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titsay
Today's Document

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Stranger Things
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$LAYYYTER
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cherry valley forever
Keni
Show & Tell
occasionally subtle
Acquired Stardust
PUT YOUR BEARD IN MY MOUTH

Andulka
Peter Solarz

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"I'm Dorothy Gale from Kansas"
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@witcherishere
Hi, follow me for Witcher content. I’m new and has no followers or mutuals.
In light of recent events I would like to provide the Witcher fandom with some resources:
Free fan translation epub downloads:
https://drive.google.com/drive/mobile/folders/0Bxy1ZuMV2KEgfkRIcGZ3RkFRTmZSNkpVcEhfeEw3d1drV0pXU3l3dklhWjNMajBaeTFnWnM?usp=sharing
Free official translation Audiobooks playlist:
https://www.youtube.com/playlist?list=PLkRBRvJwb3RgKg2Syrm_pQgfKCMXiTchB
I know it can be hard to get into or invest in a new fandom when there’s SO much material to catch up on. Hopefully these free options can be of some help!
Please enjoy ☺️
The Witcher Audiobooks in Order - YouTube
Legally required to make a shitpost for every fandom I'm in
ladies, if he
names all his horses roach
has only two moods and they are done™ and "if i feel another emotion i will combust"
only wears leather
has people tossing coins at him randomly
says fuck at any minor inconvenience
he's not your man, he's geralt of rivia
The Witcher: Peace out until 2021
Me: *cracks knuckles and opens AO3*
Me: Fine I'll write it.
I wrote one on Wattpad, check out Bewitched by MirajaneMalphas
*likes your answered ask but not in an “I sent that” way*
Anya Chalotra and Freya Allan show off their best Geralt of Rivia impressions (via @decider, Twitter)
I love that the Witcher proves how you can have a sexist world without having a sexist story. The framework is patriarchal, it's at times blatantly sexist and at one point Yennefer even bitterly points out that, as far as the world as concerned, women are just vessels. But the narrative isn't.
Things like -- it would be so easy to turn Yennefer into a villain. She's got a classic Femme Fatale backstory, she hits every point, she's powerful and ambitious and ruthless... but she isn't evil. In the end, she doesn't put her ambition over doing the right thing. She doesn't let her recklessness get in the way of the Battle at Sodden Hill; she registers some displeasure at being put up in the tower to observe and report, but she does it, and she does it without reserve or bitterness, to the best of her ability. She went through hell to find the power that she thought would give her what she wanted, only to discover that it wasn't all it was cracked up to be -- on her own. She didn't get this revelation from a lover, or from some great tragic descent into madness and fall from grace. She came to this realization over time, without someone else's opinion.
Queen Calanthe -- jfc, Queen Calanthe is how Daenerys Targaryen should have been handled. She's a powerful woman, an unapologetically ambitious warrior woman, who falls and loses her throne and country -- exactly the same way a King would have. Her flaws -- her hubris, her selfishness, her unwillingness to let go of her granddaughter -- lead to her downfall, but they do so rationally. She doesn't go mad, or start making stupid irrational decisions, or have to be otherwise softened -- she loses the battle. She was out-maneuvered, and her support was blocked, and she just failed. She just lost. Queens -- any poweful woman, really -- always go mad and have to be put down For The Greater Good, they never get to be a Tragic Hero in the classical sense -- always Lady Macbeth, never Hamlet.
Calanthe is a fucking Greek Tragedy. She hits all the high points of an Aristotelean Tragic Hero: she evokes pity and the fear that the viewer could have made all the same mistakes; her fortunes change from prosperity to adversity, not through vice or depravity but through error of judgment; that error is made through a fundamental character flaw, something that the character could have stopped, but also couldn't because of who they are as a person.
I cannot think of another Queen treated this way in fiction.
There's one single mention of rape, and that character does imply that this in part led to her not being a princess anymore -- followed almost-immediately by the main character explicitly and pointedly calling her Princess, pointing out that it isn't what was done to her that makes her monstrous, it's what she herself does. Even so, it's simply part of her backstory, she's the one who brings it up, and there's no gruesome flashback to "evoke sympathy" or whatever bullshit excuse to show women suffering.
It's just. It's so obvious that this showrunner is a woman. The comparisons to GoT are all over the place, and obviously -- they're both dark, gritty fantasies with a heavy political aspect -- but the way this show treats its characters, and particularly its women, is just so refreshing. It's not without its flaws, and while I'll admit that there were a few moments where I was like, "did she really need to be naked here?" none of those moments were tasteless or predatory, and there was none of that gratuitous degradation of women that was such a hallmark (and turnoff) of Game of Thrones.
(There's more, too, about how the Witcher differs from GoT in how sometimes, some people are just decent and kind. Sometimes, people really are all right, and do the right thing regardless of their own self-interest. And while, yes, it would be unrealistic if everyone or even most people were that way -- it's just as unrealistic to have no one be. There's this element of human compassion in the Witcher that's far too rare, if it exists at all, in Westeros, that makes the world so much less heavy. There's plenty of darkness and bleakness, but there's also kindness and compassion to balance it out. But that's a whole other post.)
It's just. God, it is just so nice, to have a fantasy show that acknowledges sexism without itself devaluing the female characters.
Most people I know had that one movie as a kid; that one movie that they would watch over and over and over to the resigned acceptance of their parents. I’ve always thought that movie says something about a person. What was your movie?
Stardust or the princess bride.
The sorcerer’s apprentice (2010)
I know from my experience that I’m very apologetic and I am actively trying to change that. I don’t necessarily embrace being angry because I feel like I second guess myself and say it’s coming from an irrational place, when actually it’s rational and it’s needed. Yennefer has changed my life. She’s taught me so much because I’ve been able to exercise [my anger] and it’s such an empowering thing to be able to show and explore.
#same.
im a simple girl.. i see book, i buy book, i let book sit on my shelf for months unread
Then I finish book in two days three months later
Everything you have ever felt, everything you’ve buried. Let your chaos explode.
You say that this is all life is to you, but there is a vortex of fate around all of us, Geralt, growing with each and every one of our choices… drawing our destinies in closer.
Anna Shaffer as Triss Merigold in The Witcher: Season 1 (2019)
I’m in.
put in the tags your eye color and the color you would want your eyes to be, it’s for science