We Ask Your Questions So You Don’t Have To! Submit Your Questions To Have Them Posted Anonymously As

We ask your questions so you don’t have to! Submit your questions to have them posted anonymously as polls.

More Posts from Vivacias and Others

3 months ago
Brave Hobbit

brave hobbit


Tags
1 year ago
I Tried To Experiment Some With Colours So Here’s A Baby Beloved….. 

i tried to experiment some with colours so here’s a baby Beloved….. 


Tags
1 year ago
A digital drawing of Bree from the Webtoon "Here There Be Dragons." She is in the middle of dragonspeak, and has her eyes and hands glowing a bright gold. Behind her, a dragon of liquid gold looms.

PLEASE read @htbdcomic on Webtoon I've been following it since it started and it's SO fun


Tags
9 months ago

Still Alive!

Well, haven't been on tumblr in a blue moon, but I thought I might drop by and let everyone know that today is the release day for a RuneQuest ttrpg product that I have co-written!

I am talking a bit about "Lands and Traditions under the Sune Dome" in a Patreon post open for everyone to read. Come have a look if you are curious:

My first ttrpg module is up for sale! | Malin Ryden
Patreon
Get more from Malin Ryden on Patreon

Or you can check it out directly on DriveThruRPG:

drivethrurpg.com

Now that editing/proofreading/layout/adjustment/writing hell is over for that one, I can refocus full time on the next Fallen Hero: Revelations demo, which by the way able to be wishlisted on Steam!

Fallen Hero: Revelations on Steam
store.steampowered.com
Face down your ghosts and unearth secrets better left buried as you prepare to take vengeance on the ones who wronged you. But be warned, bu
2 years ago
Some Kinda Mood

some kinda mood


Tags
2 years ago

I’ve been thinking a lot about fandom recently, both as someone who has engaged with it regularly for over a decade on various platforms and also as someone who has increasingly become disenchanted with those spaces. Not only because of pervasive issues of (especially anti-Black) racism, misogyny, transphobia/homophobia, and the like, but the particular way those things take shape within fandom.

At the most basic level I think fandom has a fundamental methodological problem with the way it approaches texts, be they shows, books, movies, etc. What I mean is that people almost invariably approach fandom at the level of character, often at the level of ship - your primary way of viewing a text is filtered through favourite characters and favourite relationships, as opposed to, say, favourite scenes, favourite themes, favourite conflicts.

This is reinforced through the architecture of dominant platforms that host fan content, particularly AO3 - there are separate categories for fandom, character and ship, and everything else is lumped together in “Additional Tags.” You cannot, for example, filter for fics on AO3 by the category of “critical perspective” or “thematic exploration”. There is no dedicated space for fan authors to declare their analytical perspective on the text they are writing about. If an author declares these things, they do so individually, they must go out of their way to do so, because there are no dedicated or universally agreed-upon tags to indicate those things, and if your fanfiction has a lot of tags, that announcement of criticality gets mushed together in a sea of other tags, sharing the same space with tags like “fluff and angst” or “porn without plot.” Perhaps one of the few tags closest to approaching this is the tag “Dead Dove: Do Not Eat,” which doesn’t indicate perspective or theme but rather that there is, broadly, some kind of “problematic content” contained therein - often of a sexual nature, frequently as a warning about “bad” ships.

Now this is not an inherent problem, as in, it is not inherently incorrect to approach a text and primarily derive pleasure from it by focusing on a given character or relationship. And I think a lot of mainstream media encourages (even requires) audiences to engage with their stories at these character- and ship-levels. The political economy of the production of art (one which is capitalistic, one that seeks to generate comfort, titillation, controversy, nostalgia, or shock for the purposes of drawing in viewership, one that increasingly pursues social media metrics of “engagement” and “impressions”, one that allows for the Netflix model of making two-season shows before cancelling them, as well as a whole host of other things) enforces a particular narrative orthodoxy, one that heavily focuses on the individual interiority of specific characters, one that is deeply concerned with the maintenance of white bourgeois middle class values of property ownership, the nuclear family, normative heterosexual sexuality and gender, settler-colonial ideas about community and environment, etc. If you do not care about the familial drama surrounding Shauna cheating on her husband in Yellowjackets, for example, because you think the institution of monogamous marriage and the nuclear family is stupid and violent and heternormative, then you will have a difficult time engaging with the show in general. We exist within a deeply normative (and frequently reactionary) media environment that encourages us to approach art in a particular way, one that privileges the individual over other narrative components (settings, themes, conflicts, ideas, political and moral perspectives, structure, tone, etc).

All of which culminates in priming fans to engage with art at these levels and these levels alone, even when that scope is deeply inappropriate. A standout example I recently encountered was browsing the fandom tags on tumblr for the movie Prey - a movie that recontextualises the original Predator film by setting it in colonial America to make the argument that the horrific violence of white colonists and imperial soldiers is identical to the violence we see the Predator do to human beings. It is a movie that makes the argument that, despite this alien monster running around killing people, the villains of the franchise are these occupying soldiers and settlers, an alien force who themselves have just as little regard for (indigenous) human life.

And when browsing the tags on tumblr, what I found was dozens upon dozens of horny posts about how hot the predator monster was. Certainly there were discussion of the film’s narrative, and these posts got a good amount of notes, but the tags were heavily dominated with a focus on the Predator itself. People were engaging with this film not as a solid action movie with interesting and compelling anti-colonial themes, but as a way to be horny about a creature that is, ironically, a stand-in for white settler indifference to (and perpetuation of) indigenous suffering. And if this is your takeaway from an extremely straightforward film with a very clear message, this is not merely a failure to comprehend the content of a text, this is something beyond it - a problem that I think is due in part to the methodological problem of approaching all texts as vessels for bourgeois interiority, individual but ultimately interchangeable expressions of sexuality, perhaps best-expressed by the term “roving slash fandom,” a phenomenon wherein fans will move from one fandom to the next in search of two (usually white, usually skinny) guys to draw and write porn of, uncaring of any of the surrounding context of the stories they are embedded in, and consequently dominating a large sector of fandom discussion.

This even gets expressed in the primary ideological battleground of fandom itself, the ridiculous partitioning of all fan conflict into “pro-“ and “anti-“ shipping compartments. Your stance on engagement with fandom itself historically was (and still is) always first filtered through one of these two labels, describing your fundamental perspective on all texts you engage with. And both of these two labels are only concerned with shipping, as if all disagreements about art can only be interpreted through the lens of what characters you think are acceptable to draw or write having sex. Nowhere in this binary is space to describe any other perspective you might take, what approaches you think are valuable when interacting with art, what themes or stories you think are worth exploring. It’s not just that the pro/anti divide is juvenile and overly-simplistic, it is a declaration that all fan conflict must be read through the lens of shipping and shipping only - the implication being that any objections raised, and criticisms offered, is ultimately just bitching about ships you don’t like.

Which, again, I think is a fundamental error of methodology. It leaves no space for people to discuss the political and moral content of a work, the themes of a piece of art, the thorny issues of representation not just as expressed through individual characters but entire worlds, narratives, settings, and themes. You are always hopelessly stuck in the quagmire of “shipping discourse,” and even rejecting that framework will inevitably get you labelled as either pro- or anti-ship anyway - and you will almost invariably be labelled an “anti” if you express any kind of distaste for the bigoted behaviour of fans or the content of the text itself, again reinforcing the idea that this is all just pointless whining online about icky ships you personally hate.

And this issue is best perhaps epitomised by reader insert fanfiction, circumventing any need for you to project onto a character by literally inserting yourself into fiction, primarily in order to write/read about a character you want to fuck. This then intersects in particularly disgusting ways with real world politics, such as reader insert fics about Pedro Pascal going with you to BLM protests. Even if this is (incredibly over-generously) interpreted as a very poor attempt at being “progressive,” it still demonstrates that many (white) fans are often incapable of thinking about anything outside of a character-centric perspective, quite literally centring themselves in the process, and consequently they think it’s totally appropriate to do things like that. The fact that this is also frequently a racist lens is not coincidental, because again, a chronic focus on (fictional) individuality prohibits any structural perspective from entering the discussion, which necessarily excludes a coherent or useful perspective on systemic issues, where people come to the conclusion that the topic of police brutality is little more than a fun stage to enact whatever romantic shenanigans you want to get up to with a hot guy.

I will stress, again, that it is not a moral sin to have a favourite character, nor is it bad to enjoy reading about two guys having sex in fanfiction. I enjoy and do those things, I engage with fandom often through a character-centric lens (see my url) - because it’s fun! But I think that this being the dominant mode of engagement inherently excludes and marginalises all other approaches, and creates a fandom space where the most valuable way to talk about media is to discuss which two characters you most enjoy imagining fucking each other


Tags
2 years ago
Dannymance Sketch Dump 🫣
Dannymance Sketch Dump 🫣
Dannymance Sketch Dump 🫣

Dannymance sketch dump 🫣


Tags
1 year ago
Some Liveship Traders Characters (these Are Supposed To Be At The Start Of Ship Of Magic)
Some Liveship Traders Characters (these Are Supposed To Be At The Start Of Ship Of Magic)
Some Liveship Traders Characters (these Are Supposed To Be At The Start Of Ship Of Magic)
Some Liveship Traders Characters (these Are Supposed To Be At The Start Of Ship Of Magic)

some Liveship Traders characters (these are supposed to be at the start of Ship of Magic)


Tags
1 year ago
Beloved!!!

beloved!!!


Tags
Loading...
End of content
No more pages to load
  • rangdeenis
    rangdeenis reblogged this · 4 weeks ago
  • skymoonandstardust
    skymoonandstardust reblogged this · 5 months ago
  • skymoonandstardust
    skymoonandstardust liked this · 5 months ago
  • mrnightingale
    mrnightingale liked this · 5 months ago
  • calcar
    calcar reblogged this · 5 months ago
  • calcar
    calcar liked this · 5 months ago
  • paradise-remade
    paradise-remade liked this · 5 months ago
  • 10-dutchies-12-bicycles
    10-dutchies-12-bicycles reblogged this · 5 months ago
  • paradise-remade
    paradise-remade reblogged this · 5 months ago
  • webworm2
    webworm2 liked this · 6 months ago
  • canvas-madness-txc
    canvas-madness-txc reblogged this · 6 months ago
  • canvas-madness-txc
    canvas-madness-txc liked this · 6 months ago
  • ssherbet-shares
    ssherbet-shares liked this · 6 months ago
  • elventhespian
    elventhespian reblogged this · 7 months ago
  • apparentlyteodora
    apparentlyteodora liked this · 7 months ago
  • spider-sense-and-sensibility
    spider-sense-and-sensibility reblogged this · 7 months ago
  • atrickofmagic
    atrickofmagic liked this · 7 months ago
  • bisonbee
    bisonbee liked this · 7 months ago
  • ponineserrand
    ponineserrand reblogged this · 7 months ago
  • r3d-mrker
    r3d-mrker liked this · 7 months ago
  • wobblytofu
    wobblytofu reblogged this · 7 months ago
  • dumbbard
    dumbbard liked this · 7 months ago
  • centimetri
    centimetri reblogged this · 7 months ago
  • heartofstanding
    heartofstanding reblogged this · 7 months ago
  • fairandfatalasfair
    fairandfatalasfair reblogged this · 7 months ago
  • theinsterminators
    theinsterminators liked this · 7 months ago
  • koifishhies
    koifishhies liked this · 8 months ago
  • wilderment
    wilderment reblogged this · 8 months ago
  • bartsfrogprince
    bartsfrogprince reblogged this · 8 months ago
  • mooniedees
    mooniedees liked this · 8 months ago
  • mooniedees
    mooniedees reblogged this · 8 months ago
  • bibliophilepixie
    bibliophilepixie reblogged this · 8 months ago
  • thick-thighs-witchy-vibes
    thick-thighs-witchy-vibes liked this · 8 months ago
  • jaybirdsdelight
    jaybirdsdelight reblogged this · 8 months ago
  • jaybirdsdelight
    jaybirdsdelight liked this · 8 months ago
  • mhaccunoval
    mhaccunoval reblogged this · 8 months ago
  • thesleepydrawgon
    thesleepydrawgon liked this · 8 months ago
  • talistheintrovert
    talistheintrovert reblogged this · 8 months ago
  • epidemicofimprobability
    epidemicofimprobability liked this · 8 months ago
  • thesynysterunknown
    thesynysterunknown reblogged this · 8 months ago
  • thesynysterunknown
    thesynysterunknown liked this · 8 months ago
  • wheatthindinner
    wheatthindinner liked this · 8 months ago
  • doodleswithangie
    doodleswithangie reblogged this · 8 months ago
  • felicitywilds
    felicitywilds reblogged this · 8 months ago
  • rosettyller
    rosettyller reblogged this · 8 months ago
  • its-your-girl-geekerella
    its-your-girl-geekerella liked this · 8 months ago
  • purple-peaches
    purple-peaches reblogged this · 8 months ago
  • purple-peaches
    purple-peaches liked this · 8 months ago
vivacias - under a larger, kinder sky
under a larger, kinder sky

reading blog

279 posts

Explore Tumblr Blog
Search Through Tumblr Tags