[DRAGON #305] F-bomb dropped, Doc M fascinated.

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Just to add something to the mix...

To me, it's not so much the specific words themselves that are the problem, especially in a public place like here or at the shopping mall. It's that, in my opinion, it's rude/thoughtless/mean-spirited/spiteful/whathaveyou to say or write things that you know are going to be offensive where others can read or hear them. Now, if it's "common" to swear at, say, RPG.net, then there's less of a chance that the act of swearing itself is going to be construed as offensive, and thus the act of swearing doesn't seem as rude/thoughtless/etc. to me.

So now think about Dragon Magazine... a long history of not swearing. You come to expect the language to be inoffensive (even if some of the concepts are icky or "vile). My question, then, is ... is the reader warned at all that the Martin story contains strong language? If not, I can see why this would be a pretty big shock to some readers, and why it might even be cause to reconsider whether the magazine is something one would continue to invest time and mony into, especially if the reader is a child.
 

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To Henry

I'd just like to add my recommendation on this series of books. Eric and Buttercup have recommended them. I, however, do not. While George R.R. Martin can craft a good story, his elements of vulgarity, depravity and blatant sexuality makes the story less.

And yes, I've read the three books so far and I was just wishing that The Others would sweep out of the north and lay waste to everything.

Son of Thunder
 

I'm with Sigil on this one. There is a time and place. Dragon (as it is marketed now) is no more the time and the place than the PHB or DMG....I mean...in the play examples, you could have the players talk like _real_ D&D players, right? After all, we wouldn't want to censor anyone...


DM: Okay, Lidda. There is a large pad lock on the chest. What do you do?

Lidda: Sh-t. I bet its trapped to. I search it for traps.

DM: (secretly rolls a d20 to see if Lidda finds the trap...she fails). No. You're pretty confident that it isn't trapped.

Lidda: Okay. I try to pick the lock.

DM: You set off a poison needle trap. Make a fortitude save.

Lidda: (rolls a 1) F--k!!!

DM: You lose 12 con points. You're dead.

Lidda: I F--kin' hate you.



Yeah...that would be great... :rolleyes:
 

Personally, I think it is about context. . .

If Dragon started publishing articles with headlines like "These f---ing feats kick f---ing ass!"

It would definitely be clear that they were serving no purposed except to use these words for their own sake.

For a character to use such a word in a story because that is what his characeriation is not offensive - and I honestly can't see how it could be

The truth is, a 12 year old is not likely to read the fiction in Dragon and if he or she is then I think he/she can handle a little f-word - again in the CONTEXT of the story. . .

And personally, the fiction was always one of my favorite features of Dragon (back when I used to buy it regularly) because it was a source of ideas that I knew my players were not likely to have access to - I used to also love the Role of Books feature that included little mini-reviews and synopsis of fantasy books -allowing you to steal ideas from the books without having to actually read most of the crap that passed for fantasy literature these days. . . :)
 

Uller said:
Lidda: I F--kin' hate you.
I always thought Lidda was pretty hot. Hearing her swear like a sailor just makes her that much more attractive...

Sorry, did I just say that out loud? :D
 

Thread...growing...too...fast...to...keep...up...

barsoomcore,

Some good points, but we need clarification as Mercule was hinting at. There are differences between vulgarity vs. profanity vs. cursing vs. swearing vs. just plain rude language. People will talk about "curse words" to cover all the areas I've just mentioned, when "cursing" means wishing harm on another, often specifically that they go to hell.

Is there any language that lacks some word or concept that is considered strongly taboo? I don't know. There are some that may lack some of these precise categories of words, but that does not mean there aren't still words a person shouldn't use.

As far as meanings and usage of various words; yes some of them have been in use unchanged for hundreds of years; that does not mean that their impact on people hearing them is exactly the same. I had a friend who surprised people while in Australian when he mentioned that he and his wife were going to root for a particular team in a rugby match. They wondered why my friend thought having sex with his wife would help the team that they liked. "Root" had a new meaning, and last I checked, Australia was still speaking English.

We're getting into the realm of socio-linguistics--how do different groups use the same language? Languages are constantly changing and how words are perceived and used is also constantly changing. I think someone else made this point already, but "inappropriate speech" (to use an umbrella term) is defined by cultures and societies (and in part God, with cursing and swearing). As societies change, so does the definition of "inappropriate speech."

I think this debate is going to go one for a while yet, and I don't think I've really answered barsoomcore, but I've got other stuff to do:) and I've spouted off enough.
 

Do it but don't say it?

This is an overreaction to a pathetically insignificant instance in a vast sea of mature behavior with mature subject matter intended for a mature audience.

A few points:

First: It's important to remember that Dragon is not like TIME or Newsweek in that it's not intended for a general audience. Nor is it intended, I don't think, to introduce D&D to someone not familiar with it. Dragon is highly technical and would be mysterious to anyone off the street who picked it up. There are articles for how to run games, but these articles are for people who have already purchased the core books to help them use what they already have.

It's not introductory.

Second: We all (I say, painting with the broad brush) started D&D in our teens but now we're in our 20s and 30s. This is at least what WotC marketing believes and if anyone would know, it's them. Teenagers are no longer D&D's primary audience. That era has long past, even assuming it ever existed (since D&D was started by mature wargamers for their friends, fellow mature wargamers).

Because of the first two points, I don't accept "but my pure teenager with virgin ears might see it!" as a valid argument. They're not the primary audience for the magazine.

If virgin ears are your concern, then it's important to keep your children from reading books available at the impulse aisle in your grocery store. I pity the life of someone kept from reading though.

Third: As players of D&D, we kill people and steal from them while their freshly-killed corpses are still warm. This is acceptable, yet one word of profanity isn't? Ridiculous.

One word? Please. When Dragon begins to look like MAXIM the magazine will have crossed over to "mature." Until then, it's as entertaining and useful as it always has been.

Those who don't get anything out of it must be running some damn strange campaign, because I always find something useful in it for some aspect of my character or my game. I can't imagine what campaign wouldn't find something useful in every issue.
 

I think arguing over whether there should be an F--- or not in Martin's Dragon article is missing the forest for the trees.

The real question is: should Dragon publish works by major Fantasy authors unedited? Given that Martin is one of the most important authors on the scene right now (and shame on you who say you've never heard of him!) I was very surprised that Dragon managed to get his story at all - all of the traditional outlets for Fantasy short fiction were probably lined up out the door to make a bid for it. (I would love to hear from J. Decker if there was anything special he did to make this happen!) Although I dont know exactly how publishing deals work here, I would expect that Dragon has a lot less editorial leverage over a major name like Martin than they usually do. IE, can you both land deals with important figures in the field and also edit them for child-friendly content?

Anyway, I think its a fine decision to move in this direction. Its inevitable it will turn off some of the old readership, but it doesnt seem to change the demographic that much. And, obviously, if the shift is successful, it will attract some new readers to replace the old.
 
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Re: Crystal!

Son_of_Thunder said:
From my point of view, ENWorld's taking a higher moral ground where it's members can swear in life, read it in books but go to ENWorld and NO, that's inviolate.

I guess It'll still be a mystery to me.

Because not everyone swears in real life, or swears to the same degree, or agrees on what swear words are offensive. As Henry said, profanity creates barriers.

I want engaging conversations with fellow D&D enthusiasts. If, in the middle of a conversation, someone says "*&^%*&*! You're just a *(*&#$(* *(#($ (*#$" as part of his retort, I'm not terribly interested in continuing a conversation with him. ENWorld has a diverse set of viewers covering some diverse age ranges (12-60+, I think). Isn't it better to be inclusive, rather than exclusive? There are other places to go have those uncensored discussions. Ask yourself this: if there are other RPG discussion forums, what makes ENWorld so popular? The answer, to me, is the moderation. Relatively on-topic, relatively intelligent discourse between like-minded individuals who all share a common respect for each other and the topic at hand.

Ahem.

Now, then...all that said, let me discuss my take on the subject at hand. It IS a tempest in a teapot, AFAIC. When I was 12, I was stealing copies of Playboy and Penthouse from my brother. I knew all the cursewords in question, had heard and seen them in use, and amongst my peers (but not adults) used them frequently [sometimes merely to prove that we could, as is the way of youth]. I have a pretty good idea that the same applied for my father, from discussions we've had. I expect that when my son is 12, he'll probably be doing the same thing, too.

I can understand that The Sigil doesn't approve of the use of certain language within Dragon. I don't find that unreasonable, even though I personally disagree. I no longer tend to think of Dragon as a 'all-ages' magazine, especially given that it's dedicated to a game which is chiefly about the systematic visiting of violence upon monsters and other folk. I mean, let's be honest here, this isn't a magazine about Scrabble. Further, at 12, I had ready access to magazines and books that used such language, sometimes for good and sometimes merely for titillation. Martin is hardly unique in this regard. A 12-year old could run out and buy Maxim, GQ or Sports Illustrated, and easily see some questionable content. That doesn't necessarily make it right, but it would silly to ignore this fact.

Different authors have different reasons for it's usage, and in "Song of Ice and Fire", it's usually part of the color of a specific character's language. He doesn't curse with impunity, but certain characters speak certain ways, and some, such as the character of Tyrion, often flavor his language with vulgarities. The characters in the Novella are the Ironborn, being something like the Vikings...a very earthy, harsh folk, many of whom are pirates or sailors, and both brutal, gruff and uneducated. They speak appropriately.

Comparing works prior to the late '60s/early '70s isn't really fair, as most of these works weren't able to get such words published at that time. Consider further, that most fantasy/sci-fi works were published in magazines first (such as Norton, Asimov, Bradbury, Niven, and so forth), it should come as no suprise. Instead, such authors made up fake curses and euphemisms that sound trite today, at best, and insulting at worst. I mean, when I was 12, I thought "Tanj it!" sounded foolish....the same way I thought the phrase "frell" sounded foolish on Farscape. It was a terribly unclever way to skirt censorship...with a "*wink*wink*nudge*nudge* we know what he really meant!" attitude. I wasn't that dumb then, and neither were any of my friends.

Martin's words are not thrown in huge letters at the top of a page, they're twelve pages into the story. If a young reader is mature enough and patient enough to get that far, quite honestly he's probably mature enough to handle the word, IMHO. Most likely, he's already aware of it. While I respect The Sigil's decision, I personally think it's silly to remove this content from Dragon. Despite some folks never having heard of him, he is an extremely popular author who's been around for some time, and is currently the author of the best-selling fantasy series in print, short of the seminal work of the genre by Tolkien. He's a good author and excellent editor.

Does this mean then that I feel that anything's a go for my kids? Certainly not. Will I let them read "Dragon" with impunity? When they're old enough, maybe I will. But just as I choose what videos and games are appropriate now, I'll choose which web content and books are appropriate then. Hopefully, I'll make choices as well as my parents did with me. They were just happy that I was reading, even it was material they didn't gibe as much with. I hope to do the same for my kids. I would like, for example, to get the T-shirt with a picture of d20 that has rolled a '1', and a particular curse word at the bottom...but I don't. Because if I wore it, my daughter would read it, and I don't want hear reading that word. Yet. I can't control her life 24/7, and wouldn't want to try...but I hope that I'll direct her development enough to know what's appropriate and when. So when she sees such words in Dragon or elsewhere, she'll react the same way that I did....without much fuss.

I agree that saying that "It's just words" or "the words are only vulgar if we let them be" misses the point. Some words simply cannot be divorced from their emotional meaning. I understand this, and part of what Sigil is saying is that you can't, shouldn't and ultimately won't. If I run up and down the halls of my office yelling epithets, I can't know what each person's reaction will be. In the cold moment of intellectualism, perhaps you might be able to do so...but if I turn a page and come

At the end of the day, this was a calculated risk for Dragon, and I think it was a wise one. Sales-wise, I bet this issue will sell well, and serve as a double-exposure for Martin and the new D&D. I'm sorry if it costs them some precious readers (and all readers are precious), but I think it was a good decision. All of this, naturally, is IMHO.
 

Re: Do it but don't say it?

Moonlion said:
Because of the first two points, I don't accept "but my pure teenager with virgin ears might see it!" as a valid argument. They're not the primary audience for the magazine.

How about, as someone in their mid-twenties, I find the trend/behavior of the magazine to be distasteful? Is that valid? It is my money after all.

Third: As players of D&D, we kill people and steal from them while their freshly-killed corpses are still warm. This is acceptable, yet one word of profanity isn't? Ridiculous.

That type of behavior may be acceptable in your games, but it is not acceptable in mine. Or, at least, it would be considered evil and there would be consequences for it.

Those who don't get anything out of it must be running some damn strange campaign, because I always find something useful in it for some aspect of my character or my game.

I apologize. I forgot to use the certified Moonlion standards of useage. :)

Besides- I know I never commented on the usefulness of the magazine, but on other matters.

SD
 

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