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bloge

@multi-void-household / multi-void-household.tumblr.com

she/her | 18+ Only
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hello there

okay so after a few years of twitter exclusivity I’m over it and I recognize that tumblr has done everything it’s ever going to do about the nsfw content ban. i have decided I’m going to at least try and come back to this site. however I am SO divorced from ALL the interests I had when I used this ancient blog that I am going to start over. i can’t make a sideblog, I can’t repurpose this one, it’s just too attached to old stuff and old people

so if you’re reading this and know who i am and still give a shit about my trash takes you can follow me on my new blog inthevoidzone. my current interests are fire emblem, star trek, granblue fantasy, scifi/fantasy novels, genshin impact, and arknights. i am still very very very anti that big fandom I was in when most of you knew me and I will for my mental health not be following anyone with profile pics or anything related to that fandom until i relearn xkit. thanks and sorry for being eternally cringe!!

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I realize they’re all in good fun but I honestly kind of really hate “boomer” jokes. Age isn’t the problem. People born in the 50s dodged the draft and protested wars and broke down those first barriers of civil rights and threw bricks at Stonewall. The gay elders who fought the AIDS crisis in die-ins  were born in the 60s and 70s are are often in the demographic lumped into “boomer” jokes as well. Like I get it, old white center right idiots made the world bad and now many complain that millennials and gen zers don’t buy enough diamonds. But ageism is a thing and it is not aimed at the young. Boomers aren’t all -- or even MOSTLY -- coasting by on fat pensions. They were also factory workers and janitors and receptionists who lost their jobs in the recession are are now too old with too outdated an education to find new jobs. You see more boomers than you do teens working at Mcdonalds, these days. Elder abuse and elder poverty are huge issues that are only on the rise. And like yeah some of them are assholes but I just really dislike these divisions along generational lines. The elderly are some of the most disadvantaged people in our society. There’s also the fact that people MY age -- 34, for those counting -- who grew up with computers, who never flew before 9/11, who have to teach our parents how to use a printer 5 times a year, who are suffering under student debt and came of age durig a recession which destroyed our ability to get decent jobs and who mostly still don’t have marriages, houses, or assets, are actually getting called ‘boomer,’ too. And at this point it sure does start to sound a lot like “you are old enough to be a parent and so that’s all you are” and then we sure are getting into some maiden/mother/crone shit, aren’t we???? Anyway. I know that it’s a joke and that honestly older people can be deeply frustrating in their complete lack of understanding how the world they helped make actually works sometimes, but the rise of ‘boomer’ as a hilarious insult just bums me out. A story by me the end.

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I just quit the Strilonde Jam Discord at long last bc this. I was reluctant to bc it was my hub for the fandom for a long time, but also I know that with “” “homestuck 2”“” and those fucking epilogues, I need to not be in a space that discusses it. Which brings me to my final send-off from that discord and by extension the HS fandom. Let my final action in this fandom be this: Don’t read them. Don’t read more of this shit. I remember the three days after the Epilogues dropped and the sheer deluge of hurt they caused, and then how the team behind them reacted. You Didn’t Get It. It’s not going to be different. And I am genuinely, to my bones, worried about people who continue to engage with it. Remember that hatereading can become a form of digital self harm, and if the Epilogues hurt you, then this project continuation will too. There is no good faith to be had here. It’s okay to not read them. For many of you, that is the healthiest choice, and if you need to hear it stated plainly then here it is: Don’t read them. There is other media out there. There is better media out there. Homestuck does this thing where it gives you this myopic fear that Nothing Will Ever Be This Good. And it’s wrong. There is better shit out there and better people to support. Go, and relearn what it’s like not to have a contentious relationship with your media again. It’s a massive fucking relief. Take care of yourselves and fuck Andrew Hussie.

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real talk though why is fandom apparently 90% populated by people who still think their high school english teachers were just, like, making up the entire concept of textual analysis.

Because they couldn’t connect to the texts that their English teachers were trying to teach them textual analysis with. A lot of the classics are dry, written by old white men about younger white men, and held up as standards of literature, rather than what they actually are: books that were popular/influential in their time. 

And look, I think it’s worth reading the classics just to figure out things about the people who talk them up. Someone who likes Hunter S Thompson is probably an anarchist at heart. Someone who uncritically likes Ian Fleming is a misogynist. That kind of thing.

I don’t want to come off as harsh with the wall o’text but I can’t let this one go.

#1 - You do not have to LIKE a text in order to analyze it, any more than you have to like the periodic table to balance chemical equations. An intellectual understanding of narrative form & structure is not remotely the same thing as an emotional connection to a story, and it’s honestly bizarre to conflate them. 

In an ideal world, yeah! Lit teachers would pick engaging texts and/or work hard to help students engage with texts that might be outside their comfort zone. But nobody’s claiming that people’s failure to grasp foundational math and science concepts is totally understandable because their textbooks were dry. We’re not talking about obscure layers-deep symbolism that relies on the reader’s familiarity with the specific cultural and historical context in which a novel was written, here. We’re talking about concepts as basic as “unreliable narrators exist” and “symbolism is not in fact a fake thing that your teachers made up.” 

Just…think about how weird it would be if people went around unironically declaring that fractions are meaningless witchcraft because they were bored in math class, as people frequently do when discussing literary analysis. Math and science knowledge is viewed as valuable BECAUSE it’s difficult and occasionally dry. It’s just literature that has to be not merely enjoyable but effortless before we consider it worthy of study. 

Frankly it has everything to do with devaluation of liberal arts and especially art, and with disdain for artistic interpretation as some kind of pointless reading of tea leaves as opposed to a set of genuine and genuinely useful skills (abstract conceptual reasoning, pattern recognition, structuring an argument) that one learns via practice and effort.

#2 - There are endless reasons to criticize the western literary canon and the way it’s taught, but again, the notion that you have to be able to connect with a narrative on some deep personal level in order to engage with it is nonsense. In fact it’s the selfsame logic of all the dudebros who dismiss fiction that doesn’t center on straight white dudes because I can’t put my finger on it but I just don’t ~connect~ with the protagonist, you know? Fiction stretches your empathy muscles the same way geometric proofs stretch your deductive reasoning skills, which is part of the reason lit classes are a valuable educational tool in the first place.

Is it fair that everybody else is constantly being asked to empathize with the perspectives of straight white dudes, when straight white dudes are so, so rarely asked to return the favor? No! Not in the slightest! But I don’t see how it’s helpful - or even accurate - to concede to the whiny dudebro logic that people just aren’t capable of connecting to perspectives and experiences outside their own.

Again, I’m not saying that everybody who doesn’t see themselves represented should suck it up. I’m saying that - specifically because this is a problem, and a vitally necessary one to address - it’s important to talk about that problem with clarity rather than echoing the arguments of people we don’t want to echo.

#3 - Relatedly, you’re really overlooking the fact that sometimes textual analysis can just be you and your spite-fueled 20k word essay that says, in essence, “I fucking loathed this book and here is my extremely articulate and well-argued explanation of why.” If it is in fact articulate and well-argued then any decent lit teacher (and there are a lot of bad ones, which again is an issue worth discussing but not the one we’re addressing here) will return it to you saying, more or less, “I feel privileged to have witnessed this elegantly merciless dissection, also here’s an angle you may have neglected to make it even more thorough.” There’s a reason it’s called criticism. Textual analysis includes Chinua Achebe and Viet Thanh Nguyen telling Heart of Darkness and Apocalypse Now to meet them in the pit. 

#4 - I’m glad you’ve specified “uncritically” here but - no? You can’t actually make reliable snap judgments about people based on what art they like?

The beautiful infuriating thing about stories and symbols is that they resist singular interpretations. That’s why they’re good tools for discussing subjects (like human emotions) too complex to reduce to variables on a sheet. They can stand a certain amount of internal contradiction and actually be stronger for it, like tensile architecture. 

Likewise people are complicated and the stuff they take from art is not always predictable, either as a creator or a fellow audience member. Plenty of Hunter S Thompson fans are just there for the air of transgressiveness. Paul Ryan likes Rage Against The Machine; David Cameron claimed “The Eton Rifles” was one of his favorite songs. Somebody at Marvel made the frankly astonishing decision to use “The Revolution Will Not Be Televised” as…uh…marketing. There’s a lot of ostensible satire (eg Fight Club, movie-version Starship Troopers) that is beloved of the people being satirized, and anti-war themes bypassing audiences is so common there’s a meme. (And a lot of counter-memes.)

As irritating as this is when it’s just people spectacularly missing the point, there can also be a lot of subversive power in reading a text against itself. And sometimes people just encounter one at an important time in their lives. Sometimes it sparks an understanding or captures an experience they’ve never seen captured before, and that makes it meaningful to them. Tolkien loved Norse mythology and so did Nazis and he was pretty peeved about it. Meanwhile there are some undeniably uncomfortable elements in Tolkien’s work that white supremacists respond to, even as others respond to the anti-war sentiment or the insistence that power corrupts or the portrayal of heroism as small and bruised and gentle. For the most part it’s not what someone likes that teaches you something about them - it’s WHY they like it. 

Not coincidentally this concept - that the substance of an argument is at least as important as the conclusion, that nuance is everything - is pretty fundamental to textual analysis, and another reason it’s valuable to learn.

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stormsbourne

not to get into Fire Emblem discourse or anything but when people say edelgard is only disliked because of misogyny, but then proceed to explain that rhea is a monster who brainwashes children to worship her and isn’t Punished Enough For Her Crimes, I make a face

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fics

Hey people I wish tumblr weren’t a dying platform twitter sucks!!! In case people didn’t notice, my Homestuck longfics have been getting reposted thanks to @nomisupernova who has generously volunteered to update them weekly. This includes All I Know Are Sad Songs (aikass) and drive it home with one headlight.  I am so insanely grateful to them for doing this!! I’m pretty much done with homestuck but these fics are important to me and to a lot of other people and I’m glad I have some help getting them back up for everyone to experience. I’ve also reposted my big gay bad sex Octopath Traveler fic, Especially Pretty Men, the best thing I wrote that nobody read :V I’m mostly writing fe3h these days, should probably post links here but tumblr is dying why is it dying twitter is suuuucks

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sometimes I just want to discuss felix/dimitri at 4 AM

I feel like Felix and Dimitri’s dynamic is quite easy to misunderstand if you’re used to FE games where most relationship development happens in supports, because there’s a lot about them you only learn outside of their supports… so let’s discuss those bits of dialogue! in fact, why don’t we discuss all of it?

god this is why I miss tumblr this in depth meta is SO good and you don’t get this on twitter. THANK YOU FOR SHARING EVERYONE READ THIS.

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nobody asked but here is who I ship literally every FE3H character with

Dimitri: Felix, Dedue, Byleth, Flayn Dedue: Dimtiri, Ashe Felix: Dimitri, Dorothea, Annette Sylvain: Ingrid, Dorothea Mercedes: Annette, Byleth Annette: Mercedes, Hilda, Felix Ingrid: Glenn, Sylvain, Ashe Ashe: Caspar, Ingrid, Dedue, Petra Edelgard: Hubert, Dorothea, Petra Hubert: Edelgard, Ferdinand Ferdinand: Hubert, Manuela, Dorothea, Bernadetta Dorothea: Edelgard, Ferdinand, Felix, Sylvain, Manuela Petra: Ashe, Edelgard Bernadetta: Ferdinand Linhardt: Caspar, Flayn, Lysithea, Marianne Caspar: Ashe, Linhardt Claude: Hilda, Lyisthea, Lorenz Hilda: Annette, Claude, Marianne, Lorenz Lysithea: Claude, Linhardt Leonie: Lorenz Marianne: Raphael, Lorenz, Ignatz, Hilda Lorenz: Leonie, Marianne, Claude, Manuela, Hilda Raphael: Marianne Ignatz: Flayn, Marianne Rhea: Byleth, Catherine Seteth: Byleth Flayn: Dimitri, Ignatz Alois: -- Gilbert: -- (but I personally want to climb on top of him wowee 10/10 hottie) Manuela: Ferdinand, Dorothea, Lorenz, Hanneman Hanneman: Manuela, Byleth Shamir: Catherine, Raphael Catherine: Shamir, Rhea Cyril: --

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