anghraine: adora as she-ra looking over her shoulder with her brows lowered (adora (make it quick))
argumate responded to this post:

it’s a sword! or is it an advanced nanotech input device with a sharp edge 🤔

I replied:

And either way, it has a magic runestone!
anghraine: adora as she-ra holding an unconscious catra in her arms (catradora (save the cat))
Oh, and one of the things I’m really enjoying about S5 (which is definitely my favorite season) is how it’s dialing up the sci-fi elements, but without sacrificing the fantasy and magic side. My general experience of things that mix classic sci-fi and fantasy elements is that one of the sides tends to really dominate the core of the story, but this is not doing that. It’s really uncompromising on both the techy sci-fi and sparkly magical fantasy fronts.

Tagged: #if i had to pick one i'd say it's more fantasy #but there are lasers and holograms and spaceships! #and they're major plot points (and sometimes characters)
anghraine: a painting of a man c. 1800 with a book and a pen; the words love, pride, and delicacy in the upper corner (darcy (love)
[personal profile] primeideal responded to this post:

haha as a math person it's like, reading fiction takes up a very different part of my brain than reading math articles...but a lot of contemporary SF/F is a little too preachy for my tastes so I'm not keeping up with the cool kids either >.<

I replied:

For me it's the emphasis on weirdness and literary approaches ... my life is already consumed by 'literary' things!

determined-overthinker said:

After my master's degree in 19th century lit, it took me 18 months to enjoy reading again, and about two more years to be able to read 19th century novels again!

colorwheels14 said:

That's definitely what I found was true for me too.

[personal profile] sqbr said:

Oh man if you ever need me to ramble about how much I HATED my phd and how it SUCKED THE JOY from maths for a long time, I am here. Things do get better, one day you will be free,

<3
anghraine: a female half-elf with a glowing hand studies a book with a lock on the cover and magical light floating above it (larissa (book))
A friend of mine was talking about how it took her a long time after her PhD to enjoy reading again, and it was such a relief to hear, because everyone I know is super into their research, and I feel like I could gladly live five years without ever reading another book or article.

At the same time, she now enjoys reading again, so it’s kind of reassuring to think that maybe, someday, I Will Be What I Was.

Also, every time I see some apparently-cool sf/f story going around on Twitter, it’s like … I couldn’t properly read it right now, but I’m looking forwards to the day when I’ll actually want to. Someday, I will be free!

Tagged: #i really do want to read and (kindly) review things that are relevant to my interests #but nothing is relevant to my interests rn #still... the end is in sight. sort of. #at least there is one
anghraine: a picture of multnomah falls in oregon: a tall waterfall with a wooden bridge connecting either side (multnomah)
Until I posted about the resuscitation of Voyager 1, my activity bar over on Tumblr was split pretty evenly between responses to a P&P post that had been reblogged by a BNF and various people who are extremely into The Borgias discovering my back catalogue. Before the P&P post reblog, the activity bar was ... like, 90% Borgias reblogs and likes. And good for them, it's still my favorite TV show ever!

In any case, this is probably why I included my brief quasi-epistolary modern US American politics Borgias AU from 2016 in my random list of fics in this post. I did re-read it before finishing that post and had fun immersing myself in all the little details that went into the AU. I'd originally hoped to write more of it, but writing a US politics AU was ... a more difficult prospect after Trump's election and I never did. Still, there's quite a bit that I'd already nailed down and forgotten later.

I did remember that one element of the basic premise is that this version of the Borgia family is not (recently) from Valencia or Italy. Rodrigo is the son of immigrants to the US from Ecuador and rose against adversity to wealth and political power. After serving as a capable Speaker of the House, Rodrigo beats the Republican presidential nominee "Julius Rove" (Giuliano della Rovere) and in the same election cycle, Rodrigo's seat in the House is won by his young nephew César (Cesare, of course). And I remembered that the story was primarily told via excerpts from news headlines and clippings (in fact it's entirely told that way because I never wrote the rest).

Other details I didn't remember:
  • These Borgias are Californians! West Coast, best coast. :D
  • Rodrigo's first VP is Katharine Powers (Caterina Sforza). In the fic, this relationship had yet to go horribly awry, but I had plans for a later disaster.
  • I had a brief aside about Rove delaying a formal concession to Rodrigo. Although the fic was posted in July of 2016, you didn't need foresight to imagine that being a RL concern later, though I certainly didn't anticipate the form it would take in 2021.
  • Vanozza is Rodrigo's ex-wife, Vanessa Gautier, a Canadian actress from Montréal who raised not only their children but the orphaned César as well. I seem to vaguely recall that she was a fairly minor public figure at the time of their divorce, years before the election, known mainly for a well-regarded performance as Empress Theodora in Byzantium, a made-up film that is very different from the actual Byzantium film directed by Neil Jordan (creator of The Borgias; I am pretty sure this was a convoluted shout-out that amused me at the time). Vanessa's very PR-savvy daughter Lucrecia jokes that her first public appearance was in Byzantium (Vanessa was pregnant with her at the time; I'm sure this was a reference to Carrie Fisher's jokes about her "performance" in Tammy, when Debbie Reynolds was pregnant with her).
  • Since then, Vanessa has worked her way into more consistently prominent roles and is now a very well-known movie star in her own right, especially following her role in a massively successful HBO epic fantasy TV series that is this universe's version of Game of Thrones, but based instead on David and Leigh Eddings' Elenium and Tamuli novels (Vanessa plays Sephrenia but brings a bit of Lena Headey-as-Cersei energy to the role).
  • I still kind of love this element (with a very major reservation discussed below) of a bizarro world hit fantasy series based on a completely different book series being embedded into an AU about the Borgias navigating US politics as a Democratic political dynasty along the lines of the Kennedys, but obviously dealing with a very different world and other pressures like, uh, racism.
  • There's also a reference to Lucrezia's rivalry with Sancia d'Aragona in the show; Lucrecia's first actual public appearance was not political but rather, at a big entertainment event with Vanessa. Lucrecia managed to upstage the new superstar Sasha Darby.
  • There's a reference to a photograph of Lucrecia with César at a political event, in which she is of course wearing Valentino (this still amuses me).
So just after that, I was visiting my parents and saw that my dad is re-reading The Belgariad, the most popular of David and Leigh Eddings's fantasy series (but The Elenium is better, fight me). We talked a little about it and of course, I also thought of my random The Elenium adaptation subplot in the Borgias politics AU I'd just been re-reading, and remembered that I'd actually once had an idea inspired by the fic subplot for an Elenium fancast that draws entirely from the actual cast of Game of Thrones. I don't remember the specifics since I never did it, except (of course) Lena Headey as Sephrenia and I think Peter Dinklage as Stragen. Charles Dance as Dolmant??? I kind of like the idea of Nathalie Emmanuel as Ehlana, but there are multiple options.

I should add that David and Leigh Eddings are high-octane problematic figures in SF/F. The Belgariad especially includes a lot of misogyny and racism, and is, let's say, politically ambiguous in general. Moreover, it became well-known after David and Leigh Eddings's deaths that decades earlier, he and Leigh had adopted two children, abused the son, and the children were taken away by the state. The Eddingses separately served a year in prison for the abuse at a time when this was rarely punished at all. The knowledge of this makes all subsequent re-reads feel very surreal, given the prominence in the novels of weird yet idealized kids who turn out to be literal gods. (The linked post also discusses reading the Eddings books, especially the Belgariad-centered ones, in light of this.)

I had personally been very invested in the Eddingses' novels as a teenager/young adult; they were formative experiences for me as a fantasy fan and I have strong feelings about basically every aspect of all of them up to and including The Redemption of Althalus. I kept my collection of Eddings books after finding out what they'd done, since they were dead anyway at that point, but it feels weird to talk about them without mentioning the level of baggage around them. Apparently David was an alcoholic (extremely unsurprising), Leigh was generally violent, and he considered divorce, but never went through with it. Eventually several strokes left her unable to write or speak, though David continued to credit her as co-author, and he himself had increasingly severe dementia and required constant care in his last years while still writing. They had become extremely wealthy and left their millions to medical research and need-based scholarships at Reed College, his alma mater. So the legacy is a LOT and, as I said, it feels odd to talk about their work without acknowledging it.
anghraine: a focused shot of adora from she-ra, a blonde girl with large eyes and a concerned expression (adora [save the cat])
1) This chapter is a monster (~12,000 words at this point with a long way left to go), mostly because I have so much to say about one specific play (one of three that inspired the whole dissertation concept to begin with), but it's only one of many texts under discussion overall. I'm tired, but also too obsessed opinionated interested in my topic and in doing right by my guy a very relevant playwright to cut it short. On one level it's fun and another aghhhhhhhhhhh

2) One of the fun/exhausting aspects of studying early modern literature (mostly plays for me) is that there's typically 400 years of accumulated scholarship to discuss in the course of positioning my argument and, well, actually making my argument. I actually enjoy the 50s-80s early modernist scholars quite a bit because they're less infected by Victorian traditions than the earlier ones, but less entrenched in fixing on One Theoretical Lens To Rule Them All and saccharine semi-corporate bullshitting that infects a lot of modern academia. So if they think someone's argument is bad, they'll just say so. Like, I kind of love this debate over the incestuous subtext (barely subtext) of The Duchess of Malfi where Louis Giannetti snaps out in a footnote, "Finally, he [F. L. Lucas] concedes that incest might be a possibility—'a suggestion, and an inessential one' (p. 34). How Professor Lucas can dismiss incest as 'inessential' staggers the mind" (307n14). Tell us what you really feel, Professor Giannetti!

(F. L. Lucas himself was a truly remarkable figure in Webster studies and also 1930s British anti-appeasement and anti-fascism. His Webster takes are a little wonky but it kind of feels less significant in the grand scheme of things. He didn't have the focus of later Webster scholars but given that his extremely varying interests included raging at the British press and government, helping refugees, putting fascist hate mail from Ezra Pound on display, and ultimately running an intelligence cell to fight Nazis, it's hard to care that much. He also wrote a sci-fi novella about overpopulation and, apparently, global warming in 1937.)

3) Anyway, I was going over The Duchess of Malfi and some of Ferdinand's many creepy, purity-obsessed speeches/threats to his sister, and stumbled over this one:

Your darkest actions: nay, your privat'st thoughts
Will come to light

me, wearily: Okay, Horde Prime.
anghraine: picture of luke; text: my fandom has been whining longer than your fandom has existed (luke [whining])
me on Twitter under my real name: whining, academic rambling, inane D&D remarks, academic rambling, whining, pictures of my cat

me on Twitter under my pro pseudonym: retweeting from SFWA and various publishers/editors, occasional whining, writing advice, playlists, chatter about my projects

me on Twitter as Anghraine: WHINE WHINE WHINE WHINE

Tagged: #okay and occasionally korvira
anghraine: a picture of a woman with a white streak in her red hair casting a spell (lohse (full))
[personal profile] primeideal responded to this post:

tbh i’m only doing short stories but i cannot believe it is worth it to get involved in SF/F twitter. nooooo.

I replied:

I’m much more of a novelist than a short story writer, and it’s like … ugh, fine. But the hellscape of SF/F Twitter is half the reason I neglect my account tbh (so it only has … like, 30 followers, lol).

colorwheels14 said (on Jan 15th):

I know other professors who are on twitter for academic presence and reasons… I am not. Because there is no way I’m interacting with strangers on twitter.

alishatheninth said (on Jan 18th):

Just tell us what it is when it’s out so we can buy it, please!

I replied:

Aww, thanks!

I don’t think most people are interested tbh, which is fine (my “Anghraine” self has always been mainly for fandom), but I’m a little leery about explicitly connecting my pro and fannish identities. I’m not putting a lot of effort into the separation, just trying to avoid having one lead directly to the other. So I probably won’t say directly. I might broadly hint, though :)
anghraine: picture of éowyn from bookverse lotr preparing for battle (lara)
[ETA 4/10/2024: I'm only preserving this on general principle; the submission window it's referencing is long past, of course.]

I know at least a few of you followed me for that SF/F publishing list, which is extremely outdated at this point. However! I just saw (*sigh* on Twitter) that Diabolical Plots is currently open to submissions for January, and they have a pretty detailed list of what they’re looking for here.
anghraine: jyn supporting a severely injured cassian as they escape from the transmission tower (jyn and cassian [supportive])
It feels like I'm increasingly seeing posts that are like "a bold and daring thought: what if genre fiction actually is a lesser art form" and "fanfic really is cringe and shallow in a way original, or at least literary, fiction definitionally isn't, as a natural byproduct of the form."

I have many complaints about fandom trends, both generally and specific to certain fandoms. I have always had lots of complaints about these. But I hate this. I hate the snide, snappy versions of this especially, but I also hate the more earnest arguments about how this just naturally arises from the existence of magic or spaceships or the re-purposing of pre-existing characters. I hate the attempts to pass off nostalgia for ye olde SF/F + handwringing over the corruption of the youth/womenfolk/etc as somehow progressive. I hate framing the most absolutely conventionally pretentious arguments about why less "respectable" genres really truly deserve to be disrespected as revolutionary.

There are deeply ahistorical and short-sighted elements to this that I've ranted about before (most recently with regard to fanfic here), and trying to additionally suggest these ideas are dangerous and transgressive and simultaneously so obvious as to be above criticism is so nonsensical. If you want to talk in sweeping generalizations about how SF/F is trash and fanfic is trash, you can do that, but the demand to be welcomed for doing so in fandom spaces and that the entirely predictable result of people getting annoyed just shows how right you are and how defensive fandom is about their unsophisticated tastes is just raw entitlement and elitism. Upsetting people is not a vindication of your position.

Read more... )
anghraine: artist's rendition of faramir; text: i would not take this thing if it lay by the highway (faramir)
I talked a few days ago, under f-lock, about some painful RL experiences around being perceived as deeply boring and incapable of feeling pain (or feeling most emotions, really). And I wanted to make an addendum to that, one that I don’t think really needs the f-lock.

I’ve made many complaints about various fandoms + multifandom spaces and trends over the years, and I still consider most of those complaints valid. Nevertheless, fandom has typically been a much less bleak environment for me.

If someone in fandom finds me boring, they usually do not tell me so, or treat me in a way that makes this apparent. They simply don’t interact with me. And people who do follow me or interact with me don’t do it because of my family’s involvement, or because I’m a package deal with more interesting/attractive/charismatic friends, or because of some other figure in my meatspace life at all. In fandom, none of that matters. At least, it hasn't for me.

Even the followers who don’t particularly care about me as a person are following me for my own sake in some capacity, rather than for the sake of someone else. Sure, some of these will leave if I get super into something they find dull, or stop posting or whatnot, but their interest in my opinions about the thing they’re into is still about my opinions of that thing, or how I express my opinions, or something about my online persona.

And there are also people who don’t share my preoccupation with a current fixation, or don’t find my take on it interesting, and are thus kind of bored, but they like me personally enough to stick around, anyway. This doesn’t usually trigger my “oh no I’m being boring” issues, because if they’re invested enough to stay, despite disinterest in my current thing, they’re evidently still engaged at some level with me.

Beyond that, people in fandom don’t typically lecture me on my general demeanor. It’s happened, but not often. In fact, while fellow fans sometimes express respect for my—let’s say, often rather severe manner of presenting myself and my opinions, they don’t generally act like it is required of me to be that way or that it somehow precludes a capacity to feel. We’re all in fandom because we feel things!

And that’s been very powerful for me. I wasn’t diagnosed as autistic until I was well into my 20s, while I’ve been directly or indirectly excluded or distanced from many RL social circles ever since I was a child. I’ve certainly been treated as if I and the things I care about are objectively dull and emotionally unengaging.

But throughout my entire adult life, there has always been one glaring exception to this. There really was a social sphere in which my experience of others and of myself could be different. There was fandom.

For all of online fandom’s many, many flaws, this has been part of my experience of it from even before I was an adult—in fact, from the time that I made my first post. At the time, I was extremely shy and anxious, so I lurked a lot, and was very worried about breaking some rule somewhere if I actually said anything on the big scary Internet. But I had feelings. I was in high school and I had such feelings.

Many of these were Pride and Prejudice feelings. In high school, I started collecting copies of P&P just so I could read the introductions/editorial content and see what other people thought about it, since nobody I knew IRL cared about it the way I did. This was both my first step into academia proper and a sort of proto-fannish activity. But my Austen feelings were not actually the ones that propelled me into breaking my self-imposed Internet silence and detachment from online communities. A lot of Austen fandom didn’t really seem like my people. I was also into Harry Potter, but HP fandom similarly did not seem like my people.

Actually, speaking of boring other people, I’m going to be really self-indulgent and rewind even further for THE FULL SAGA of what brought me into fandom.

Read more... )
anghraine: a piece of paper covered in handwriting and a fountain pen; text: writer (writing)
[Context from 14 March 2024:] So, back in 2015, I was searching for a bunch of information on SF/F publications, and thought it might be of interest to my followers on Tumblr, so I posted it for them. It eventually spread around Tumblr (read: has over 40,000 notes at this point; I finally deleted the original post, something I almost never do). Much of the information is long outdated; magazines have gone under, or changed their pay-rates, or no longer accept submissions, or were part of a long-since published anthology, etc etc.

Anyway, I reblogged the original post in Dec 2020 (as you see from the title line) and said:

Y’all, I posted this nearly six years ago and the information is extremely outdated. The SFWA maintains a pretty good list of markets these days, and you can also find much more recent collections of links/information on Google.

Tagged: #i know this won't reach most people but it's covering my activity bar AGAIN and i just. had to say something. #words about words #writing #not sure what my more general tag is any more...

anghraine: a close shot of catra from she-ra, a girl with cat ears, heterochromia, and long hair (catra)
This is a tiny thing, but I've just seen RS Benedict et al's desperate attempt to drag Ursula Vernon for being insufficiently self-flagellating about benefiting from the Hugos bullshit.

As far as I can follow:
  • The RSB/Rite Gud crowd seem to be under the impression that Ursula Vernon bathes in gold coins derived from her illegitimate Hugo.
  • There was a comparison to Pontius Pilate that I don't fully comprehend. I don't think Vernon (or possibly anyone) does either, but it did allow for a lot of pictures of David Bowie in the threads.
  • Vernon is currently in regular chemotherapy for cancer.
  • There was a speculation that Vernon was actually in cahoots with Dave McCarty to get the Best Novel Hugo (...) or maybe it's just her irresistible sexual allure.
  • Fanfic is a faint specter over all of this because of the File770 BNFs' tantrums over the AO3 win a few years ago + RSB being the same RS Benedict who periodically has vapors about fanfic in general.
  • This is also the same RSB who (almost as desperately) tried to make "squeecore" happen awhile back.
  • Because of unrelated WSFS incompetence, Vernon hasn't received the physical award yet and hasn't made a decision about what to do with it.
Most of this whole thing sucks, but ... lmao.
anghraine: vader extending his lightsaber; text: and now for the airing of grievances! (Default)
I read the Sanford and Barkley report (not all the emails etc, just the report and coverage). I have a lot of opinions (most of which are currently being expressed by Denise on Bluesky) but one of them is that I do not buy the narrative that Diane Lacey is a hero for very belatedly doing the right thing. She didn't have to do it and kudos for that, I guess, but mostly I think minimal decency is benefiting from contrast with McCarty et al who are so much worse.

But everyone fucked up really badly in racist, spineless, immoral, and wildly incompetent ways and I think the report is correct that they will not experience the worst of the consequences for it.

I'll admit I got a laugh out of this, though:



anghraine: various thickly-bound books on the shelves of a library (library)
Normally, I would talk about this on my sf/f(/general writing) accounts if I was going to do it at all, but my brain is kind of chewing on Isabel J. Kim's "Why Don't We Just Kill the Kid in the Omelas Hole" in a way that feels more suited to the fandom side of things, so.


anghraine: vader extending his lightsaber; text: and now for the airing of grievances! (Default)
I'm appalled about the Hugo Award situation, and sorry for people who were arbitrarily declared ineligible and for the winners who now have to doubt the entire process that got them their awards.

But also, it's a little bit funny that literally the same people who were throwing absolute tantrums over AO3 users joking about winning a fraction of a Hugo and breathing down the OTW's neck about it are now wringing their hands about how nobody has any ability to do anything, now or ever, about a Hugo Award when the vote calculations are pretty blatantly fraudulent.

Like, it's critically important that the Hugo Award trademark be protected from random AO3 users. But also there's no intention or possibility of protecting it, actually. Um???

anghraine: a female half-elf with unruly hair glances sideways (larissa (side-eye))
Between my readings for the diss, I've been catching up with the f_fa discourse over the Cait Corrain thing and it's just like ... wow.

In fairness to f_fa (lol), the arguments mostly seem to be the result of a single the-only-war-is-the-class-war wanker who is also extremely pedantic (by my standards!) and uses ableism as a specter to downplay racist harassment. But still, whew.
anghraine: a stock photo of an inkpot with a feather quill in it (quill)
On the brighter side, I queued ... like, 25 posts for the writing Tumblr blog, which feels nice! Several are links to Éowyn art, but I had actually gathered the links to all of their sources five years ago, so I can easily credit them properly.

I also have a Wordpress blog that is more ... professional, I guess? I mostly put reviews, longer-form thoughts, and pictures of my cats there, so my Tumblr is much more active. But I do like how the Wordpress blog looks, at least, and it's more neatly organized than my Anghraine accounts, which gives me joy. Additionally, I re-read an old story that I submitted a couple of times and was unsurprised to have rejected, and I thought it had promise if I cleaned it up, so—I cleaned it up. 

I was talking on Tumblr about my concern that it deals with empire-building and it's not perfectly clear that the charismatic "hero" is the antagonist until relatively late in the story (even given that it's barely 13 pgs). I don't want to be didactic, but I also don't want to seem rah rah imperialism to the point that people just stop reading before the reveal. Also, the whole thing is told from an outside POV character who loves the hero's wife, and there are some places I'd like to submit that specifically don't want outside POVs (RIP me, I guess). I couldn't change the POV, but ... idk, thinking of at least trying again with some other markets.

I believe in my little postlude-to-the-fairy-tale-whoops-imperialism story at its core, and I like the revision, but I also have a lot of uncertainty about how well I got across what I was trying to do, etc etc. That said, it's still enjoyable and exciting to look at markets, see what's out there, etc.
anghraine: a stock photo of a book with a leaf on it (book with leaf)
Huh, I see a lot of lit-fic fans insisting that the stereotype of lit-fic as "college prof/writer having affairs and people being miserable in a stylistic way" is just a defensive genre fan take that took off.

I wouldn't know, myself, because nearly all my literary reading these days is in the periods I study, ending at around 1815. But my best friend is getting an MFA in creative writing and damn if every lit piece he gets assigned isn't "people being miserable in a stylistic way, especially writers having affairs."

This may not be representative of modern lit fic as a whole! Like I said, I wouldn't know. But the idea that the stereotype is completely manufactured by defensive genre fans seems ... maybe not quite fair.

(The ricochet from 'there's no bias against genre writers or fans any more, you just like feeling persecuted' to 'you're inventing unfair stereotypes of lit-fic because you don't want to challenge yourself with important deep things instead of the trash you read' is ... hmm, certainly an intriguing kind of whiplash.)

anghraine: a picture of a woman with a white streak in her red hair casting a spell (lohse (full))
I haven't read much recently, but going off ... idk, vibes, the Hugo finalist list looks pretty cool, actually. A lot of people I generally respect and only a couple I deeply do not

And WOT made it!

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anghraine: vader extending his lightsaber; text: and now for the airing of grievances! (Default)
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