For example, it doesn't hold water at all at young ages. They won't admit it, but teenage boys are massively preoccupied with their "look." The more they are, the more they refuse to admit it, even 30 years later. "I just wore whatever" is man-code for "I had a very specific and narrow set of things I felt comfortable wearing because of my weight/social group/parental rebellion issues, but they were sufficiently loose/grunge-ish/typical/etc that I could pretend I didn't care and people were kind/unobservant enough not to call me on it too often."
But, were you actually as uncaring at age 12? Past tense was relevant there![]()
That's not something shil's advocating. He's talking about the unintentional expression of sexist attitudes.I have a serious problem with the sterilization of creative endeavors for the promotion of social values over the integrity of the work.
Of course males care how they look and are perceived by their peers. All humans do (to varying degrees, based on the individual). How many of your male cousins are anorexic? Bulimic? Perhaps, as sensitive as you find them to be, they are still generally less so than their female peers.I think that's a pretty interesting generalization, too, and like most generalizations, it fails HARD in a number of places.
For example, it doesn't hold water at all at young ages. They won't admit it, but teenage boys are massively preoccupied with their "look." The more they are, the more they refuse to admit it, even 30 years later.
That's not something shil's advocating. He's taling about the unintentional expression of sexist attitudes.
Sure. If gender issues are important to a setting, let them be important. My point was they weren't intended to be in mine.And I believe Oni was referring to an unintentional consequence that might occur when attempting to deal with that.
At least, that's how I read it.
Of course males care how they look and are perceived by their peers. All humans do (to varying degrees, based on the individual). How many of your male cousins are anorexic? Bulimic? Perhaps, as sensitive as you find them to be, they are still generally less so than their female peers.
That's not something shil's advocating. He's talking about the unintentional expression of sexist attitudes.
For example, shilsen is currently running a setting I co-wrote. I can certainly speak authoritatively about the 'integrity' of that particular work. I was more than a little surprised to hear that the vast majority of interesting NPC's in the setting were men. It shouldn't surprise me, it's what my friend John and I wrote.
That's a kind of inadvertent, but very real sexism. Our unstated default assumption was that the authority figures and men of action, should be, in fact, men. It wasn't intentional. I wasn't trying for a certain level of historicity, I wasn't trying to make a point.
And I ended up making a one. One I don't particularly like.
I've written more egalitarian settings in the past. Heck, my last one, which was partly a parody of swords and sorcery conventions, complete with deliberate sexism and racism had stronger female NPC's. What gets my goat is that in the setting where I didn't think about gender roles, in automatically made the world about guys (in a manner of speaking).
It's not quite that plain... but it's plain enough to get me thinking.
Cool. I'm hoping that this thread at least gets people to think a little more about the subject (or subjects, since we're discussing many interrelated things here) of gender and sexism than might normally be the case. I only learned the term cisgender a few months ago myself, also from Proserpine.
Oni said:I have a serious problem with the sterilization of creative endeavors for the promotion of social values over the integrity of the work. If the world is egalitarian great let it be so, but if it's not don't force it to be so. Now I understand that this might be kind of an extreme stance to take with regard to campaign settings, it's a game right? But how interesting is fantasy world after fantasy world were everyone's equal and no one treats you different because of the way you look, unless of course you happen to be green. Besides where does this kind of things stop?