Diversity Representation in MU*ing
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"Still bisexual but now annoyed" is how I'm going to describe Ember on Arx from now on, because it works regardless of context or situation
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@onigiri said in Diversity Representation in MU*ing:
Conversely, I had to hear someone use the n-word in a lounge because 'it factored into an academic debate about Lovecraft.' Some nerds do not get it.
Sometimes you just have to debate about a man's cat.
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@onigiri said in Diversity Representation in MU*ing:
Conversely, I had to hear someone use the n-word in a lounge because 'it factored into an academic debate about Lovecraft.' Some nerds do not get it.
I... I mean. Yes. Technically. It would.
But a MU is absolutely not the place to have academic debates. In the first case, because I demand to get paid for any academic debating I do.ETA: This is meant more as an amusing "aww look Tinuviel is silly" rather than a legitimate response. Just don't say it, guys, c'mon.
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@reversed said in Diversity Representation in MU*ing:
"Still bisexual but now annoyed" is how I'm going to describe Ember on Arx from now on, because it works regardless of context or situation
Piccola's is "just annoyed." Always annoyed.
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@reversed said in Diversity Representation in MU*ing:
"Still bisexual but now annoyed" is how I'm going to describe Ember on Arx from now on, because it works regardless of context or situation
Teagan is bi.
Yet another perk of Arx: political marriage can be had and you can have your lovers over there, whatever. I'll have mine. -
@Auspice said in Diversity Representation in MU*ing:
@reversed said in Diversity Representation in MU*ing:
"Still bisexual but now annoyed" is how I'm going to describe Ember on Arx from now on, because it works regardless of context or situation
Teagan is bi.
Yet another perk of Arx: political marriage can be had and you can have your lovers over there, whatever. I'll have mine.Jeez, you don't have to go on and on about it, I accept your proposal, gosh.
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@reversed APPARENTLY
I think I lost my temper at the time because my universe cannot comprehend Lovecraft being so important and life-changing a topic that people have to pull out that word without employing a moment's empathy toward who may be in the room and may feel hurt hearing it in what they may hope is a safe space. BUT NOPE GOTTA VOMIT SEMANTIC FACT, IT IS THE NERDY WAY >:|
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@reversed said in Diversity Representation in MU*ing:
@Auspice said in Diversity Representation in MU*ing:
@reversed said in Diversity Representation in MU*ing:
"Still bisexual but now annoyed" is how I'm going to describe Ember on Arx from now on, because it works regardless of context or situation
Teagan is bi.
Yet another perk of Arx: political marriage can be had and you can have your lovers over there, whatever. I'll have mine.Jeez, you don't have to go on and on about it, I accept your proposal, gosh.
I even made you this backpack to ride around in
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@Auspice said in Diversity Representation in MU*ing:
@reversed said in Diversity Representation in MU*ing:
@Auspice said in Diversity Representation in MU*ing:
@reversed said in Diversity Representation in MU*ing:
"Still bisexual but now annoyed" is how I'm going to describe Ember on Arx from now on, because it works regardless of context or situation
Teagan is bi.
Yet another perk of Arx: political marriage can be had and you can have your lovers over there, whatever. I'll have mine.Jeez, you don't have to go on and on about it, I accept your proposal, gosh.
I even made you this backpack to ride around in
A spoupoose.
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@onigiri said in Diversity Representation in MU*ing:
@reversed APPARENTLY
I think I lost my temper at the time because my universe cannot comprehend Lovecraft being so important and life-changing a topic that people have to pull out that word without employing a moment's empathy toward who may be in the room and may feel hurt hearing it in what they may hope is a safe space. BUT NOPE GOTTA VOMIT SEMANTIC FACT, IT IS THE NERDY WAY >:|
I mean, I can only speak for myself, but I think losing one's temper is justified -- people don't get N-Words in Paris passes just because "it's the NAME of the song, CHILL," or whatever.
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@onigiri So, I think this is a bit funny...
One time @Aria and I were driving home from my parents' house, and she needed to read The Rats in the Walls for a class, so I was reading it aloud from the passenger seat while she drove.
It's a really good story, but it kept fucking up the pacing when I gave this big Kiff Croaker sigh every time the cat's name came up.
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@Tinuviel said in Diversity Representation in MU*ing:
ETA: Why do I call myself gay then, you ask? Because fuck you, that's why.
Also because it's just easier. It's easier for me to tell people I'm gay and have them get all surprised when I hook up with a woman than to try and explain bisexuality is a real thing. @Auspice and I have talked about this at length.
You're not allowed to be not-an-extreme.
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@onigiri said in Diversity Representation in MU*ing:
I think I've also posted at length here before ranting about the rampant fetishization of queer characters -- though this is not the specific topic to talk about that.
I mean, kinda is. This is the same reason I don't think white people who are uncomfortable doing so should feel obligated to make an effort to play POC. People who want to do it and can do it comfortably will just go ahead and do that anyway, and people who feel ill at ease about it should just trust their gut.
I feel there's very little harm in people writing what they know, whether that's their own culutre, ethnicity, sex or orientation. The likelihood of harm is much higher in writing about experiences that aren't yours, and offensively mischaracterising them through an external lens. If this were more than a hobby, and we were writing for publication or an audience, I'd care more. But in this hobby, the only audience we're writing for is one that's actively participating in the writing process already, and don't require others to tell their stories.
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@Tinuviel said in Diversity Representation in MU*ing:
@Roz said in Diversity Representation in MU*ing:
@Tinuviel I think you're conflating a few things. One, having a fantasy setting decide to basically forego racism as part of the theme doesn't mean that all the players and the OOC experience will suddenly be free of bias, because OOCly we're all still brought up in this system.
Second, I think you're conflating "this experience was valuable for my personal learning and I think others could find it valuable, too" with "all games must provide this specific experience in the same way."
No, actually. Not even remotely, on either of these points.
I am speaking, specifically, about the idea that was raised that playing a POC character to tell and experience stories from the viewpoint of a POC, specifically to try to understand their point of view in reality.
@Sparks said in Diversity Representation in MU*ing:
Granted, that pressure is more common in anything set in the modern-day world, as opposed to fantasy worlds, but I'd argue that the modern-day world is where being willing to expand your viewpoint is actually potentially important to things outside of pretendy fun-times internet story games. Since we aren't experiencing widespread and systemic real-world racial oppression of elves, or werewolves, or Togruta, or anything else mythical or purely fictional.
Sorry, I'm evidently not being clear here, for which I apologize. Learning to expand a viewpoint does not mean taking another experience as your own. It means learning to see things from another person's point of view, which is something we have a general lack of in today's world.
I should clarify that I know some folks think of characters on a MU* as alter-egos, and use them to explore aspects of themselves. (Which can be really valuable for folks who are exploring their sexuality or gender identity and cannot do so safely in their offline home life.) I do not. As someone who writes a lot, I think of characters on a MU* as being like characters in a story I'm writing; their experiences are not mine, but if I'm writing a character in a story it behooves me to try to get out of my own head a little bit. After all, if I don't, a character will just be... well, me.
Trying to force yourself out of your own headspace to try to see something from some other point-of-view is something you can do in a lot of places—writing, certainly, but also friendly debate where you genuinely try to see the other person's viewpoint, reading nonfiction from people whose experiences differ from your own and really trying to understand where they're coming from, etc.
And when the viewpoints you're trying to stretch your head to are for something that's a real-world thing, it's worth doing in an informed manner; talk to people whose viewpoint you're at least trying to understand. And not just one, but as many as you can, since no one social group or cultural group or any group is likely to have uniform opinions on everything.
It's something people will never be perfect at—or even close—because we're all inherently flawed because you can never entirely get out of your own head. But I tend to think any time you can work to see a situation or scenario from a viewpoint that isn't your own inherent one, it's like exercising an empathy muscle. A man trying to genuinely try to comprehend what a woman goes through in a world full of sexist background radiation, someone from a more privileged social standing working to understand what folks who don't have money go through, someone trying to understand where people on the opposite side of a political divide are coming from (I... I have tried, but I cannot do this one, not even to try to win them over with rational arguments), etc.
You'll never 100% understand someone else's experience—hell, you might never understand 40% of it, if even that—but at least trying to step outside your own head long enough to see the general shape of where they're coming from is worth it. And their time and energy is worth you trying to at least meet them halfway rather than making them walk everything over to your point-of-view to explain whatever on your terms rather than you trying to understand what they're saying on theirs.
It ain't perfect, sometimes we'll get it wrong—heck, maybe a lot of times—but I honestly believe that empathy muscle is at least worth trying to exercise. And if you fail, you apologize, make amends as best you can, try to learn what you can do better next time, and then do better next time.
But there's a fear that in trying to stretch that muscle and get outside your own head that way, those failures might be Really Bad, and that so it's not worth trying to step outside your own head at all. And I just... I can't agree. None of us want to fail at things, but failures are also the first steps towards eventual success. And if you don't risk failure by trying, you never get anywhere at all.
Anyway, being forced into personal experiences outside your normal world view can certainly be one way to stretch that muscle. It's not ideal—and often not pleasant—but boy can it be effective. My friend quite demonstrably wanted me to change out my avatar to understand his online experience firsthand, because I was being unfairly dismissive about the severity of his experience when I kept equating it to the online sexist toxicity I was dealing with in the same game at the same time.
(I mean, the sexist toxicity was pretty awful too, but it did not involve freaking death threats. Most of the time. This having been pre-GamerGate.)
Honestly, my friend's challenge to me was like the more recent two folks who handled support for a company—one man and one woman—where they flipped email signatures for a week on the shared support account email and changed nothing else about how they handled the incoming client mails, and he had an eye-opening week when it came to the sort of sexist nonsense she put up with that he'd been blind to. It wasn't that he wasn't unsympathetic or unaware that sexism happened, he just had not truly comprehended how overwhelming and constant it was and how his productivity bottomed out when people thought they were talking to 'her'. And conversely, when people thought they were talking to 'him', she had her most productive week ever by leaps and bounds. Because, as her co-worker put it after the fact, it turned out he wasn't actually a lot faster like he'd thought (and written off as having had years more experience), but that in the time he could finish a ticket and move on to the next, she was stuck still trying to convince the client for her first ticket that she actually knew what she was talking about so they'd follow her instructions.
She could've told him all that. (In fact, she did tell him all that; the two of them wrote up Medium stories about the experience which are both worth reading.) And it wasn't like he didn't believe her that sexism was a factor, but he didn't actually understand it until she forced him into the situation she was normally in. It forced him to flex that empathy muscle, and get a little better at stepping outside his head to understand where she was coming from for other things too.
In the case of the challenge my friend made, he demanded I do it because he figured—rightly, as it turned out—the experience would be eye-opening. It was also a passive experience, just like the email, inasmuch as all I had to do was make a new character for the game who was dark-skinned instead of fair-skinned—akin to flipping the email signatures—and without saying or doing anything new or differently than I had been before, holy flipping cheese did the hidden assholes reveal themselves.
Anyway. I guess I'm not trying to say people must exercise that empathy muscle, or must do any one thing to try to get better at shifting their viewpoint to understand what someone else is trying to communicate; I think that'd counterproductive in the extreme. I guess I'm just saying... there's value in doing it when there are good opportunities, and I think discouraging it is detrimental.
And even if it's not the intention, a lot of the caution folks end up feeling they have to exercise—never write an NPC on a modern game that doesn't share their own background in case they get it wrong, never write a character in a story that isn't one entirely drawn from personal experience, never try to make the effort to stretch and see someone else's viewpoint because your interpretation might be wrong, keep arms and legs in preexisting unconscious cultural bias zone at all times while life is in motion due to risk of offense—is worse than the possibility of a failure you can learn from and do better as a result of.
That said, I'm realizing that I'm definitely not communicating any of this stuff very well (...and also, just now, that my ADHD meds wore off two hours ago and HELLO HYPERFOCUS ON WRITING A POST), and I've got no desire to muddy the waters of the thread more than I already have. So with this as my final attempt, I think I'll bow out as a contributor. (I'll definitely keep watching/listening, though, because there's a huge variety of viewpoints on all of this and it's worth listening to them.)
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@Derp said in Diversity Representation in MU*ing:
@Tinuviel said in Diversity Representation in MU*ing:
ETA: Why do I call myself gay then, you ask? Because fuck you, that's why.
Also because it's just easier. It's easier for me to tell people I'm gay and have them get all surprised when I hook up with a woman than to try and explain bisexuality is a real thing. @Auspice and I have talked about this at length.
You're not allowed to be not-an-extreme.
it doesn't help that in recent years I've come to realize I am also demisexual and holyfuck explaining that to people makes me wanna cry sometimes.
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@Auspice said in Diversity Representation in MU*ing:
demisexual
Pft. Whatever. That isn't even a thing.
ducks
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@Auspice said in Diversity Representation in MU*ing:
it doesn't help that in recent years I've come to realize I am also demisexual and holyfuck explaining that to people makes me wanna cry sometimes.
"I don't get it. You like girls, and I'm playing a girl, so you must want to fuck me whether you know me or not because that's how attraction works, right?"
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@Sparks said in Diversity Representation in MU*ing:
Learning to expand a viewpoint does not mean taking another experience as your own. It means learning to see things from another person's point of view, which is something we have a general lack of in today's world.
I know perfectly well what it means.
Playing a character on a MU is not writing a character in a story. At least not as far as I'm concerned. It is embodying a character through word and action in a real-time interaction with other people.
So this "confusion" is simply based on very different ideas on the nature of character, which results in your intention - to me - being incompatible with sense.
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@GreenFlashlight said in Diversity Representation in MU*ing:
@Auspice said in Diversity Representation in MU*ing:
it doesn't help that in recent years I've come to realize I am also demisexual and holyfuck explaining that to people makes me wanna cry sometimes.
"I don't get it. You like girls, and I'm playing a girl, so you must want to fuck me whether you know me or not because that's how attraction works, right?"
You would not believe how many times I've had a char fall for someone and THEN go check out their PB and I'm like 'oh wow that person is wildly unattractive (to me)'
or
had people I'm RPing with page me various pics of their PB like 'look how hot my char is here' and I'm like 'uh, I guess???'Sorry people, I don't care about shirtless pics or sideboob or dat ass (even America's Ass). tbh for me it's all about eyes. If they have really stunning eyes, I might be drawn in. I'm an eye-sexual.
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Am I the only one whose sexual orientation changes depending on who I'm dealing with?
I'm gay when machismos come a-flexin' and straight as a board when MU* lesbians want a giggly pillow-fight.
Then I go back to being gay anytime I'm in the vicinity of linen shorts.