Pride Steve 2019 Redraw – [Etsy]
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Kiana Khansmith

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Pride Steve 2019 Redraw – [Etsy]
Cover by me
for Shoeless Joe and the Sunshine Kid by @nimmieamee
Gift for Mandoorhandhookcardoor <3
Guys I was aiming for "cover from the classic novel you read in high school, interesting but kinda ugly"
I think I succeeded right???
Cover for Shoeless Joe and the Sunshine Kid by @nimmieamee
Gift for Mandoorhandhookcardoor <3
My art can be found on AO3 here, along with a ton of links about the classic book covers I looked at while making this!
An Archive of Our Own, a project of the Organization for Transformative Works
I'm not going to transcribe all the links over, so if you want to see all the covers I'm talking about, click through to AO3 and scroll down to the end notes.
*
I looked through so many covers from the 60s and 70s, and really this should be in a Butch Cassidy and the Sundance Kid style, but the feeling of the fic was so eerie and noire, it brought me to Rebecca and spooky classic novel covers and a lot of those ended up being from the 50s. Those 60s fonts are too cheery! So, this is perhaps a bit more 50s than it should be. However, the mysterious lady in the window is wearing a beehive hairdo, and the Sunshine Kid's tie and pants should be appropriate :D Hopefully it can be Generally Midcentury Enough.
I kept thinking of my high school copy of To Kill a Mockingbird --for some reason this was on my mind the whole time I was drawing. I always found it really ugly, but I could not get it out of my head. The purple is to blame for the slight purple cast of some of the grey. I also thought a lot about Rebecca, and The Yellow Wallpaper (which I just realized, in my head is set in the attic of Rebecca's house. My head assigns every story a location, and those two stories are on the same plot of mental land).
The house in Sunshine Kid is looming too in my mind, similarly haunted (though how can it be? no one's dead. right???). And the image of a woman seen from outside though a lit window...
Covers that I looked at in the graphic design phase once the drawing was finished: this wonderful cover of Rebecca (doesn't the man even look like Bucky?), another cover of Rebecca, Film Noir movie posters like Wait Until Dark --see the mixture of drawing and graphic effects (I bet using cut paper back then)... so many pulp fiction covers.
Other covers with both drawn and graphic elements such as: Death of a Salesman, On the Road, The Catcher in the Rye. A lot of covers used cut paper, including the iconic one of Jurrassic Park by Chip Kidd, so I thought a lot about how our cover designer would be cutting the shapes out of coloured paper and how the shape of the piece behind the title is shaped like a beam of light.
The font is Franklin Gothic which I'm pretty sure is the movie font used in old newsreels and movies.
Part way through finishing the yellow I realized it's Nancy Drew yellow!!! I was picturing those old Nancy Drew books with the 50s/60s dresses and that dot matrix, slightly cloth-grain textured covers. You can see lots more Nancy covers here (notice how the styles update from the original 1920s, to the 1950s/60s reprints in flared or mod-style dresses!). In some, Nancy even has a hairstyle similar to our mysterious redheaded woman!
And here are some more classic covers to enjoy!!!
Art notes:
There are many shapes that mirror the baseball in Bucky's hand: the globe light by the door, the centre of the sun window over the Sunshine Kid, the number plate reading 107, and the alarm clock in the window. The alarm clock is next to the bars of a bed. It is in shadow, as is the 107 and the baseball. The watch on the Sunshine Kid's wrist is lit up like blind glasses so you can't see the face.
Clocks are a clue of course (when is the story set). An alarm clock suggests someone is waiting to wake up. I thought a lot about gaslight, the wrong light of someone else's imposed reality.
Cover for Shoeless Joe and the Sunshine Kid by @nimmieamee
Gift for Mandoorhandhookcardoor <3
stained
Cover by me
for Shoeless Joe and the Sunshine Kid by @nimmieamee
Gift for Mandoorhandhookcardoor <3
“By the first world war, soldiers swore so much that the word “fucking” came to function as no more than “a warning that a noun is coming”. “
Guardian review of Holy Sh*t: A Brief History of Swearing by Melissa Mohr
i would like to take this opportunity to present my headcanon about that infamous “language!” line: steve and the howlies had such dirty mouths that they had to be constantly reminded to clean it up for the reporters that followed them around. so steve heard a swear word over the radio and had a kneejerk stop that we’re being filmed for the folks back home reaction.
in other words, he said “language” not because he never swears, but because if he’s not on guard he swears way too much. :D
“the word ‘fucking’ came to function as no more than “a warning that a noun is coming”
And the interesting thing about actually dealing with people who do swear to that degree, which I have, is that eventually your brain completely tunes the word fucking out.
You basically don’t hear it. It becomes unimportant noise.
I was actually just talking to someone last night about how when I was a kid (the 80s), no one said “fuck” or “shit,” ever, but people casually tossed slurs around like nobody’s business. Now people use “fuck” and “shit” like punctuation, but slurs are increasingly taboo–and that’s exactly how it should fucking be.
You can tell we were kids in the 80s in different places…
OH MY GOD I FOUND THE POST AGAIN!!
When I first saw this post go around, I was traveling, but I had something I wanted to say and I could never find it again.
Okay, so, this post isn’t wrong, but what the original gifset doesn’t take into account (though some of the commentary touches on it) is how incredibly situational swearing was in the 1940s.
So, yes, men swore a lot – around other guys, in certain contexts. But they were very heavily conditioned not to swear around women and kids.
I think this might be one of the big reasons why a lot of people my age and younger got the idea that people didn’t swear during the 1940s. Most of us fell into the “kid” or “female” categories, or both, and guys our grandparents’ age would never, ever say “fuck” around us. And those words weren’t usually used in media of the era for similar reasons, so we got the idea that people that age were very prim and polite, when it’s more that they were prim and polite around us.
I remember as a young woman walking in on groups of old blue-collar guys talking among themselves, with profanity flying freely, and then noticing me in the room and immediately clamming up and apologizing to me for swearing around me.
There’s a bit in the Douglas Bader biography I was reading a month or so ago that demonstrates this in a WWII context. According to the book, the squadron pilots swore freely in their radio chatter to each other in the field, to the amusement of the WAAFs (female service personnel) who were listening to the radio in an ops room as they moved counters around on maps (much like we see Peggy doing in TFA) and the embarrassment of their commander:
After awhile, to the regret of the Beauty Chorus [the WAAFs], Woodhall disconnected the loud-speaker in the Ops Room, feeling that some of the battle comments were too ripe even for the most sophisticated WAAFs. (“They laugh, you know,” he said, “but dammit I get so embarrassed.”)
… so, right, even in the middle of a war, pilots saying “fuck” over the radio was something the female staff had to be insulated from.
Say what you will about the baby boomers, but they largely demolished that wall between “swearing around men” and “swearing around women”. Most guys my dad’s age don’t do it anymore, at least not to that much of an extreme. By the time you get to my generation (I’m 40), people might swear or they might not, and they usually don’t swear around young kids, but swearing around men but not around women is just not a thing anyone does anymore. At least I don’t know anyone who does it specifically and consistently who’s not elderly.
It’s not really an individual-sexism thing, more of a socialization thing – sexist on a societal level, sure, but I don’t think Steve would balk at swearing around women, kids, or in a refined or professional social setting because he’s a sexist or a prude. It’s just something you didn’t do as a polite person. Like blowing your nose on the tablecloth in a fancy restaurant. I think he could and probably would unlearn that, but it’d take time.
So, to me, about half the examples up there work just fine (“now why the fuck would I do that” to Bucky – absolutely! Or “Is everything a fucking joke to you?” to Tony) and several jar horribly, because they’re not the right context (like the “there’s only one God ma'am” bit – noooo, you aren’t going to get “fuck” and “ma'am” in the same sentence! not for a Steve fresh from the 1940s! – or “we have our fucking orders” … in a polite, professional context like that, no). Steve would never. Or, I should say, someone from Steve’s culture – who tries in general to be a polite and respectful person, as Steve does – would never. Maybe after he’s had a few years to acclimatize to the more relaxed social climate surrounding swearing in the 21st century, but I think it’d take him awhile; he would sort of instinctively jerk himself back from doing it in all but the most relaxed sort of “palling around with your teammates” environment.
(Headcanon-wise, I could see Steve very quickly incorporating someone like Natasha into his mental schemata as “one of the guys” – not consciously, but on a subconscious level: like, he doesn’t hold back from swearing around her pretty quickly – but taking a LOT longer with someone like Wanda or Pepper.)
tl;dr disclaimer: not a historian, was not alive in the 1940s, so please correct me if I’m wrong on things here.
I’m so glad someone said this, because this is something I think a lot of the Steve meta about swearing misses. Situational profanity, exactly! He wouldn’t cuss in anything he’d consider ‘polite company’, because you didn’t do that. I’m absolutely sure he’s capable of having a very foul mouth in some circumstances (he was a soldier who grew up in working-class Brooklyn, so… yeah), but in the cultural context where he grew up, you sure as hell didn’t say ‘fuck’ in front of a lady, not if you had any manners to speak of.
/speaking as someone who cusses like breathing, even.
This is the best explanation of Steve’s ‘language’ line I’ve ever seen.
So, basically. He'd swear around Bucky.
Upon reread I noticed in TNW Ch 19's Jan 24 entry Eisenhower said, “it is with the help of men like you, Captain Rogers, that we will shape the century”. Pierce of course echoes this to Bucky. In your meta is Pierce purposefully adopting this phrase (though im not sure how he would have a recording of Eisenhower saying this that day) or is it a common saying "you will shape the century"? Thanks!
Heh heh heh. You’re the first person to ask this great, great question. 1) “shape the century” is NOT a common saying to the best of my knowledge. 2) No, Pierce wouldn’t have had an audio recording of Eisenhower saying this, but of course, he did have a written recording of him saying it: The Night War. And in that entry, Buck is ludicrously proud of Steve (“If only his ma could see her boy now.”) so it stands to reason that it might be something that sticks with him on an emotional level, even if he’s long forgotten the context… ;)
Praximeter climbing out of her well to make me say “ouch”.
My favorite kind of exercise.
Bucky?!
Your shirt is too big for me…
Why was that so hot? Heated Rivalry, S01E06
Bucky
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I want to die. Don't let this disappear from your timeline.
"It’s funny I think the only thing you got to do to fix a forgetful man is put him in combat—he will close his eyes and find that he cannot forget a single thing he ever saw smelled felt or heard."
--Bucky in The Night War by @praximeter
The irony of Bucky in the future, hearing these words he can't remember writing, desperately wanting his memory to be fixed.