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her heart, i bathed in dishonored

@presiding / presiding.tumblr.com

they/them | friendly & gay | art by @deerghast | mostly Billie Lurk posting | about pres
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thought i'd put my dishonored fics in one place - click for the fics, full size imgs, & artists below

Place Like Void [complete]: What if the Outsider offered a safe home in the void for Corvo? The Outsider/Corvo. 41k. Explicit. Romance. Art by gravehound (& the print). Click to read.

The Contract [ongoing]: Dishonored 1 rewrite. POV: Daud, Corvo, Billie, Jessamine. Daud/Corvo. ~90k/180k. Teen & up. Action/adventure. Art by ferretrix. Click to read.

the monster in the hull [complete]: Dishonored 2 rewrite. POV: Meagan Foster. What does it mean to become a monster? Billie/Emily. 100k. Mature. Drama/mystery/romance. Art by sirguyofdykesborn. Click to read.

Mark of the Beast [ongoing]: Daud has escaped to Tyvia, but his ghosts have followed. Daud/Teague Martin. 58k/80k. Explicit. Drama/romance. Art by storja-historja. Click to read.

the ghosts of the hound pits pub [complete]: Cecelia looks exactly like Billie’s lost love Deirdre, but the void is thinner in the Hound Pits Pub. Billie/Cecelia. 37k. Explicit. Horror/romance. Art by yufiit. Click to read.

The Moth King [complete]: The Outsider reads a parable. 2k. General audience. Short story. Art by Piotr Jabłoński. Click to read.

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illmetkismet

Sugardaddy/sugarbaby relationship but the one with money is an annoying 23 year old who like, made a successful app in college or something, and the poor one is a 40-something single dad with medical debt who was just 'made redundant' at his soul-killing job. Mmmmm-hmmmm.... Thinking about this.

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closet-keys

something I think more people need to understand is that rape culture has a very simple way to maintain the plausible deniability that enables mass support and investment, and that is the complete separation of the rhetorical construction of "The Rapist" and "The Pedophile" from any actual specific person who engages in sexual violence.

so often people do not believe that we could possibly live in a rape culture, they do not believe it could possibly be true that people do not care about children who were sexually abused-- they say but everyone hates rapists and pedophiles! but that's not really true. they hate the conceptual idea of The Rapist and The Pedophile, but do not actually oppose--in real world contexts, with real actual complicated people--the use of sexual violence to control, degrade, and otherwise abuse other people. they do not hate their friend who joked that their date "took some convincing" or their neighbor who publicly humiliated their adolescent child by telling their church group he was "caught" masturbating, or the cop who performs cavity searches or the guy who posted tips for "stealthing" online, or their uncle who says he "made some mistakes with women" when he was younger, or the person on social media publicly speculating about a stranger's sexual desires and sharing their nudes to degrade and humiliate them, or their granddad who was "falsely accused" of sexually abusing his daughter when "all he did" was leer and not touch, or their professor who has relationships with their students, or their acquaintance who recommends dating girls with "issues", girls who are "crazy", girls who are trans or fat or queer or have low self-esteem, because "they'll do anything", or the person they organize with who is so valuable to the movement but everyone kind of knows not to be alone in a room with them, or...

specific people who rape are usually not the deviant that most people already want a reason to expel from the community, they are the center of power and influence. they provide vital support or resources to people, they are likable and intimately connected with many people, they have an embedded role in the social fabric and many people benefit from it (whether economically, politically, spiritually, etc). Specific people who rape are incredibly buoyant. They are usually buoyed to places of power no matter how far they're attempted to be pulled down from that power, and most people see this and will cling to a person like this, defending them, because people who rape are the social equivalent to a life preserver, whereas people who have been raped are the social equivalent of an anchor-- no one wants to be dragged down by allying themselves with the person who was raped by the beloved person everyone loves and relies on.

On the other hand, The Rapist" and "The Pedophile" as cultural tropes are treated very differently from specific people who have raped others. "The Rapist"/"The Pedophile" is often a racialized, gendered, and classed archetype that exists to be the ideological load bearing pillar of rape culture, to reinforce the belief (against the weight of evidence) that rape is something committed by Deviant Others who can be identified and expelled from social life. When sexual violence is not understood as one of many possible tactics of control and is instead as the result of the uncontrollable desire of innate deviants, then accusations do not even require there to be a specific person who was harmed by a specific act. All you need is evidence of "deviance" and all the justified anger at sexual violence can be offloaded onto whatever scapegoat you want.

In fact, within rape culture, harassment campaigns are much more successful than any actual instance of a survivor asking for support. That is no coincidence either! Rape culture hates survivors! But because in harassment campaigns there is no actual survivor speaking up, rape culture's default of disbelieving specific, actual survivors is never triggered, and so the accusation becomes perceived as more credible because there is no victim to discount.

If there is no actual specific instance of someone engaging in sexual abuse of another specific person, there are no details to question and pick apart ("but why was she naked if she didn't want to have sex?" "was he really raped if he had an orgasm?" "how do you know it was sexual? adults have to bathe their kids" "why did she post that photo if she didn't want it shared?" "I've never seen that side of him!" "maybe you misunderstood" "maybe she didn't hear the safeword" "why wait until now to bring it up?") and no demands of the public that implicate them and demand change from them (are you sending survivors funds to help them move out? to help them afford therapy? are you examining why you didn't notice it was happening or didn't believe it could be true? are you able to understand that as part of this person's community, you failed to protect them, and that actual restorative justice involves you changing your beliefs and behavior too? that it's not just about rehabilitating the person who raped someone?)

If there's no survivor, then the imagined victim can be perfect, innocent, and worthy to rally around. The imagined victims are only good and only hurt and have no problematic opinions about anything (no opinions at all! so they can be imagined to believe whatever you believe), no burdensome expectations of you, no resentment towards you.

Focusing on identifying "The Rapist" as a deviant instead is so easy; it only requires condemning someone who you probably either already dislike or a complete stranger who has no direct connection to your life. It's so much easier to pin responsibility for the entire (abstracted) concept of Rape onto someone you already hate and is already a social outcast and show how much you're "against rape" by venting all your anger and fantasized violence against them. It feels good too! the way righteous anger always does. It can be energizing when a whole community comes together to hate the same person.

Supporting actual survivors does not feel energizing, it feels exhausting. It requires so much work and effort, and you don't feel righteous while you do it, you may even feel ashamed, frustrated, deeply sad, resentful, angry, hopeless, or emotionally numb. It enters the deepest parts of your consciousness and you find it hard to breathe during certain scenes in movies, seeing certain arguments play out in the news cycle. It changes you, too, and that is the point.

We want to be against rape culture, because we want to be good people. but we don't want it to be hard.

I think this reality is the reason why a lot of young organizers think they can throw themselves into restorative justice and then find themselves completely burnt out a few months or a year later. People start thinking it'll be energizing, and then have to contend with the reality of what is, essentially, providing material support for disabled people whose health and capabilities have been permanently decreased from trauma. Some folks think they're gonna be "fixing things" so everyone can continue their reliance on the person who raped someone and the survivor can "move on" and everything can be "restored."

And then (if they're serious and not just performing at activism) they are inevitably faced with the terrifying reality of trying to make ends meet, with cobbling together strategies to meet community needs outside of the person who everyone relies on. they are faced with this person who raped someone losing interest after a few meetings and deciding "the accountability process" is dragging on too long and interrupting "more serious things than one person's emotions." they are faced with trying to get more people involved supporting the acute needs of the survivor even when the survivor is "difficult" or "ungrateful", and realizing that no one wants to do it. it is overwhelming to realize how deep the roots of rape culture run through everything, how much stability is upturned when you uproot any structures and beliefs that rely on rape culture. it is deeply demoralizing when you realize nothing can change without collective effort and very few care enough to do it.

It's so much easier to do nothing and pretend you don't know what happened. It's so much easier to decide it doesn't have anything to do with you and maybe this is something the survivor should "work out" with the person who raped them. It's so much easier to not try.

that's the function of rape culture. and we are all implicated in it.

#cw rape#pres writes essays in tags#god I'm sorry. I'm about to talk fandom. it's relevant as an example of pervasive thinking. stay with me#I was one of those young people who got burnt out on this type of dv activism young#talking about dishonored. corvo is one of the best-loved dh characters. probably THE best loved universal favourite#he's a beautiful brown eyed man. who is sad and grieving.#who OH YEAH canonically. heroically. gave a woman to her stalker#what I'm here to talk about is the way that fandom wraps itself up in knots about things that aren't canon or in-text. but.#there's no discourse bout the rape ingame eg. campbell. if you like corvo no one looks at you twice. he's a beautiful sad brown eyed boy.#he's not upholding rape culture at all! couldn't be. he is simply too sad and beautiful.#and it's totally fine that the devs backpedalled on this because it's “obviously bad”. well it's still in the game they don't care that muc#“oh she was a villain anyway” even if true still disgusting. it was implied she was getting abused for her money too#do you see? do you see? the number of free passes we give? the way you're probably reading this making excuses?#can't help but make the comparison between the people who are still friends with my rapist#he's also a beautiful sad brown eyed boy.#but yeah isn't it easier to just not have these conversations.#isn't it easier to just say “well it's not canon to me and I didn't do that in any of my playthroughs” as tho the game doesn't reward it.#with achievements#isn't it easier to say well he wasn't the stalker he was just taking advantage of her being stalked. wow that's so much better#but no let's hire someone to write a book that informs us that it turned out fine. yippee.#we wouldn't want anyone out there to feel uncomfortable about their revenge power fantasy videogame ostensibly about hard choices!#certainly wouldn't want to start a serious discussion about sexual harassment in the videogames industry#in some ways the backpedaling is worse from that perspective. if you're going to make edgy media with dubious characters. own it#have to add that I'm talking about popular character trends here and not specifically anyone who likes corvo. like whatever who cares.#but I sure am saying that rape culture means that his literal canon actions get shoved under the rug.#but no let's do unironic “feminist corvo” memes or some shit.#because he has a daughter I fucking guess.#oh its the rats? the rats that are following him are girls? we're still giving a woman to her stalker and its justified? oh? feminism?#ah yes corvo the human trafficker. the feminist icon#cool.
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