May. 23rd, 2008

WisCon

May. 23rd, 2008 12:50 pm
ljgeoff: (Default)
We are here! I'm laying on the floor, my head on my backpack, next to the elevators, trying to keep myself tucked away enough that I don't trip anyone.

[livejournal.com profile] okoshun and [livejournal.com profile] epi_lj picked me up around 0545. The drive was lovely (for me, they had driven through the night). We arrived around noon and met folks in the lobby, namely [livejournal.com profile] boxofdelights, [livejournal.com profile] annaoj, [livejournal.com profile] porcinea and [livejournal.com profile] bcholmes. After some hugs and bouncing (literally), I headed upstairs to register. It's been an hour and we still don't have a room. I'm getting hungry and I need to take some Excedrin.

Mike called and sounded wistful. Perhaps I can talk him in to coming along next time.
ljgeoff: (Default)
1) Elves and Dwarves: The Racism Inherent in Fantasy

There were some interesting bits in this panel, but most of the time was taken up by boring exposition of the obvious. If I hear another panelist drone on about "well, what I'm doing (did) in my novel...." I'm going to throw something at them. I'm starting up a list of 'who to avoid', as a companion of my 'who to look for.' Anything with [livejournal.com profile] vito_excalibur or [livejournal.com profile] elisem in it is bound to be good for me.

The meta-question posed in this panel was "Is it a reasonable goal for SF/F to come up with beings who are different, and is it reasonable to accept those differences?

Besides the obvious blatheron re: "oh, my, look at how elves are good and beautiful and fair!" and pendantics about the classification of race and species, the points made were:

1) Writers like to have fun, and elves and dwarves are fun
2) The fantasy world of elves and dwarves etc. is a condom for handling issues that are too dangerous to otherwise discuss.
3) Sometimes an author can say something beautiful and profound with fantasy and magic that transcends race, sometimes authors bend the stereotypes so that even the very thick can see them for what they are, but alot of writers use the fantasy stereotypes because it's easy and safe and it sells books.

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