A thought on race and RPGs
Since there is so much discussion of it recently.
So, my people in Polaris are explicitly (rather than implicitly) white.
"The people that live in the memory of Polaris are tall, thin, and beautiful. Their hair is silver and gold and all the colors of the sky at night and their skin is so thin that you can see their pale blue veins beneath it."
Now, anyone who is white and reading this, please do me a favor and turn over your arm. Note that you can very clearly see the blue blood in your veins through your skin. It's a pretty standard trait of white people.
Nonetheless, almost everyone who has talked about these people with me makes the assumption that they are, you know, albino, or translucent, or in some other way super-white, or that they are magical elves (they are neither), or in some other way different in appearance from, you know, skinny northern Europeans.
I wonder if this is because whiteness is so much the assumed default that, if the writer takes the time to describe the skin of a character, that character must be divergent from the norm somehow.
Or it could just be that I'm an unclear writer.
So, my people in Polaris are explicitly (rather than implicitly) white.
"The people that live in the memory of Polaris are tall, thin, and beautiful. Their hair is silver and gold and all the colors of the sky at night and their skin is so thin that you can see their pale blue veins beneath it."
Now, anyone who is white and reading this, please do me a favor and turn over your arm. Note that you can very clearly see the blue blood in your veins through your skin. It's a pretty standard trait of white people.
Nonetheless, almost everyone who has talked about these people with me makes the assumption that they are, you know, albino, or translucent, or in some other way super-white, or that they are magical elves (they are neither), or in some other way different in appearance from, you know, skinny northern Europeans.
I wonder if this is because whiteness is so much the assumed default that, if the writer takes the time to describe the skin of a character, that character must be divergent from the norm somehow.
Or it could just be that I'm an unclear writer.
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"Every book is three books, after all: the one the writer intended, the one the reader expected, and the one that casts its shadow when the first two meet by moonlight." -- John M. Ford, Rules of Engagement
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Let's just face it... Bliss Stage is a squick factory.
Although I love it if only for this conversation with my friend Andrea, regarding two very close male teachers of mine.
Me: "So that would put them at Intimacy 4?"
Andrea: "For being pantsless? At least."
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"The only thing that creepy that I've picked up in Bliss Stage was a loli Sarah Smith."
Read as
"It's creepy that I've gone out with a 13 year old in character while playing Bliss Stage."
Double entendre on 'picked up.'