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Sun, Nov. 21st, 2004 07:34 pmI supported two independent presses and three independent bookstores this weekend ^_^. Aka, my book spending is still out of control.
Busy weekend. I ended up going to San Francisco yesterday to see Pat Murphy, Debbie Notkins and Karen Joy Fowler talk about the Tiptree Award. I didn't know very much about the Tiptree Award previously, so it was a great fun listening to them talk about how they created the award. And bake sales. I am amused that Bruce Sterling baked cookies. And I didn't realize I would want to take notes until they started talking, so I ended up not being able to. However, I'm not quite sure how new the information would be to people on LJ, given that it seems a good deal of people have been to Wiscon before and probably know all about the Tiptree? Anyhow, I ended up buying the new Tiptree Award anthology and getting that, along with Fowler's Artificial Things and Sarah Canary, signed. I was particularly excited because they mentioned that Kara Dalkey's Japanese Snow Queen story that was in Firebirds, along with a new translation of "Snow Queen" and another short story based on it. One of my favorite fairy tales. Of course, after hearing that, I had to buy the book immediately. I also ended up finding Teresa Nielsen Hayden's Making Book. I did feel rather awkward after the panel, because it seemed like most of the people who had gone there knew each other and were quite comfortable standing around chatting. I ended up sort of hiding behind stacks of books. I'm not very good at the whole social thing, so I keep flip-flopping around as to whether I should try going to a con or not.
Also ended up watching The Incredibles. I liked it, but was rather irked by the gender roles. Why start out by having Elastigirl proclaim that she wouldn't want to give up her secret identity to settle down and then have her be a typical housewife? Also, I was rather annoyed by how the female characters were reluctant to use their special powers while the male ones weren't. And if I were married to Mr. Incredible, I would have been really mad at him, galivanting around while I was stuck at home with the kids. And the girls were all stick thin.
Mostly I wasn't quite sure what Brad Bird was trying to say about superpowers. The boy thinks I'm sort of overanalyzing, but the movie was asking the questions! And while part of me thinks it's unfun to have to supress secret powers, I didn't actually have too much sympathy for Dash wanting to run the race. And there seemed to be this disturbing undertone on normality and how normal people just want to cut super people down to size because of jealousy.
I was very amused by assorted things like the snippet on the dangers of capes. And Edna is the bomb. Daaahlink. Tee hee. I think I may have embarrassed the boy by laughing really loudly everytime Edna was on the screen, but seriously, she was the bomb. And everyone else was laughing too. Movie also gets bonus points for cool uses of superpowers (I liked the speedboat thing).
And today I met
fannishly, and we talked about many things ranging from the joys of Angel, Asian mothers complaining about people being too fat, depression and LJ! Yay, fandom folk from Taiwan! There should be a club ;).
Busy weekend. I ended up going to San Francisco yesterday to see Pat Murphy, Debbie Notkins and Karen Joy Fowler talk about the Tiptree Award. I didn't know very much about the Tiptree Award previously, so it was a great fun listening to them talk about how they created the award. And bake sales. I am amused that Bruce Sterling baked cookies. And I didn't realize I would want to take notes until they started talking, so I ended up not being able to. However, I'm not quite sure how new the information would be to people on LJ, given that it seems a good deal of people have been to Wiscon before and probably know all about the Tiptree? Anyhow, I ended up buying the new Tiptree Award anthology and getting that, along with Fowler's Artificial Things and Sarah Canary, signed. I was particularly excited because they mentioned that Kara Dalkey's Japanese Snow Queen story that was in Firebirds, along with a new translation of "Snow Queen" and another short story based on it. One of my favorite fairy tales. Of course, after hearing that, I had to buy the book immediately. I also ended up finding Teresa Nielsen Hayden's Making Book. I did feel rather awkward after the panel, because it seemed like most of the people who had gone there knew each other and were quite comfortable standing around chatting. I ended up sort of hiding behind stacks of books. I'm not very good at the whole social thing, so I keep flip-flopping around as to whether I should try going to a con or not.
Also ended up watching The Incredibles. I liked it, but was rather irked by the gender roles. Why start out by having Elastigirl proclaim that she wouldn't want to give up her secret identity to settle down and then have her be a typical housewife? Also, I was rather annoyed by how the female characters were reluctant to use their special powers while the male ones weren't. And if I were married to Mr. Incredible, I would have been really mad at him, galivanting around while I was stuck at home with the kids. And the girls were all stick thin.
Mostly I wasn't quite sure what Brad Bird was trying to say about superpowers. The boy thinks I'm sort of overanalyzing, but the movie was asking the questions! And while part of me thinks it's unfun to have to supress secret powers, I didn't actually have too much sympathy for Dash wanting to run the race. And there seemed to be this disturbing undertone on normality and how normal people just want to cut super people down to size because of jealousy.
I was very amused by assorted things like the snippet on the dangers of capes. And Edna is the bomb. Daaahlink. Tee hee. I think I may have embarrassed the boy by laughing really loudly everytime Edna was on the screen, but seriously, she was the bomb. And everyone else was laughing too. Movie also gets bonus points for cool uses of superpowers (I liked the speedboat thing).
And today I met
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(no subject)
Sun, Nov. 21st, 2004 09:55 pm (UTC)*signs up*
:)
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Sun, Nov. 21st, 2004 10:16 pm (UTC)(no subject)
Sun, Nov. 21st, 2004 11:55 pm (UTC)(no subject)
Mon, Nov. 22nd, 2004 12:19 am (UTC)(no subject)
Mon, Nov. 22nd, 2004 12:26 am (UTC)As for the Tiptree Award stuff, I don't know much about it, and from what I've heard about the con, I'd feel about as welcome there as fleas at a cat show.
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Mon, Nov. 22nd, 2004 06:39 am (UTC)Bounced in through KDS. That aspect of the film bugged me too. Dash's racing is sort of a contrast to "Earshot". On the one hand, Nancy is shown as that irritating over-acheiver/wannabe type like Syndrome is, and yet there's also the sense that it's something akin to cheating for Buffy to use her Telepathy to her advantage in class.
The movie was tons and tons of fun to watch, but I did find it disquieting too. It does seem to take too much joy out of punking on people who have the misfortune to be born without SuperPowers.
Oh, one positive gender aspect of "Incredibles"
Mon, Nov. 22nd, 2004 01:36 pm (UTC)(no subject)
Mon, Nov. 22nd, 2004 06:05 pm (UTC)(no subject)
Mon, Nov. 22nd, 2004 06:08 pm (UTC)Re: Oh, one positive gender aspect of "Incredibles"
Mon, Nov. 22nd, 2004 06:10 pm (UTC)(no subject)
Mon, Nov. 22nd, 2004 06:25 pm (UTC)(no subject)
Mon, Nov. 22nd, 2004 06:32 pm (UTC)(no subject)
Mon, Nov. 22nd, 2004 06:48 pm (UTC)I remember, by the time the Potential Slayer storyline came around in S7 of BtVS, I started to wonder if Joss Whedon ever watched ESPN. The portrayal of Potential/Slayer/Everybody Else and the gender/power (and by power I mean might) isues felt sort of quaint to me when I was watching 13-year old Michelle Wie compete in a Men's Golf Pro-Am, and when I could watch Serena Williams on Sports Center. Were we getting into Slayer:Human::Olympic Athlete:Human sort of a situation. But my thoughts on that never really got anywhere coherent.
(no subject)
Mon, Nov. 22nd, 2004 07:44 pm (UTC)(no subject)
Tue, Nov. 23rd, 2004 03:12 am (UTC)(no subject)
Tue, Nov. 23rd, 2004 03:05 pm (UTC)(no subject)
Tue, Nov. 23rd, 2004 05:35 pm (UTC)I've no problem with the story wherein the hero is "special" in some way. The thing is, I tend to read things in a very political manner, and democratic/egalitarian politics requires me to consider the idea that everybody's special. Whether we're aware of it or not...
I also should point out, that as a reader/viewer, I don't identify directly with or as the Hero. Mostly, I think in terms of "my parents live in that town".
So yeah, the super hero is special. But just because nobody tells a story about him, it doesn't mean that the guy who sells him the newspaper or the lady in line at the bodega isn't special too.
People have a whole host of different talents, whether it's cleverness or super-hearing, or one thing or another. But it's heart-spirit-mind that I care about. Physically manifest superpowers make for an interesting laboratory for that, but aren't required.
Buffy is my favorit of Whedon's characters, but I always liked her best for the non-Physical-Power aspects of her character. What I like were aspects of story wherein Buffy had to determine what was valuable to her (and when what was valuable to her extended beyond herself toward those who shared her community), wherein Buffy had to examine what she was capable of (and when that capability extended beyond simple questions of physical capability), and how she could take action (and recruit, persuade and influence others to act) in order to bring about positive change and good.
And none of that required her to have superpowers. It just required her to demonstrate virtuous character. When writers nelect that, I lose interest. Because I never forget that the superpowers are a reality to the character, whereas not having superpowers is a reality of my life. So I can't just take the superpowers... I have to be able to take things from it that can be unwound and separated from the SuperPower.
(no subject)
Tue, Nov. 23rd, 2004 10:27 pm (UTC)The more optimistic view of it (imho) would be the Spiderman movies, in which Peter Parker is much like Buffy. He doesn't even have to have superpowers to go and help, and I like him because he really is out there trying to do good, not only via his Spiderman persona but in his life. I like how Raimi shows that Peter doing good can't really be separated from Spiderman doing good, because like