luzula: a Luzula pilosa, or hairy wood-rush (Default)
I was going through old folders and found this file from 2010, when I was a tag wrangler. I'd almost forgotten this, but I was actually the one to suggest that we use meta-tags for characters and pairings (as opposed to just for freeform tags and (I think?) fandoms). The plan before that was to use some sort of disambiguation pages for ambiguous character and pairing tags, sort of like Wikipedia.

Anyway, I thought it was an interesting snapshot of AO3 and tag wrangling, so I'm posting it. I'd forgotten that bit about how much work it used to be to re-name a canonical tag which had lots of other tags attached to it! You had to manually unhook all of them and then re-hook them afterward.

Read more... )
luzula: a Luzula pilosa, or hairy wood-rush (Default)
Can you think of SF books where there are long-lived humans/aliens who by reason of their long lives are better at overcoming the problems of short-term thinking? Problems I'm thinking of are things like "let's go on hunting this species for food, even though if we do, it'll go extinct", or "let's go on burning fossil fuels, even though if we do, it'll wreck the climate".

I guess another question is whether longer lives would necessarily make us wiser that way...we already do have long lives compared to lots of other organisms. No matter how long you make it (500 years?) there would still probably be even longer-term problems that this society would take a short-term approach to, on their terms. And even if you have a long life, you might still discount the future as opposed to the present.

KSR's Mars books do have lots of interesting thoughts about how a longer life changes you personally, and also changes society.
luzula: a Luzula pilosa, or hairy wood-rush (Default)
Various people are writing about their fannish history. I thought I'd done a more recent such post, but the last I can find is from 2011, back when I was in a stable long-term relationship with due South. I won't rehash that previous post, but I wanted to talk a little about what's happened since then and where I am right now. Obviously also fueled by thoughts of my recent new obsession with Flight of the Heron.

I fell out of due South fandom in late 2013/early 2014, because I fell (unrequitedly) in love with someone in RL, which left no room for fannish feelings. Or more specifically for shippy feelings: it turned out that despite writing all sorts of things in the fandom (gen, m/f, f/f, m/m), the strongest driver of my fannishness was my Fraser/Kowalski feelings (and Fraser feelings in general).

Since then I have been unrequitedly in love for six years (well, not as intensely all the time, obviously). My fannishess went into reading a lot of books, and I did write a little fic, but there have only been two pairings I wrote with the clear motivation "ooh, I want to get these characters into bed together". The first was William Laurence/Napoleon Bonaparte from Temeraire (late 2016). I had fun with that, but it didn't stick because seriously...Napoleon Bonaparte...*facepalm*. The second was Cassian Andor/Bodhi Rook from Star Wars (late 2017 and sporadically ongoing). That could've stuck; I think the reason it didn't was that I didn't connect with the rest of the existing fic (fluffy coffeeshop AU:s for that pairing, really?).

So now Ewen Cameron/Keith Windham in Flight of the Heron: an out-of-print book from 1925 set in the 18th century with a tiiiny fandom. I have not felt like this for many years, though: this completely besotted feeling which lowers your work productivity and makes people look at you weirdly on the bus because you're sitting there with a foolish smile on your face writing fic in your head. Also, despite the fandom being tiiiny I have already had more meaningful fandom interaction for this than I had in the huge fandom Star Wars (thank you [archiveofourown.org profile] Hyarrowen for being so welcoming and giving great beta feedback!). I am really enjoying the writing, too: the style is obviously old-fashioned, but I like it a lot. The writing process feels different; I have to do a lot more tinkering on the sentence level than I'm used to. Looking forward to writing sex scenes in that style, too. : )

I've been thinking about pairings I have shipped, and there are some pretty clear patterns here:
Benton Fraser/Ray Kowalkski (cop partners)
Nate Fick/Brad Colbert (modern military officers)
William Laurence/Napoleon Bonaparte (19th century military, also enemies)
Cassian Andor/Bodhi Rook (military in space)
Ewen Cameron/Keith Windham (18th century military, also enemies to start with)

Okay, I'm being a bit selective here--I have also shipped Aziraphale/Crowley, for example, before I got into due South. They are technically enemies, but otherwise don't fit the pattern. And of course there's also a part of my fannishness which is not about this kind of shippiness--some of my best writing is about other things entirely.

But still. Of course, it's not exactly news that that slashiness turns up so reliably in stories of police or military: that homosocial environment combined with danger, loyalty, honor, duty, and repression of emotion. It's catnip to a lot of fangirls, including me. I guess I'm...a little bit conflicted about it? Add in historical settings and you get other things to feel conflicted about, such as Ewen Cameron in Flight of the Heron who is a Scottish Highlands laird. I mean, I'm not conflicted about Ewen as a character, he is lovely and so is Keith. ♥ ♥ But the Scottish Highlands is obviously a historical society which has been heavily romanticized--in reality it appears to have been feudal and elitist (they were allied with the French Bourbon kings, after all...). But it's a novel, not actual history, and I guess I am sticking with the depiction in the book (where actually Keith Windham is Not Impressed about the Highlands, so there's a counterweight there).

If I were going to fall for a wartime ship, why not characters in the Spanish Civil War or something where it could actually intersect in a meaningful way with my political interests?? Oh well. I guess I will just go on doing union organizing while simultaneously writing starry-eyed fic about enemy military officers, and accept that humans don't always have to be consistent. Also, it will be interesting to see if my newly shippy state edges out my feelings about my RL crush.
luzula: a Luzula pilosa, or hairy wood-rush (Default)
So I started thinking about this and now I can't stop. I blame this comment thread.

One possibility is that they have human-like reproductive organs hidden away somewhere. I guess this is not that far-fetched, given that they also have, like, eyes. But I find it a boring idea.

The other possibility is that they reproduce like trees, which I think is more fun! But this has problems. Many trees have flowers with both stamens and pistils. Oaks for example, which I think Treebeard is meant to be, have both, but not always in the same quantities. Some trees are 75% male, some are 25% male, etc. It varies. I do like the idea that the ent/entwife divide doesn't actually have to do with gender but with whether they have an affinity for wilderness or traditional agricultural landscapes. But that doesn't work with canon, because when the entwives are gone, they're supposed to not be able to reproduce anymore. Hmm, there's also the question of whether ents from different tree species can mate, but it seems that canonically they can--I remember Treebeard talking longingly of a birch-entwife.

Surely Tolkien knew that many flowers have both male and female organs? I can't believe he wouldn't know that. Of course, there are trees which are either male or female; willows are a good example. But it annoys me that I can't resolve this without it being either botanically inaccurate or incompatible with canon. : ( I suppose the simplest solution is to pretend that oak trees, too, are either male or female. But damn it, I like them being hermaphroditic. Can anyone see a solution? What was Tolkien thinking here?

I also wonder about the entings. Most trees are r-strategists (many offspring, low investment in each one, in the expectation that many will die), and it's painful to think of the little entings being eaten alive by browsing animals. Maybe they only become conscious when they've survived and reached a certain age?

ETA: And a solution in the comments! Thank you. ♥
luzula: a Luzula pilosa, or hairy wood-rush (Default)
So I finally watched The Last Jedi last night.

Spoilery )
luzula: a Luzula pilosa, or hairy wood-rush (Default)
It strikes me that in the Temeraire books, Napoleon tears down the old dense quartiers and makes Paris into a city of broad avenues to make it accessible for dragons. This actually happens in RL Paris in the 1850's and 1860's under Napoleon III, but for a different reason: partly to make modern sewer systems and improve public health, but mostly to make it harder for revolutionaries to build barricades, and improve military access to the city. (There was still the Paris Commune in 1871, though, so insurrection was obviously not impossible.)

I'm kind of curious what comes next, politically, in the Temeraire world. I guess there is no Bourbon restoration, and probably if Napoleon's laws remain in force in France then liberalism/capitalism would win over feudalism all the faster. So what about the socialist movements in the 19th century? I guess a lot would depend on where the dragons sided. Many of the dragons seem to take to capitalism enthusiastically (ha, the banking scenes in A League of Dragons), and interest would pile up, over those long lifetimes...OTOH, a lot of them also seem to have a strong pathos for justice and they'll remember being oppressed (or actually still be oppressed). So who knows. (ETA: Also, another obvious difference is that European colonialism won't take off in the same way.)

Someone who knows more than me about 19th century history should write this. *g*

And hey, those chained Russian dragons, how are they going to affect Russian history? Now I want Peter Kropotkin and Mikhail Bakunin with dragons. Or possibly they could be dragons.

Um, I'm going to finish baking my cheesecake with lemon sauce now and stop thinking about stories that would probably have an audience of one...
luzula: a Luzula pilosa, or hairy wood-rush (Default)
So I'm rereading LotR now, and there's a line about the Old Forest just as they're leaving the Shire, saying that the parts of the forest that are more alive and more malicious are all broadleaved forest with willow, oak, ash, etc. The outskirts of the forests are coniferous with pine and spruce. This struck me as very apt, since the area around the Shire is supposed to be identified with north-western Europe, and in Europe the broadleaved forest definitely has more reason to be angry at mankind.

There used to be a belt of broadleaved virgin forest all the way across middle Europe, and only remnants are left now, such as Białowieża Forest in Poland and Belarus. OTOH, the boreal coniferous forest fared a lot better, at least in Tolkien's day (though it's probably not happy with being turned into plantations in Scandinavia now). So the broadleaved forest would have a lot more reason to take revenge.

Or maybe I'm just making a whole theory out of a throwaway line here--I have no idea if Tolkien thought of it like this. *g*
luzula: a Luzula pilosa, or hairy wood-rush (Default)
I've been discussing this with [livejournal.com profile] desireearmfeldt a couple of times, and I'm curious to see what other people think.

My personal head-canon is that Bob did not take the hush-money, and before I discussed it, this wasn't something I'd reflected much over--it was just my spontaneous assumption. Desiree had spontaneously gone in the opposite direction. Anyway, now that I've thought more about it, I think )
luzula: a Luzula pilosa, or hairy wood-rush (Default)
Okay, so, Bullitt. Unfortunately this was the kind of movie where I missed about 50% of the plot (I am not good with crime plots, okay) and had to fill myself in on Wikipedia afterwards. But anyway, I was in it to see Steve McQueen acting a cop, obviously. Yeah, I see the Ray Kowalski similarities--that shoulder-holster, some of his clothes--and some of his body language, too. Like [personal profile] belmanoir says in this post (which has some illustrative screencaps), he's got a similar aggressive-yet-shy body language. OTOH, he hasn't got Ray K's jittery, restless moving around. He keeps much more still, and also I feel like he's more secure in his authority? I found him attractive--he's got really lovely eyes--and I can see how Ray would, too (of course, Ray finding him attractive is fanon, not canon, since we canonically only know that he "had a thing for him"). But maybe I'm mostly finding him attractive because of the tie to Ray? I don't know.

I also watched North by Northwest. Wow, I did not expect there to be so much slapstick humor in that movie? Or was that only my mood? Also, I do not find Cary Grant attractive. Anyway, this was not a movie where I missed any of the plot; it felt like it was really clearly telegraphed. The plot did not go the way I expected, though! Based on Fraser and Victoria's comments in Victoria's Secret (Victoria: "I always wanted to be Eve Kendall." Fraser: "But she sends Cary Grant to be killed." Victoria: "She had no choice."), I thought spoilers )
luzula: a Luzula pilosa, or hairy wood-rush (Default)
1) So [profile] seascribe and [livejournal.com profile] desireearmfeldt and I chat-watched some due South last night: first Good For the Soul and then The Deal (apparently we were in the mood to watch Fraser being beaten up by mob bosses). And at the end, we couldn't quite figure out the differences between Fraser's approach in the two eps. In Good For the Soul, he's all about The Principle Of The Thing, and forges ahead by himself until the rest of the department comes around and helps him. In The Deal, he lets Ray Vecchio deal with it in the end by beating up and shaming Zuko, without criticizing Ray for it--not a tactic that would seem to fit Fraser's principles, even with an opponent who doesn't play fair himself. Or does Fraser do something like that somewhere else in canon? Maybe he doesn't protest because this is all mixed up in Ray's childhood/family issues, and it's some sort of deal-with-your-personal-demons-one-on-one thing?

2) I have been making my slow way through Band of Brothers, on account of how the due South AU Horseshoes and Hand Grenades seems like it's inspired by BoB a lot (or at least by the same bits of history), and I imprinted hard on that fic. Sadly, I'm not connecting with BoB the way I connected with Generation Kill, which seems like a natural series to compare it to. GK focused more on a small group and their interactions, and BoB focuses more on one person per episode, and the former worked much better for me--I'm having a bit of trouble keeping track of everyone on BoB. Although to be fair, I had already imprinted on GK via fic when I watched it, so that might have an effect, too.
luzula: a Luzula pilosa, or hairy wood-rush (Default)
This is a podfic workshop that I originally posted on the [livejournal.com profile] generation_kill comm, intended as a follow-up workshop to [personal profile] chemm80's excellent beginner's workshop. That comm is mostly locked down, though, so I'm posting it here as well. I am going to assume you know the basics of how to get sound recorded, how to edit, how to export your podfics, how to upload and how/where to post. Some of what I say is also going to assume that you're using Audacity.

All of this is of course from my POV, and while I am doing my best to acknowledge the different opinions and experiences out there, YMMV on any of these topics. Thanks to [personal profile] andeincascade and [personal profile] podcath for reading through the post beforehand!

1) Reading )

2) Sound quality while recording )

3) Sound quality post-recording )

4) Editing )

5) Podfic fandom )
luzula: a Luzula pilosa, or hairy wood-rush (Default)
I watched the Captain America movie a while ago, and it got me thinking about the kinds of character types I'm drawn to. I seem to be captivated by people who are idealistic and brave and try to do the right thing. They are often part of some institution that they believe in, but that institution often fails or betrays them, and then they struggle with that.

Obviously Benton Fraser is my prime example here. But Nate Fick, my favorite character in Generation Kill, is another example, and Steve Rogers seems to push the same sort of button for me, although not as strongly. For a more obscure example, Longstreet in The Killer Angels totally hit that button for me, too.

So, these are all men, and all in military or police organizations--I guess that's a place where these issues often arise, but I'd love to find other examples. The first female character who comes to mind is Elizabeth Moon's Paksenarrion, who really fits into that pattern, although her story has other appeals to me as well. She's in a military organization, too. Perhaps Utena Tenjou? Hmm, not really--she's more of an outside challenger than part of an institution, although she is brave and tries to do the right thing.

But one example that really clicked for me when I realized that it fit this same pattern is Shevek in Le Guin's The Dispossessed. He is partly rejected by the anarchist society he comes from, even though he deeply believes in its principles. God, I love that book.

So, do you have any examples of this type of character that you think I'd enjoy?
luzula: a Luzula pilosa, or hairy wood-rush (Default)
I've been thinking about how due South might work in a world with sedoretu marriages. If you've never heard of a sedoretu, go here to read about them first (and here are the sedoretu works on the AO3). I have no idea if anyone else thinks this is interesting, but whatever, I like thinking about it, so here goes:

So much matchmaking )
luzula: a Luzula pilosa, or hairy wood-rush (Default)
1) I posted podfic recs for Amplirecathon. Check out all the other recs, too! I have downloaded so much new stuff the last two weeks.

2) In my ongoing but very slow due South rewatch, I've reached "We Are the Eggmen". And wow, I've forgotten how good that episode is (well, except for the Ray V subplot with the lottery ticket). I love Meg here! There are none of the cringeworthy elements that make their occasional appearance in S3/4. There's Cloutier and the sexual harassment, and Meg and Fraser talking about that, and then they go do action stuff together. And I also love the egg guy and his devotion to his chickens. I am just entirely delighted by this episode.

3) After reading Dira Sudis' psychically-bonded-wolves-in-the-military series, I am wondering what could be done with that in due South (yes, I know [personal profile] petra wrote it already, but it was set in Monette/Bear's original world, not in the modern day). I mean, obviously the RCMP would have bonded wolves, and Dief is bonded to Fraser. But aside from that, I can't figure out what the angle would be. Hmmmm. This is similar to my thoughts on a His Dark Materials AU for due South. I mean, it's obvious that Dief would be Fraser's daemon, but I can't figure out what one would do with it besides that.

OTOH, I do someday intend to turn Dief into a dragon and write a Temeraire AU, and I know exactly what I want to do with that.

And while I'm talking about AU:s, do go and answer [personal profile] sage's poll about a due South AU challenge!
luzula: a Luzula pilosa, or hairy wood-rush (Default)
So I was thinking about due South femslash, and it struck me that basically all the femslash pairings are with Frannie. Here are the statistics for the sum total of the (really quite few) due South femslash fics posted at the AO3 and the DSA, split up by pairing (and not including crossovers):

Frannie/Elaine - 25
Frannie/Thatcher - 10
Frannie/Maggie - 8 (half of which were written by me *g*)
Frannie/Stella - 7
Frannie/Victoria - 1 (not actually posted, but I know someone had a long WIP with that pairing, so I'm including it)
Frannie/Irene Zuko - 1 (let me link to that, because it is very very good and I just discovered it)
Frannie/OFC - 1 (I wrote that one!)
Maggie/Victoria - 1 (hey, I wrote that one, too!)
Stella/Mackenzie King - 1

So basically Frannie is in all of them except two. What is the deal with that? Not that I'm complaining--I love Frannie! But why is no one writing, say, Thatcher/Stella?

Is it because Frannie seems more likely to be lesbian/bisexual? Or because she's people's favorite female character? Or because she's hot? Or because people feel she deserves some loving? Or because she has more onscreen time with other female characters? Hmmm. ETA: I just thought of this: maybe people dislike the canonical one-sided Frannie/Fraser and write femslash as a reaction?

ETA2: Also, the image of Frannie actually in a small black dress is a very nice one. : )
luzula: a Luzula pilosa, or hairy wood-rush (Default)
I may possibly be procrastinating from writing my Bob, Buck and Caroline story by googling for images of a young Gordon Pinsent. There really isn't much out there--or possibly I don't have enough google-fu. Still, I thought I'd share what I found. There's this one, where he looks kind of serious and dark-haired and not particularly Bob-like (he's the one in the middle). Date unknown, but it looks like the 60's or 70's. And there's these two, where he's outdoors and unshaven. *squints* Yeah, I can see it. Those are from 1969, when he was 39 years old.

Also, he apparently played a Mountie on a children's TV series from the 60's called "The Forest Rangers". You can see him in uniform if you scroll down to the bottom of this page.

Huh, I wish there was something from the 50's. I mean, I do picture Bob as being a few years younger than Gordon Pinsent. Fraser was born in 1960, I think, and I've always imagined that Bob was younger than 30 when Fraser was born.
luzula: a Luzula pilosa, or hairy wood-rush (Default)
Gah, I'm tired. I have some sort of cold which won't break out, but won't go away either. And I've been taking a course on oral presentation and communication at work, which is actually good, but also very tiring. Plus, my shoulders and hands are all stiff. *wants a massage*

Okay, enough whining. I rewatched some due South the other day: "Dead men don't throw rice" and "Manhunt". I guess I don't rewatch canon very often, and it made my heart all glowy.

Some episode meta + unrelated musing about writing )

For now, please comment at the LJ entry.

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