Moderators: Azrael, Moderators General, Prelates
The EGE wrote:Mumpy wrote:And to this day, librarians revile Oregonaut as the Antichrist.
False! We sacrifice our card catalogues to him in the name of Job Security!
doogly wrote:On a scale of Mr Rogers to Fascism, how mean do you think we're being?
Belial wrote:My goal is to be the best brain infection any of you have ever had.
The EGE wrote:Mumpy wrote:And to this day, librarians revile Oregonaut as the Antichrist.
False! We sacrifice our card catalogues to him in the name of Job Security!
doogly wrote:On a scale of Mr Rogers to Fascism, how mean do you think we're being?
Belial wrote:My goal is to be the best brain infection any of you have ever had.
Yakk wrote:Computer Science is to Programming as Materials Physics is to Structural Engineering.
Also, Grass/Earth homes have been used by Native Americans as well, so that sort of doesn't help the situation on the perspective of "Taurens are a lazy writer's Native Americans"
Well, the point is to move away from the stereotypical image, not necessarily away from actual cultures. Since when we think of "the american indian" we think of teepees not actual grass huts or longhouses, it's not as much of a problem if we use them. Same with the totems - as long as they aren't the really tall totems of wood (which exist because of giant redwoods) then it'll be better._Axle_ wrote:Grass/Earth homes would be bad nomadic homes. They would be a pain to disassemble and most likely not being able to be moved at all. Being on the plains without 'taming' it requires movement with the herd. Also, Grass/Earth homes have been used by Native Americans as well, so that sort of doesn't help the situation on the perspective of "Taurens are a lazy writer's Native Americans"
doogly wrote:On a scale of Mr Rogers to Fascism, how mean do you think we're being?
Belial wrote:My goal is to be the best brain infection any of you have ever had.
Stephen Crane wrote:...For truth was to me
A breath, a wind,
A shadow, a phantom,
And never had I touched
The hem of its garment.
People eat Monkey quite frequently.Jessica wrote:First thing I think of is, why are cow people using leather? I know it's important and there are non-cow leathers in the world, but it just seems strange. It could be a point of contention for the people - if they were descended from cows, they may be very particular about their leather not coming from Ungulates.
Well, yeah; I hadn't considered that too--the logical question that stems from doing research for one group is "why aren't you doing research for all the groups?". But also, I think I'd feel like this was a little less of a moral net loss if the iconography was taken from a single tribe (and remained accurate to that tribe) rather than the general monolithic 'false' iconography we culturally assign to Native American tribes.bigglesworth wrote:And it seems to me that it would be strange for the Tauren to be based on a specific NA tribe, considering that the other races were based on conglomerations of other geographic areas' tribes.
Stephen Crane wrote:...For truth was to me
A breath, a wind,
A shadow, a phantom,
And never had I touched
The hem of its garment.
Yakk wrote:Computer Science is to Programming as Materials Physics is to Structural Engineering.
Again, again, and again: The claim isn't that Tauren are a stereotype of Native Americans. The claim is that Tauren are an importation of stereotypes about Native American culture._Axle_ wrote:When a race has tribal characteristics as Native Americans, it doesn't automatically mean that they are being a stereotype.
Stephen Crane wrote:...For truth was to me
A breath, a wind,
A shadow, a phantom,
And never had I touched
The hem of its garment.
That's... way worse than the numbers I'm getting for American schools. That's pretty horrifying.Jessica wrote:Mortality rates of children from 1894 to 1908 were between 30% and 60%. As in in 5 years of school, between 30% and 60% of the students had died.
broken_escalator wrote:Where are the angsty, young taurens that dye their fur black and get tons of piercings because you just don't understand mom and dad.
The Great Hippo wrote:Again, again, and again: The claim isn't that Tauren are a stereotype of Native Americans. The claim is that Tauren are an importation of stereotypes about Native American culture._Axle_ wrote:When a race has tribal characteristics as Native Americans, it doesn't automatically mean that they are being a stereotype.
The Great Hippo wrote: The claim isn't that Tauren are a stereotype of Native Americans. The claim is that Tauren are an importation of stereotypes about Native American culture.
General_Norris wrote:The Great Hippo wrote: The claim isn't that Tauren are a stereotype of Native Americans. The claim is that Tauren are an importation of stereotypes about Native American culture.
May I ask how do you know that they are "an importation of stereotypes" instead of an importation of history? Or is it simply impossible to base a fictional culture on Native Americans without it being a stereotype?
KnightExemplar wrote:There's the "Native American Myth" and many stories are based on it. But as stated before, the solution to this is to tackle the myth directly: educating our youth on how the Native Americans actually functioned. While WoW Tauren can be used as evidence that the myth still exists... its not quite a wrong IMO.
Zamfir wrote:KnightExemplar wrote:There's the "Native American Myth" and many stories are based on it. But as stated before, the solution to this is to tackle the myth directly: educating our youth on how the Native Americans actually functioned. While WoW Tauren can be used as evidence that the myth still exists... its not quite a wrong IMO.
I sort of agree with you here, but it also point to a problem: things like WoW or Avatar are huge. They attarct a large audience and get their full attention, and they have budgets of hundred of millions to achieve those things. You can't just abstractly expect 'education' to counteract the images produced by mass media, unless we are talking about similar huge edcation efforts.
On the other hand, people at Blizzard or in Holywood are not intentionally trying to reinforce those images, and they are not particularly dependent on these stereotypes. For them, it's just a side effect of not thinking enough about the potential downsides fo using particular imaging.
So the choice is between trying to make people at mass media more aware of the stereotypes they reinforce, or massive education campaigns to counteract them. Relying mostly on the second will be a losing business on anything beyond perhaps a few selected issues. Media can create stereotypes faster than education can dispel them.
Maybe its the conservative in me, but forcing private companies (especially the media) to change their underlying message makes me completely sick to my stomach. If there is one thing the government shouldn't regulate heavily... its the media.
doogly wrote:On a scale of Mr Rogers to Fascism, how mean do you think we're being?
Belial wrote:My goal is to be the best brain infection any of you have ever had.
LE4dGOLEM wrote:your ability to tell things from things remains one of your skills.
Weeks wrote:Not only can you tell things from things, you can recognize when a thing is a thing
KnightExemplar wrote:TheGrammarBolshevik wrote:KnightExemplar wrote:I did not wish to imply a dichotomy. But for clarification of my argument... anything more than say, an email of disgust is too much action for me.
Then, as podbaydoor says, you're perfectly welcome to move on and let the people who want to take action handle that part.
I'm not sure if you are reading my posts. My argument is stronger than just personal inaction: its against virtually any hypothetical action. I do not feel that these "stereotypes" are a wrong. Heck, I'm still not convinced that they are even stereotypes at all.
Jessica wrote:Social activism can has made changes
Yes. Yes it is. See, "Native Americans" refers an entire people. It's like saying I wish to base a fictional culture on Europeans without it being a stereotype. How could I possibly do that, without making a hideous amalgamation of a snooty, clog-wearing, yodelling, rude, lederhosen-sporting, blond-haired, beret-waving, onion-munching strangely-accented clockmaker with bad teeth and a Mario moustache? This is why, as a writer, you have to work harder at the 'fiction' part, than the 'what can we base it on which people will instantaneously recognise?' part. It's not just the Tauren, or Blizzard, but all sorts of entertainment media. Hell, I grew up believing that all 'Red Injuns' were tomahawk-wielding scalp-merchants with feathers in their hair and names like Running Bear and Sitting Down who greet people with a raised palm and a 'how' sign and often, if not constantly, ran around making ululations with their hand patting their mouths. Where did I learn these traits? Comic books, TV, cowboys 'n' injuns fillums... all sorts of media. I know now how damaging that perpetuation of these stereotypes are, and Blizzard continue to, as Belial mentioned, reinforce this notion with the tee-pees and the wigwams and the totem poles and the heyheyhey and the like. Growing up, my perception of Native American life and culture was completely wrong, and the weapons used to shape this perception were old TV shows and lazy kids' comics. The imagery used to cause this imprint on my impressionable child mind was set until I actually decided to learn about it (after reading One Flew Over the Cuckoo's Nest), which I understand not everybody in the world would choose to do. The cycle of stereotype perpetuation is continued, not with low-budget TV imports, but with multi-multi-bulti-million-selling games like Warcraft, which takes the lazy stereotype and slathers it onto bipedal cows.General_Norris wrote:Or is it simply impossible to base a fictional culture on Native Americans without it being a stereotype?
The EGE wrote:Mumpy wrote:And to this day, librarians revile Oregonaut as the Antichrist.
False! We sacrifice our card catalogues to him in the name of Job Security!
HungryHobo wrote:They want to put themselves into a world/culture which never actually existed outside their imagination.
Some people want to play the role of a native american style character.
HungryHobo wrote:I used to play a game where I had a character who was essentially a sterotype of a medieval blacksmith.
broken_escalator wrote:Medievel blacksmith is not the same as an entire people. How do you compare the vast differences of all the Native American tribes and confuse them with a profession during a time period?
broken_escalator wrote:or that they don't ritualistically fulfill the codes of their paganistic charter.
Except they took all these cultures, blended them on high for 5 minutes and then stuck them straight into their game. Oh ho ho, how cleverly creative, its not a culture that existed because we blended them. That totally isn't propagating a stereotype. Y'know, because we blended them.
Is native american style the style where you mishmash all the different cultures together?
See, when you have a historical pattern of, to put it lightly, disrespecting a certain culture, then any future actions will be seen in that light. And so, what is a whimsical stylized riff when done to one culture is just...more of the same old disrespect when done to another. It's kindof like the way that I can make your-mom jokes at my friends and it's fine, but if I do it to the guy at work that I'm always fighting with, there will be significantly fewer giggles and significantly more HR complaints.
broken_escalator wrote:The wrong totems and buildings is pointing out that they are just a general mishmash of native american cultures. The same, tired stereotype we've been reusing to death. Yes, serfs were oppressed. But is it fair to try to compare the levels of oppression then with the genocide of native Americans?
I think your privilege is getting in the way of understanding Belial's post.
TheGrammarBolshevik wrote:Answer honestly: do you identify with the blacksmiths of the past who may have been your ancestors? Does anyone else look at you and say "Ah, a blacksmith"?
TheGrammarBolshevik wrote:And that's why Native American stereotypes are problematic, while nobody gives a shit if we misrepresent blacksmiths.
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