Sunday, December 31, 2017

Links Round-up: What I've Been Reading

Ben Lehman's blog. I own Ben Lehman's Polaris, which is a tragic and ethereal game that I'd love to get back to playing at some point. There's a lot of eye-opening and disquieting stuff on there: in particular, Who are rape survivors? on the realities of sexual assault and on failures of allyship and Compassion for Evil, on the uncomfortable fact that we share our humanity with the most monstrous of people. TW: pedophilia, sexual assault

The Best That We Are Able from the Slacktivist, on the true meaning of Christmas and the way that we ask much more tolerance and generosity of ourselves at the end of the year:
Either we’re admitting that we’re actually capable of treating each other and ourselves much better than we do most of the time, or else we’re admitting that we’re not, and that this little season of respite and forced decency we muster up at the end of every year is just an illusion and the best that we can expect of ourselves and of one another.
I wonder what the world would look like if we all acted like our Christmas selves, every day of the year. Could we even?

The X-Card and the Question of Safe and Healthy from nckclrk on Tumblr, on actual experiences playing with the X-card.

One section that particularly resonated with me was the mention of a campaign where people were polite and put up with the things that made them uncomfortable. I've played those before. The table is polite; the post-game gossip is not.

The Problem with Calling Women Females from Jezebel was very satisfying in articulating in a calm and collected manner my problem with the word "females" being used to describe woman. Seeing the word "females", usually in an online post, is a pretty good signal that I'm going to be offended by whatever content follows because it treats women as the Other. Often, as something that should be lured like stray cats. "Why are there not more females in the gaming community? do we need to put out more kibble in the alley?" In addition to the cissexism and sexism of reducing women to a set of biology, it's often followed by blanket statements of what "females" are and what females like.

Tuesday, December 26, 2017

Links Round-up

"See, the term “practicing” is deceptive. It should instead be thought of as “learning”.This may seem like a tautology, but it really isn’t. The term “practicing” suggests repetition, while “learning” suggests the acquisition of knowledge, which is what I believe the colloquial “practicing” should be"
This distinction made me wish someone had told me this before. This made everything about how to practice - deliberate practice, don't practice your mistakes, be mindful - all suddenly click and let me come up with a few ideas of my own as well. I'm not the best learner, but I still have a ton more practice learning things in various settings that I do practicing.

This shift in perspective also makes practice more relaxed and joyful. When practice is viewed as repetition, it's easy to fall into a shame-spiral. Why didn't I get this right? Why aren't my fingers doing the right thing? But with learning, it's easier to forgive yourself and to focus on finding solutions, because we expect to mess up while learning.

Besides, learning is so much more interesting than practicing. ;)

What is College For? Hint: It's Not Just Getting In

In the process, all too many [students] receive a sorry message, indeed: “The goal of high school is to get into the college that rejects the most people; the goal of college is to gain access to employers or graduate programs that turn away the greatest number of qualified candidates; the goal of life is to have more of the stuff that other people are unable to acquire.” No one puts it quite this way, but that’s what our young people are hearing. It is a message that kills the soul: Value things only to the extent that other people are deprived of them.
Yet another thing that I wish someone else had told me years ago. This was the message that I was taught - to be self-satisfied with myself for climbing the academic/corporate ladder, for no other reason than because the ladder was there to be climbed. (Of course, then I failed to get into the college my parents wanted...and had a marvelous time.)
“But for roleplaying, the key problem is a majority of the rules sets aren’t actually games. They give you rules to put scores to characters, resolve some fictional events but no larger picture. It’s like having numbers, faces and suits on cards- useful tools, but doesn’t actually organize what makes the game. What are the roles of the players? What is the goal of play? What is the intended play experience?”
We recently lost a player from our gaming group, and I've been doing some GM soul-searching. Overall, all of these articles are a good read for focusing on the importance of communication in a relatively undefined social game and on shifting the emphasis away from "problem players".

I've definitely been guilty of blaming players in the past, because obviously this just isn't how we play the game! Except it's not so obvious, after all, and many Georges are probably acting with intention and trying to have fun.

I actually used to play with one of those players who would do ridiculous things that would break immersion and party cohesion. He seemed like a nice person outside of the game! He just thought that party conflict and "chaotic neutral" randomness kept things interesting.  I didn't confront him about it, though it may have been better to - or it may not have, since that gaming group didn't really have a culture of active communication.

(Of course, that is not to say that there aren't problematic players who aren't playing with good intent, but that should just be resolved by asking them to leave.)

Reclaiming Problematic Settings

This is something that I'm wrestling with: how to deal with a problematic setting in a format that's for fun and not actually art. Roleplaying can be cathartic and create interesting and brilliant stories...but it's not the medium for heavy criticism. So, how to wrestle with questions of erasure vs. representation? I'm not sure the article actually cleared anything up for me, but at least it gives me a list of things to consider.
A very good and short watch about how the Internet has co-opted black bodies, in the format of performative or stereotyped depictions, to perform emotional labor and allow non-black people to "inhabit" blackness on the Internet.

Monday, December 25, 2017

2018 Reading Challenges

I just found out that reading challenges are a thing, so of course the only thing to do was to sign up for as many as I can.

Here's what I'm planning to do for 2018:

Back to the Classics

Tentatively, my list is:

1.  The Well at the End of the World, by William Morris

2.  East of Eden, by John Steinbeck

3.  Their Eyes Were Watching God, by Zora Neale Hurston

4.  The Shahnameh, by Ferdowsi and translated by Dick Davis

5. The Little Prince, by Antoine de Saint-Exupéry

6.  The Moonstone, by Wilke Collins

7. The Odyssey, by Homer (hoping to pick up the new translation!)

8. Middlemarch, by George Eliot

9. The Scarlet Pimpernel, by Baroness Orczy

10. Moby Dick, by Herman Melville

11. Crime and Punishment, by Fyodor Dostoevsky.

12. The Call of the Wild, by Jack London

Banned/Challenged Books Reading Challenge

Still waiting on a link for this one (2016 version), but no harm in deciding early to do this.

No real list of books yet, but I'm adding these to my list of books to consider:

The Absolutely True Diary of a Part-Time Indian, by Sherman Alexie
Beyond Magenta: Transgender Teens Speak Out, by Susan Kuklin
Persepolis, by Marjane Satrapi
Revolutionary Voices, edited by Amy Sonnie
The Bluest Eye, by Toni Morrison

Books n Tunes

I'm aiming for Hum Baby - pairing up 10 songs and romance-centered novels. A disturbing portion of my life is dedicated to Buffy music videos right now (it goes well with physical therapy exercises) and sending songs to my Buffy buddy. Might as well extend this to other fandoms!

 As an additional challenge, I'm thinking it might be fun to cover these songs on the guitar.

Wild Wild West Reading Challenge

One of my other hobbies is tabletop gaming. My GMing dream is to run a Buffy the Vampire Slayer game set in a Western setting. Buffy the Vampire Slayer is about the intrusion of the supernatural into a specific setting (suburbia, high school, college) to make statements about adolescence, relationships, and feminism, and I think a Weird West BTVS game would be lovely and have a lot of potential! Unfortunately, this is hampered by not having read enough Westerns. (And a lack of general GMing skills, lack of familiarity with the ruleset, and players, but that's all out of scope for this blog.)

Bandana and Vest is the level I'm aiming for (4 books).

Currently considering:

Centennial, by James A. Michener
Riders of the Purple Sage, by Zane Grey
The Virginian, by Owen Wister
The Ox-bow Incident, by Walter Van Tilburg Clark

Nonfiction Reading Challenge

I'm planning on doing the Dewey Decimal Challenge. Reading more nonfiction has been a goal of mine. I read 18 this year, but unfortunately, it skewed heavily self-help.

Links Round-up: What I've Been Reading

Ben Lehman's blog . I own Ben Lehman's Polaris, which is a tragic and ethereal game that I'd love to get back to playing at some...