Darkwing Duck
First Post
I thought this was going to be some lame ass comment about chain mail bikinis. But, it isn't. The incidents reported in this site are horrendous, absolutely horrendous and heart breaking.
“Do you have any models that look like me?” the woman asks.
“We only have normal models,” my co-worker titters, “I can order you the noble savage.”
The woman leaves. We never see her again.
I'm going to have to disagree that this has nothing specific to do with RPGs. There are a few RPG specific factors, particularly related to fantasy RPGs like D&D, that would seem to me to be relevant.
1) Most fantasy RPGs take place in a pseudo-medieval setting.
There's nothing wrong with this being the default for most frpgs. Indeed, some frpg settings even make a point of mentioning that there is a greater level of gender equality in those settings than would have existed in our medieval era. Thank God for that: the medieval era (to my understanding) was not particularly kind, especially to women.
This can really become an issue when DMs try to inject a more authentic feel to the setting by adopting more of the aspects of reality and of our medieval world.
2) Sexualization of women in gaming art.
Note: This is not going to be a rant about art in gaming. However, I am going to address it because it is a relevant topic.
All art is subjective, and I like some of the pin-up style art (regardless of the gender involved). However, for a long time there was a trend in gaming art to sexualize the females presented therein. There are many examples of this:
(a) The overused chain-mail bikini. This is fine as part of a pin-up style picture, but we really shouldn't pretend that it provides any real protection when men wearing chain armor are draped in entire shirts of the stuff. Also related to this is female armor that covers more than the CMB but fails to cover as much as the equivalent armor does on a man. Depending on how it's done, I can see this as being more forgivable outside of the pin-up style than the CMB is, but it does establish that even female armor is intended at least as much to make a woman look good as it is to protect her.
(b) The dress of casters. Most female casters seemed like they were wearing what amounts to the slave Leia outfit, with some see-through cloth hanging from it. By contrast, male casters wore robes raging from the simple robes we see Gandalf wearing in the first LoTR film to elaborate robes befitting royalty, or the ceremonial garb of priests, bishops, popes, etc.
I could go on, but I think those two example make my point about the art (and I don't want to belabor the art issue any more than is necessary). The main point of the art example is that the art already, on a subconscious level, sets women in the gaming sphere up to be seen as sexual objects.
3) The virgin and the harlot.
A lot of fantasy has a kind of two-faced view of women, with all women either being frail virginal flowers in need of protecting, or being harlots or seductresses. This also potentially sets up a subconscious expectation that I've seen time and time again in gaming, mostly expressed in the belief/assumption that a female character (PC or NPC) who expresses any interest in sexuality is a harlot and not just a rounded out person.
That said, this is not just about the problem existing in the RPG community, but in the overall gaming community (of which rpg players are part), and female cosplayers are often faced with significant sexual assault and battery.
We then asked folks to *look beyond* that, so we could discuss the actual issues. Because, to be honest, continuing to address that is a form of misdirection - it is making the discussion about all those poor white men who aren't terrorists, instead of about the women who are getting harassed. This misdirection is actually a logical fallacy
I think the chain mail bikini isn't as overused as many people think. It's just the worst (best? You know what i mean.) example of the "scanty armor" problem. It's probably about as common as the armored loin cloth the men are portrayed as wearing. That said female armor in general has a problem with showing off skin at the expense of protection. Far more so than armor for men. So it is a problem.
It seems to me that most of us aren't really defending the article, per se, so much as recognizing that however the article is written the issue that inspired it is real. In fact,I think several of us noted early on (as in on the *first page* of the thread) that the article was overstated.
We then asked folks to *look beyond* that, so we could discuss the actual issues. Because, to be honest, continuing to address that is a form of misdirection - it is making the discussion about all those poor white men who aren't terrorists, instead of about the women who are getting harassed. This misdirection is actually a logical fallacy - discarding a point due to the way it is presented, rather than the actual content, similar in form to an ad hominem, where you dismiss the point due to some personal flaw of the speaker.
The basic issue occurs, whoever wrote it, and whether or not they said it in the best way.
But, a bunch of people don't seem willing to look beyond the statement. That's unfortunate that priorities fall out that way, still after 50+ pages of discussion.
This is Kafkaesque. "You cannot be upset or speak against the inherent accusation of wrongdoing because, by doing so, you are aiding the continued perpetration of that wrongdoing." The attempt here is to create a binary choice -- either shut up about inflammatory language you disagree with (and that is frankly cancerous, more on this in a minute), or become a de facto accomplice to horrid behavior.
No, that's not correct. There's a third choice. Take the side discussion to another thread, and not have every thread that attempts to discuss the harassment be hijacked into 40 pages about the phrase used to bring the issue to peoples' attention.
So folks can have 1000 posts about the use of the word "terrorist" if they want to. But taking it to another thread is reasonable, because, as yet, the discussion about harassment of our fellow gamers *still* hasn't happened. Every attempt becomes 40 pages about how white men got called a meanie. Which would be fine if it didn't prevent the harassment discussion happening every single time, over and over again.
It's a Catch 22. Don't use inflammatory language and nobody notices. Use it, and the discussion is only about the language. Folks are still searching for the magic formula which allows the actual harassment - the actual issue that's harming people - to be discussed.
I don't know how to do it. I'd love it if that conversation happened, but to my knowledge it has not yet ever actually happened. It's not allowed to.
So folks can have 1000 posts about the use of the word "terrorist" if they want to.