right doesn’t have to mean entitled asshole esp if a rep of the divinity is active for accountability
Except that you’ve actually described the concept I take the most issue with.
I really don’t think Divine Right to its fullest extent is endorsed in many current High Fantasy novels---most readers these days recognize it’s bullshit, especially if the crown is passed on to an entitled asshole character. But there’s this...thread running through High Fantasy novels that says as long as you’re a good king/lord/duke/prince/whatever, as long as you’re capable, you're still first on the list to rule. You’re still entitled, there’s just a small caveat. Fee simple determinable. Sure, you have to work for it, you may even have to prove yourself worthy of it in the first place. And maybe it all turns out well, and the result is the good of the High Fantasy kingdom, 1000 years of peace and prosperity!
What I think that narrative misses---or deliberately ignores---is that while gods or kings or magic swords are figuring out who is Worthy Of Being King After, the actual people who will be under the king’s rule have little to no say in that decision.
It’s sneakier than straight-up Divine Right talk, more subtle, but the result is still an affirmation of the nobility. A kind of rigid meritocracy, where you were only ever considering the Duke’s three children. I mean, if you remove primogeniture and the divine right of kings, but keep the nobility, you have not actually fixed the problem! The nobility is the problem.
It doesn’t even have to be nobility, really, that’s just the most common form it takes in High Fantasy. For example I love Pratchett’s Discworld series, and especially Vetinari---the Patrician and tyrant of Ankh-Morpork. He’s a wonderful fantasy of a hyper-competent chess master who can move society towards modernism with a minimum of fuss. But outside of the fantasy, I’m left uneasy. A benevolent dictatorship, after all, is still a dictatorship. Why are we---readers, fantasy fans, writers---all so obsessed with this fantasy elite nobles who can take care of all this without our input, and the messy push and pull of self-governance?
What I want is more High Fantasy democracies and republics and parliaments, and---Greek polises or Mayflower Compact-style legislatures or even the elected kings of medieval Ireland, or the Slavic veches. Pick a model, pick something else. People have wanted a voice in their societies for as long as there have been societies, a specific ruling class is no more “natural” than plastic cups. The choice to keep writing about them is an artificial one, just like everything in fiction.
Look, I want to fantasize about elves and dwarves and dragons as much as the next girl, and I’m certainly not immune to stories about palace intrigue and courtly drama. But the fact that we can’t seem to fantasize about (parody, invert, play off of, comment on) democracy is depressing sometimes.
A bit about orcs
The first time I saw The Lord of the Rings:The Fellowship of the Ring I was around 14 year old. My (female) friends from class were in love with either Legolas, Aragon or Frodo while me, always the weird one, cheered for Orcs. Sauron, Saruman and Boromir in some ways too, but Orcs were my ultimate favorites, both as individual characters and race as the whole.
Part of me is upset how movies or books (in general, not only LoTR & Hobbit) use “ugliness” as the sign of evilness. Especially since many movie!Orcs had deformed bodies by battle injuries or natural illness(?). Some weren’t able-bodied, yet still they were prominent leaders and/or warriors. Despite the supposed “ugliness”, I really like how they look in the movies. Frankly, Orcs from Lotr & Hobbit movies are my favorite so far.
Because even the less important ones are so unique, you know?
I mean, did you see elves? For me they look all the same with few exceptions for characters that played bigger role in movies. And humans... well, there is a visible divison between the good ones and supporters of Sauron (or Saruman) and its once again comes down to appearance. The best example is Grima in contrast to people of Rohan. And let’s not forget that only Orcs and “people of Darkness” have tatooed & pierced bodies - what I always find quite ironic, because for me things like tatoo or earring makes a character much more unique individual, and thus easier to remember.
LotR&Hobbits!Orcs are one of few groups that were showed so diverse - ethnically and individually. Even the “mass produced” Uruk-Hai had their own moments, like marking each other with a White Hand symbol.
I just have so many feelings about orcs, okay?
Slapped in the face that I’ve been drawing big robots obsessive for over a year
Only completed like three of those robots