Elizabeth Barrette (ysabetwordsmith) wrote,
Elizabeth Barrette
ysabetwordsmith

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Pr0n vs. Romance

Tags: art, gender studies, humor, romance
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  • 21 comments
I'd always heard that the difference was "Porn is written by men. Romance is written by women."
It's kinda like the ST TOS episode - http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/The_Savage_Curtain

The big ugly alien sets up a contest between good and evil,
and notices that both sides basically bash each others heads open with big sticks,
so he doesn't see the difference...
right, well, Kirk asks,
"What did you offer them, and what did you offer us?"
And the big ugly alien says,
"I offered them power, and I offered you the freedom and safety of your crew. Oh. Never mind."
Everyone has a price. Some people merely keep theirs in a nonstandard location.
Excellent synopsis of that episode! :-D
Thank you.
I often do that same thing with passages from the bible...
:)
There is one place where that episode fails... not all those who seek power are evil. I have some characters who seek to rule the world so they can end things like starvation, genocide, and other forms of suffering. Is that good or evil?

Then too, there are evil characters who want nothing to do with power. They wouldn't take power if it was given to them.
That reminds me of why Kovid, my evil warlord-wizard, first stepped onto the path that led to taking over the world.

Raiders trampled his onions one too many times.

Really. He was perfectly happy as a scholarly recluse in a quiet little tower with a garden, not too far from a village. But people kept ransacking his yard, so he dealt with them; and that threw more pressure onto the villagers, who came to him for help; and things just sort of snowballed from there. It explains a lot about his often-short temper dealing with people.
Feel free to correct me if I'm mistaken,
but that's essentially how the US became an ally of Napoleon;
the British conscripted a few too many american sailors.

For that matter,
it's probably also how Israel got where it is today.
Winning a war in six days seemed like such a good thing
when it happened. *sigh* The Sum of All Fears, indeed...
That episode was one of many that season
which were just lame rationalizations of US involvement in Vietnam.

But, yes, there are exceptions to that rule;
however, there are few exceptions to the rule about
power corrupting, and absolute power corrupting absolutely.
>>That episode was one of many that season
which were just lame rationalizations of US involvement in Vietnam.<<

I would say "exploration" rather than "rationalization." Some episodes were more favorable, while others made war look stupid and atavistic.

>>however, there are few exceptions to the rule about
power corrupting, and absolute power corrupting absolutely.<<

The complete saying is that "Power tends to corrupt, and absolute power tends to corrupt absolutely." I think it's the approach, rather than the arrival, that is the problem. If you have truly absolute power, then nothing can threaten you, and you don't have anything to left to fight against except yourself. That encourages a shift of perspective. Also worth considering is the way people handle power, specifically, whether they concentrate it or spread it. A person who delegates comfortably is less prone to power trips, and some people simply aren't attracted to power in the first place.

*chuckle* I am always amused to imagine how frustrating it must have for the Ring of Doom to keep getting picked up by hobbits, since the Rings were all racially targeted. It had a really hard time getting a grip on hobbits; gaining traction required very lengthy exposure. And Sam blew it off quite explicitly because its prime temptation was so utterly alien to his personality. By that time, the poor Ring must have been like, "AGH! No! Not ANOTHER hobbit! Help!"



The question of exploration/rationalization
wouldn't be the first time we haven't fully agreed on a particular point...

You're probably right about the quote, too,
although it might be a matter of how one understands/translates
the original Latin...

and now I'll be thinking about writing a synopsis of LotR
from the Ring's POV...

Hmmm...
>>The question of exploration/rationalization
wouldn't be the first time we haven't fully agreed on a particular point...<<

True. A key point for me, however, is that several ST episodes caused a ruckus when they were released, because they were perceived at that time as criticizing the war. Interpretations today might vary.

>>You're probably right about the quote, too,
although it might be a matter of how one understands/translates
the original Latin...<<

True. Much can get lost in translation. I prefer the "tends to" variation because it helps avoid the always/never logical fallacy.

>>and now I'll be thinking about writing a synopsis of LotR
from the Ring's POV...<<

*laugh* That would be SO cool! I would love to see that. It would be as much fun as the Very Secret Diaries.
Hmmm...
The raging paranoia of the Nixon administration may have seen them as critical...

And this is what I came up with, LotR-wise...

He didn't throw me, I jumped.

They say a pie gag only works when the sap has dignity. Listen, I was created to corrupt. It's my passion, my raison d'etre. But Gollum? Imagine a tsumani rushing to shore and sweeping aside a sand castle. I thought I'd never get out of his slimy hands. But then what do I get? A hobbit. Corrupting a hobbit is like prying something loose with a crowbar that has only one end. No place to apply the force; no way to get any leverage. Oh, and then, after years of just the occasional disappearance, a bit of skylarking now and then, he has one short twinge of regret when he gives me away to another hobbit! I can't tell you how much I was looking forward to the darkest depths of Mordor. *sigh* And in the darkness? Never mind them.
>>The raging paranoia of the Nixon administration may have seen them as critical...<<

Yeah, that time period was very narrow-minded and touchy. I think it's important to look at things both in terms of their historical context and in terms of modern context, because then you can sort of overlay the two and compare changes.

>>And this is what I came up with, LotR-wise...<<

*laaaaauuuuugh* Thank you. That's a gem.

Re: Thoughts

msstacy13

10 years ago