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Kentinal
Great Reader

4685 Posts

Posted - 15 Aug 2021 :  17:46:04  Show Profile Send Kentinal a Private Message  Reply with Quote
quote:
Originally posted by Wooly Rupert

quote:
Originally posted by sno4wy

quote:
Originally posted by Wooly Rupert
So the good drow living in this utopian city kidnap people for coming too close? Do they wipe their memories, too, involuntarily, or imprison the people forever?



Basically, yeah. Jarlaxle, Catti-brie, Zaknafein and Entreri wander too close and they're met with armed guards from Callidae, whom escort them to be questioned and then put under watch. They're not allowed to leave without getting their memories of the place wiped.

Visitors are allowed to stay if they're deemed non-malicious, but anyone who wants to leave gets their memories wiped. Non-cooperative people are imprisoned, and those deemed malicious are executed via exposure to the arctic conditions (or kicked off a cliff). The four protags were actually subject to this after they accidentally brought in the chaos phage, those goodly utopian drow were very quick to go from "welcome guests" to "any last words?"

The involuntary nature of the memory erasure is heavily romanticized with how wonderful Callidae is -- it's so great that all who pass through would willingly give up their memories to protect it.



Wow, so they were going to be executed for bringing something into a place they themselves were involuntarily brought to?

...I have no words for this.



Clearly RAS has a vastly "improved" good Drow then what was before, getting rid of those flawed good Drow that followed Eilistraee. What is more scary is WotC appears to have no problem with this.

"Small beings can have small wisdom," the dragon said. "And small wise beings are better than small fools. Listen: Wisdom is caring for afterwards."
"Caring for afterwards ...? Ker repeated this without understanding.
"After action, afterwards," the dragon said. "Choose the afterwards first, then the action. Fools choose action first."
"Judgement" copyright 2003 by Elizabeth Moon
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sleyvas
Skilled Spell Strategist

USA
11691 Posts

Posted - 15 Aug 2021 :  18:10:16  Show Profile Send sleyvas a Private Message  Reply with Quote
Lol, so let me get this straight

"Hey, who are you? You wandered into an unsanctioned area. You are now our prisoners!"
walk to city
"Hey, you're infected with a disease! Choose now... death or we mind rape you and send you away?"
"Um, are those our only choices?"
"Yes, oh, wait, maybe we can cure that disease? Nah, that's too much trouble for an outlander. But its ok, we're better than you"

Does that match up to what happened in the book roughly or am I misunderstanding and there were some other offerings?

Alavairthae, may your skill prevail

Phillip aka Sleyvas
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Irennan
Great Reader

Italy
3802 Posts

Posted - 15 Aug 2021 :  18:18:15  Show Profile Send Irennan a Private Message  Reply with Quote
Yeah, especially considering that this chaos phage can supposedly be healed by a mere "cure disease". These aevendrow guys are said to be able to summon food at will through magic, which is a spell of similar level to "cure disease". This means that curing that disease should be a walk in the park to them.

Mathematics is the art of giving the same name to different things.
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sno4wy
Senior Scribe

USA
466 Posts

Posted - 17 Aug 2021 :  21:44:54  Show Profile Send sno4wy a Private Message  Reply with Quote
I'm sorry for my slow responses, thinking about the shit that Bob does always seems to sap my strength.

Ok, so, there's an "explanation" for why they don't magically cure Zak: for some unexplained reason, way up north, magic grows weaker and weaker as the Autumn Equinox approaches, to the point that all magic stops working until it passes. The 4 protags stumble into the outer regions of Callidae because their magical enchantments that ward against the cold are failing and they thought they'd find some respite in a crack in the glacier. To stave off the progression of the phage, Zak is basically put into a refrigerator chamber thingy.
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sleyvas
Skilled Spell Strategist

USA
11691 Posts

Posted - 17 Aug 2021 :  22:20:36  Show Profile Send sleyvas a Private Message  Reply with Quote
So they just happened in, got the chaos phage, and showed up right as "the power's out" .... and that's why they're going to use "the power" to mind rape them and send them away? I mean if they have magic to "mind rape", they should have power to cure disease. Admittedly, I didn't read the book, and I'm basing this on what I'm being told, but something sounds hinky with this explanation. Maybe its divine magic that's affected by the Autumn Equinox and not arcane?

Alavairthae, may your skill prevail

Phillip aka Sleyvas
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sleyvas
Skilled Spell Strategist

USA
11691 Posts

Posted - 17 Aug 2021 :  22:35:27  Show Profile Send sleyvas a Private Message  Reply with Quote
By the way, so far, what I've heard described of these drow in this story, despite it being so "wrong".... I find it great. See I look at it as these are drow that think they're better than everyone else, and unlike those "other horrible drow", they say the "proper" things that are supposed to be said. In other words, they're hypocrites, and they're using the fact that they have better "tech" to validate their horrible behavior. They probably take every chance they can to tell all those "uninformed" people just how "uninformed" and "clueless" they are and preach on how their society is so much better as a result. Of course, their society being so much better, its okay then if they perform some overtly horrible act in order to keep their society functioning. I mean, its all for "the greater good" in the end. If it weren't for all those "horrible other unlearned people" then things would be okay....

sound familiar?

Alavairthae, may your skill prevail

Phillip aka Sleyvas
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Irennan
Great Reader

Italy
3802 Posts

Posted - 17 Aug 2021 :  22:56:38  Show Profile Send Irennan a Private Message  Reply with Quote
They won't go for that, it's the exact contrary of what they're trying to do by adding these new drow societies--showing that the drow can be shining beacons of good and perfection. Apparently, "perfect utopia and ignoring all the problems that arise when writing it"="good representation", didn't you know? If they added the kind of mindset that you describe, the aevendrow would have the same supremacist attitude as the Lolthites, and they won't go for it.

I totally get where you're coming from, though. As I mentioned before, the only use for such a setting in writing (aka a way to produce conflict) is to tear it down in a way that reflects your thematic viewpoint. The biggest way to do it probably consists of showing problems that came to be in this apparently perfect society due to some flawed idea that lies behind it all (flawed in relation to your thematic viewpoint), and leading those problems to their conclusion. The example of self-proclaimed perfect utopia that tries to civilize the rest of the world comes to mind for the aevendrow.

But Idk, it's like they're tyring to concentrate all the bad writing tropes into one place. You have the perfect utopia powered by "a wizard did it", that is extremely isolationist because "those savages out there would ruin everything" but also somehow a place of enlightenment, that can do bad things, but it's either involuntary or preemptive self-defense, so it's not actually bad. What's worse is that this book isn't even describing an organization, but a whole city-state, double the size of Menzo, that somehow manages to be entirely free of internal problems or conflicts, and whose only troubles are the slaadi. Smh...

It reminds me of horrible fanfic writers creating horrible Mary Sues. While the implication of some of the aspects of this society becomes evident when examined, the story will either ignore it (probably the case here), or paint it as not really bad, because it's necessary, or even romanticize it. Bleh...

Mathematics is the art of giving the same name to different things.

Edited by - Irennan on 17 Aug 2021 23:26:17
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sleyvas
Skilled Spell Strategist

USA
11691 Posts

Posted - 17 Aug 2021 :  23:26:25  Show Profile Send sleyvas a Private Message  Reply with Quote
quote:
Originally posted by Irennan

Yeah, especially considering that this chaos phage can supposedly be healed by a mere "cure disease". These aevendrow guys are said to be able to summon food at will through magic, which is a spell of similar level to "cure disease". This means that curing that disease should be a walk in the park to them.



I bet these aevendrow have some special showers they could send non-aevendrow people to that would do a permanent cure disease on them.

Alavairthae, may your skill prevail

Phillip aka Sleyvas
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Irennan
Great Reader

Italy
3802 Posts

Posted - 17 Aug 2021 :  23:42:05  Show Profile Send Irennan a Private Message  Reply with Quote
Yes, that's an important observation, actually. They are able to effortlessly resolve famines and plagues, yet they choose to not do anything. Like, if my understanding is correct, it would cost literally nothing to them. They can summon infinite food (top tier quality, all the flavors you want at that!), which means they can also likely cure illnesses at will (since the power/energy required is roughly the same). They could *teach* this creation magic to others (btw, what kind of magic do they use?), even upon compensation (though they have no use for compensation or resources of any kind, since they have all they need). They could streamline it, produce tomes/manuals and send them everywhere, and make all he world a perfect utopia. This too would cost them little to nothing--if they have all the resources they need, then they have unlimited free time to write those manuals too. However, they choose to do nothing about this and just hide under some glacier, and for whatever reason the story ignores this and labels them as "good" (I'm also willing to bet that RAS sings their praises throghout the book).

Mathematics is the art of giving the same name to different things.

Edited by - Irennan on 17 Aug 2021 23:43:39
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Dalor Darden
Great Reader

USA
4211 Posts

Posted - 18 Aug 2021 :  16:47:28  Show Profile Send Dalor Darden a Private Message  Reply with Quote
This all seems like a perfect example of this city-state having built up a lot of "ends justify the means" Good Credit: we do so much good, that a little bad isn't wrong.

AKA Moral Licensing.

The Old Grey Box and AD&D for me!
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Irennan
Great Reader

Italy
3802 Posts

Posted - 18 Aug 2021 :  17:21:42  Show Profile Send Irennan a Private Message  Reply with Quote
They don't even do any good to others, even though it would cost them nothing to help other civilizations get rid of a crapton of major issues. From the description, they just think of how to prosper themselves, but don't reach out to help.

So yeah, they may do good to themselves, but they can't use that to justify crap done to others.

Mathematics is the art of giving the same name to different things.

Edited by - Irennan on 18 Aug 2021 17:24:07
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Dalor Darden
Great Reader

USA
4211 Posts

Posted - 18 Aug 2021 :  17:35:14  Show Profile Send Dalor Darden a Private Message  Reply with Quote
Moral Licensing often is group inclusive. A group can do well as a whole (even if only to their own group) and then is able to justify bad things (even to outsiders).

This city-state has continued to do good for their own sake (one helping another) that they likely don't see any action they take to preserve their "Goodness" as bad.

The Old Grey Box and AD&D for me!
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Cards77
Senior Scribe

USA
745 Posts

Posted - 18 Aug 2021 :  18:13:40  Show Profile Send Cards77 a Private Message  Reply with Quote
Two things:

1) RA Salvatore writing about dark elves is beating a dead horse that's been dead for 20 years......of course it's boring. He's been doing the same trick for 20 years.

2) His highly touted "fight scenes" are just a bunch of word salad. I never did get it.

There are so SO many great authors out there who don't get nearly the credit they deserve for their characters and story development.

I'm looking squarely at Richard Baker.

Compare and contrast The Last Mythal trilogy vs....well anything else.

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sno4wy
Senior Scribe

USA
466 Posts

Posted - 18 Aug 2021 :  18:46:20  Show Profile Send sno4wy a Private Message  Reply with Quote
quote:
Originally posted by Cards77

Two things:

1) RA Salvatore writing about dark elves is beating a dead horse that's been dead for 20 years......of course it's boring. He's been doing the same trick for 20 years.

2) His highly touted "fight scenes" are just a bunch of word salad. I never did get it.

There are so SO many great authors out there who don't get nearly the credit they deserve for their characters and story development.

I'm looking squarely at Richard Baker.

Compare and contrast The Last Mythal trilogy vs....well anything else.



"Word salad" I LOVE IT. May I borrow this descriptor for Bob's combat scenes?

Agreed about Richard Baker, although my personal favorite is a different trilogy of his. Still, really happy to see the mention!
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Irennan
Great Reader

Italy
3802 Posts

Posted - 18 Aug 2021 :  19:15:14  Show Profile Send Irennan a Private Message  Reply with Quote
quote:
Originally posted by Dalor Darden

Moral Licensing often is group inclusive. A group can do well as a whole (even if only to their own group) and then is able to justify bad things (even to outsiders).

This city-state has continued to do good for their own sake (one helping another) that they likely don't see any action they take to preserve their "Goodness" as bad.



Ahh, got it, you were talking about their own perception of their actions. In that case, well yes, I agree. The problem comes when the story itself doesn't show their actions from any other lenses other than their own "heroic" narrative of what they do.
That's easy to do using a PoV that doesn't belong to the society, like RAS does, but you don't even need to use the PoV of an outsider to show the wrong in this soceity's beliefs. You can do that while still filtering everything from their perpsective.

As an example (unrelated to the aevendrow), let's say your character is be a factory owner with a disregard for their workers. They think that workers only think about lazing off and freeloading. So, when this owner enter their factory and sees a worker taking a break, they'll immediately judge that worker negatively.

However, you can make the owner throw a fit of rage when the worker, taken aback by the sudden inspection, mistakenly hits the pile of finished items next to them and makes many of them fall on the ground. The owner will perceive them as an incompetent idiot, will think that this person should have never been hired, maybe make plans to detract the value of the broken items from their pay, or even to fire them. However, at the same time, you will have shown that the worker has actually worked quite a lot, since they made that pile of finished items.

Then the worker might try to salvage the items, and the owner will be even more frustrated by their slow/goofy movements. The owner will perceive such movements as incompetence or lazyness, but you will have shown that the worker is tired. You could even describe (from the owner's PoV) the worker bringing their "dirty hands" to rub their "dead fish eyes", make some comment about the ugly eye bags, etc... to highlight how overworked this person is and at the same time show how the prejudice of the owner colors their perception of the worker with disgust. This is an exaggeration of course, but it's good to show what I mean.

Basically, the point is that you can show the aevendrow perception of their action as justified, while also showing all the wrong in it. So there's no excuse for not doing that, except lazyness or wanting a Mary Sue society. This is especially true for RAS, who doesn't seem to know what a PoV or character filter are, and doesn't shy away from just telling stuff to the reader (with a giant megaphone descending from the sky in the story to make comments), so it would be incredibly easy for him to tell that it's just the aevendrow that perceive their actions as justified.

Mathematics is the art of giving the same name to different things.

Edited by - Irennan on 18 Aug 2021 19:30:25
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Wooly Rupert
Master of Mischief
Moderator

USA
36779 Posts

Posted - 18 Aug 2021 :  19:18:26  Show Profile Send Wooly Rupert a Private Message  Reply with Quote
quote:
Originally posted by sno4wy

quote:
Originally posted by Cards77

Two things:
1) RA Salvatore writing about dark elves is beating a dead horse that's been dead for 20 years......of course it's boring. He's been doing the same trick for 20 years.
2) His highly touted "fight scenes" are just a bunch of word salad. I never did get it.
There are so SO many great authors out there who don't get nearly the credit they deserve for their characters and story development.
I'm looking squarely at Richard Baker.
Compare and contrast The Last Mythal trilogy vs....well anything else.


"Word salad" I LOVE IT. May I borrow this descriptor for Bob's combat scenes?
Agreed about Richard Baker, although my personal favorite is a different trilogy of his. Still, really happy to see the mention!



For me, Richard Baker tells a better story -- but his characters don't grab me. They feel flat, and like whatever they're doing in the story is just going through the motions. Off the top of my head, I can't think of a single character of his that I liked. (Not saying I disliked them; they were all just bundles of meh)

RAS, on the other hand -- I've liked several of his characters, at least until I got tired of reading about them. And I will always dig Jarlaxle.

Admittedly, RAS has also had some characters that were... questionable, at best, IMO. And the fact I've stopped reading his stuff is commentary enough on the stories.

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Edited by - Wooly Rupert on 18 Aug 2021 19:20:38
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sno4wy
Senior Scribe

USA
466 Posts

Posted - 19 Aug 2021 :  04:55:52  Show Profile Send sno4wy a Private Message  Reply with Quote
quote:
Originally posted by sleyvas

So they just happened in, got the chaos phage, and showed up right as "the power's out" .... and that's why they're going to use "the power" to mind rape them and send them away? I mean if they have magic to "mind rape", they should have power to cure disease. Admittedly, I didn't read the book, and I'm basing this on what I'm being told, but something sounds hinky with this explanation. Maybe its divine magic that's affected by the Autumn Equinox and not arcane?



That's not quite how it goes, but it's on me for not laying out the plot. In my defense though, the sequence of "this happened, and then this happened, and then this happened" is less exciting than some grocery lists that I've read.

Alrighty, so, the four protags were trudging around at the top of the world trying to figure out where Doum'wielle went two years ago after being thrown up there by Gromph. There's an avalanche, Entreri and Catti-brie get injured, the four find a cave to rest in. Zak explores the depths of the cave and finds an egg hatchery tended to by a frost giant. Frost giant didn't like having an intruder and fought with Zak, Zak gets injured and returns to where the others are. They're approached by a drow who's actually a blue slaad in disguise, more fighting ensues, Zak gets infected with chaos phage, they kill the slaad and gtfo from the cave.

Then, more wandering around, eventually finding Callidae. The aevendrow interrogated them and wanted to know literally everything that happened to them since they showed up in the north, they left out the detail about the slaad cave because the slaad's drow disguise spoke in the same dialect that the aevendrow did.

Zak's chaos phage is exposed when he was wrestling with an aevendrow in a vat of frozen grapes because that's apparently part of their wine-making process (they actually like having blood in the wine). The four protags were then seized by these good drow who jumped right to the assumption that they intentionally deceived them, all the while the protags had no idea what they did wrong as they're being exposed to the elements with their warm clothes preemptively stripped away. Charming, right?

Edited by - sno4wy on 19 Aug 2021 04:58:15
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sno4wy
Senior Scribe

USA
466 Posts

Posted - 19 Aug 2021 :  05:04:46  Show Profile Send sno4wy a Private Message  Reply with Quote
quote:
Originally posted by Irennan

Yes, that's an important observation, actually. They are able to effortlessly resolve famines and plagues, yet they choose to not do anything. Like, if my understanding is correct, it would cost literally nothing to them. They can summon infinite food (top tier quality, all the flavors you want at that!), which means they can also likely cure illnesses at will (since the power/energy required is roughly the same). They could *teach* this creation magic to others (btw, what kind of magic do they use?), even upon compensation (though they have no use for compensation or resources of any kind, since they have all they need). They could streamline it, produce tomes/manuals and send them everywhere, and make all he world a perfect utopia. This too would cost them little to nothing--if they have all the resources they need, then they have unlimited free time to write those manuals too. However, they choose to do nothing about this and just hide under some glacier, and for whatever reason the story ignores this and labels them as "good" (I'm also willing to bet that RAS sings their praises throghout the book).



It isn't stated what magic they use, unless you mean arcane versus clerical, in which case they use both. There's also supposed to be magic in the aurora borealis, which they call the "Merry Dancers".

Yeah, Bob does indeed sing their praises. So much of the city is so incredibly over the top and unnecessary. For instance, there's this huge multi-story ice slide that's an entryway into the city, and it's so amazing that the guards that regularly go out to scout and return via this slide never get sick of it. And let's not forget the apex of Callidae's customs, the city-wide occasion that's basically basketball on ice in which literally the entire population of Callidae attends.

It's just so flat and uninteresting, the most cringe example for me is when Zak is admiring his aevendrow love interest, and there's this description about how there's something really different about this drow woman than any that Zak has seen before and oh, just look at how she is framed in the doorway of ice. It literally reads like, here is this woman, she is framed in the doorway of ice, and then it goes on to extol how soft and gentle she looks and it's like, how tf is anyone supposed to get that impression from the description? But yeah, lots of stuff like that, all the time.
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Irennan
Great Reader

Italy
3802 Posts

Posted - 19 Aug 2021 :  11:14:56  Show Profile Send Irennan a Private Message  Reply with Quote
quote:
Originally posted by sno4wy
[...]how soft and gentle she looks and it's like, how tf is anyone supposed to get that impression from the description? But yeah, lots of stuff like that, all the time.



Yep, typical "invading narrator", the author that invades the thoughts of a character--or outright invades a scene with his giant megaphone--to scream to the reader how they should see/feel about something or someone, even though nothing shows that. Bonus points if that something has little to no relevance to the scene. Idk how a professional with decades of experience can still do amateurish stuff like this.

Mathematics is the art of giving the same name to different things.

Edited by - Irennan on 19 Aug 2021 11:18:06
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sleyvas
Skilled Spell Strategist

USA
11691 Posts

Posted - 19 Aug 2021 :  14:20:02  Show Profile Send sleyvas a Private Message  Reply with Quote
quote:
Originally posted by sno4wy

quote:
Originally posted by sleyvas

So they just happened in, got the chaos phage, and showed up right as "the power's out" .... and that's why they're going to use "the power" to mind rape them and send them away? I mean if they have magic to "mind rape", they should have power to cure disease. Admittedly, I didn't read the book, and I'm basing this on what I'm being told, but something sounds hinky with this explanation. Maybe its divine magic that's affected by the Autumn Equinox and not arcane?



That's not quite how it goes, but it's on me for not laying out the plot. In my defense though, the sequence of "this happened, and then this happened, and then this happened" is less exciting than some grocery lists that I've read.

Alrighty, so, the four protags were trudging around at the top of the world trying to figure out where Doum'wielle went two years ago after being thrown up there by Gromph. There's an avalanche, Entreri and Catti-brie get injured, the four find a cave to rest in. Zak explores the depths of the cave and finds an egg hatchery tended to by a frost giant. Frost giant didn't like having an intruder and fought with Zak, Zak gets injured and returns to where the others are. They're approached by a drow who's actually a blue slaad in disguise, more fighting ensues, Zak gets infected with chaos phage, they kill the slaad and gtfo from the cave.

Then, more wandering around, eventually finding Callidae. The aevendrow interrogated them and wanted to know literally everything that happened to them since they showed up in the north, they left out the detail about the slaad cave because the slaad's drow disguise spoke in the same dialect that the aevendrow did.

Zak's chaos phage is exposed when he was wrestling with an aevendrow in a vat of frozen grapes because that's apparently part of their wine-making process (they actually like having blood in the wine). The four protags were then seized by these good drow who jumped right to the assumption that they intentionally deceived them, all the while the protags had no idea what they did wrong as they're being exposed to the elements with their warm clothes preemptively stripped away. Charming, right?




Ok, now starting to see a little more of the story, and starting to wonder about it. If they want blood in their wine, I'm now wondering if their overly good representation isn't closer to what I'm talking about (as in they're actually being represented as hypocrites with a moral problem whose focus is only on themselves). This fits the description that Dalor Darden just spoke of, and I feel it could be an interesting topic to explore (i.e. elves that retreat to a portion of the world in order to help only themselves..... sound familiar?). Again, I'm basing this without reading the book, and I'm like 9 books behind in his trilogies because he's so prolific of an author, and I can only read so much of his stuff before I start to tire of the characters and need something else.

Alavairthae, may your skill prevail

Phillip aka Sleyvas

Edited by - sleyvas on 19 Aug 2021 14:21:35
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Irennan
Great Reader

Italy
3802 Posts

Posted - 19 Aug 2021 :  15:33:42  Show Profile Send Irennan a Private Message  Reply with Quote
quote:
Originally posted by sleyvas
If they want blood in their wine, I'm now wondering if their overly good representation isn't closer to what I'm talking about (as in they're actually being represented as hypocrites with a moral problem whose focus is only on themselves).



Why would liking blood in wine hint at any of that, though? It's just flavor stuff, and it's harmless. As I said, yeah, the hypocrisy would be an interesting narrative to explore, but the problem comes when the story doesn't show any of that. When, as sno4wy pointed out, the story romaticizes the erasure of memory, by saying that people are willing to have their memories erased because they want to protect Callidae so badly, then the story is condoning the aevendrow. Maybe this will change in future books, but for now we have a story that wants to have its cake and eat it too (by offering a "oh so perfect" society that does bad stuff, while ignoring that such bad stuff is, well, bad, and instead trying to paint it as ok).

-----------

On a related note, erasing memories might sound as not so much to some people, but it's huge. It's the same as erasing a person, or at least a part of that person. Our brains are associative, a huge part of what we think, feel--on a sensorial and emotional level--comes from association with memories. This process is so fast that the impressions related to memory come before our conscious thinking can kick in (and is one of the reasons behind A LOT of people's problems). Memories are very important to our identity, because they are key to the narrative that the brain creates of ourselves, and they massively influence the way we interact with the world (which is why character filter in narrative is so important--it makes the characters feel real). From many recent neuroscience studies, we know that memories are so important to our identity that, when an event doesn't conform to the idea that we have of ourselves at a given time (which also comes from previous experiences and memories), the brain alters the memories of the new event (or even creates events and stuff that didn't actually happen) to make them align with the perception that we have of ourself at the time. Basically, for something to become part of our personal memories, it has to align itself with the idea that we have of ourselves at the time.

It takes a lot of efforts to perceive things objectively (actually, as objectively as we can), and it takes a lot of actively being aware that our brains work like this to overcome all the problems that come from it (like certain kinds of bias and prejudice, or the fact that first impressions are hard to overcome, and that a lot of people don't even try to change them). Trying to forcefully alter someone's memories is however a violence on a deeper level than some would think.

-----

On an unrelated note, I wonder why they don't just conjure wine like they do with everything else. Is it just because they like the wrestling on grapes thingy?

Mathematics is the art of giving the same name to different things.

Edited by - Irennan on 19 Aug 2021 15:44:46
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Wooly Rupert
Master of Mischief
Moderator

USA
36779 Posts

Posted - 19 Aug 2021 :  16:08:37  Show Profile Send Wooly Rupert a Private Message  Reply with Quote
quote:
Originally posted by Irennan

On a related note, erasing memories might sound as not so much to some people, but it's huge. It's the same as erasing a person, or at least a part of that person. Our brains are associative, a huge part of what we think, feel--on a sensorial and emotional level--comes from association with memories. This process is so fast that the impressions related to memory come before our conscious thinking can kick in (and is one of the reasons behind A LOT of people's problems). Memories are very important to our identity, because they are key to the narrative that the brain creates of ourselves, and they massively influence the way we interact with the world (which is why character filter in narrative is so important--it makes the characters feel real). From many recent neuroscience studies, we know that memories are so important to our identity that, when an event doesn't conform to the idea that we have of ourselves at a given time (which also comes from previous experiences and memories), the brain alters the memories of the new event (or even creates events and stuff that didn't actually happen) to make them align with the perception that we have of ourself at the time. Basically, for something to become part of our personal memories, it has to align itself with the idea that we have of ourselves at the time.

It takes a lot of efforts to perceive things objectively (actually, as objectively as we can), and it takes a lot of actively being aware that our brains work like this to overcome all the problems that come from it (like certain kinds of bias and prejudice, or the fact that first impressions are hard to overcome, and that a lot of people don't even try to change them). Trying to forcefully alter someone's memories is however a violence on a deeper level than some would think.



This one book I read, the main character had the power to control other people's bodies, and also to make them feel pain. Thing was, the discovery of this power was associated with a lot of trauma, so she was never able to do a lot with it, and could only affect people if she was touching them skin-to-skin.

On top of that, the same initial trauma left her very meek and unwilling to stand up for herself.

But then she gets amnesia (actually, all her memories were actively removed). Because of circumstances, she's still trying to live the same life -- but she doesn't know that the previous version of her was notoriously meek, and when she discovers her powers a second time, she didn't know that she'd previously been limited to touch.

So she winds up far more assertive, and able to do a lot more with her powers -- because the memories that had shaped her personality and held her back were now gone.

I thought that was a really interesting exploration of the whole concept of a person losing their memories and how it would affect their personality.

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sleyvas
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Posted - 19 Aug 2021 :  16:39:35  Show Profile Send sleyvas a Private Message  Reply with Quote
quote:
Originally posted by Irennan

quote:
Originally posted by sleyvas
If they want blood in their wine, I'm now wondering if their overly good representation isn't closer to what I'm talking about (as in they're actually being represented as hypocrites with a moral problem whose focus is only on themselves).



Why would liking blood in wine hint at any of that, though? It's just flavor stuff, and it's harmless. As I said, yeah, the hypocrisy would be an interesting narrative to explore, but the problem comes when the story doesn't show any of that. When, as sno4wy pointed out, the story romaticizes the erasure of memory, by saying that people are willing to have their memories erased because they want to protect Callidae so badly, then the story is condoning the aevendrow. Maybe this will change in future books, but for now we have a story that wants to have its cake and eat it too (by offering a "oh so perfect" society that does bad stuff, while ignoring that such bad stuff is, well, bad, and instead trying to paint it as ok).

-----------

On a related note, erasing memories might sound as not so much to some people, but it's huge. It's the same as erasing a person, or at least a part of that person. Our brains are associative, a huge part of what we think, feel--on a sensorial and emotional level--comes from association with memories. This process is so fast that the impressions related to memory come before our conscious thinking can kick in (and is one of the reasons behind A LOT of people's problems). Memories are very important to our identity, because they are key to the narrative that the brain creates of ourselves, and they massively influence the way we interact with the world (which is why character filter in narrative is so important--it makes the characters feel real). From many recent neuroscience studies, we know that memories are so important to our identity that, when an event doesn't conform to the idea that we have of ourselves at a given time (which also comes from previous experiences and memories), the brain alters the memories of the new event (or even creates events and stuff that didn't actually happen) to make them align with the perception that we have of ourself at the time. Basically, for something to become part of our personal memories, it has to align itself with the idea that we have of ourselves at the time.

It takes a lot of efforts to perceive things objectively (actually, as objectively as we can), and it takes a lot of actively being aware that our brains work like this to overcome all the problems that come from it (like certain kinds of bias and prejudice, or the fact that first impressions are hard to overcome, and that a lot of people don't even try to change them). Trying to forcefully alter someone's memories is however a violence on a deeper level than some would think.

-----

On an unrelated note, I wonder why they don't just conjure wine like they do with everything else. Is it just because they like the wrestling on grapes thingy?



Agreed on the memory wipe thing, and that's why I keep using the term "mind rape" in reference to this.

On the blood in the wine thing... it CAN depend on the representation. But for them to specifically call this out in the novels makes me think that the point was to "point out something". Drinking blood is something that has long been thought of as evil (i.e. vampires).... and now my mind as a result of typing this just went somewhere I didn't expect.... or at least somewhat barbaric. What would be interesting to note would be "whose blood"... is it the blood of animals who have been slaughtered for food (wait, they make their food with magic, no)? Is it the blood of their own people or their enemies? Is there secretly a group of vampires living amongst them that like living in the far frozen north because its dark for long periods?

Now I'm really curious about this, but I may be overblowing the reference.

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Irennan
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Posted - 19 Aug 2021 :  16:49:13  Show Profile Send Irennan a Private Message  Reply with Quote
@Wooly
Yep, since human brains are associative, memories of traumas are one of the biggest factors in shaping a brain's "control theory" (a model it creates about how to control your environment, which is a huge part of people's identity).
Even though the example that you made is an interesting situation, and we see a removal of memories leading to a more assertive person, the original identity effectively disappeared. In this case the result was a "more efficient" person, but she could have become that even without giving up her memories. Basically, the erasure of memories made her skip the act of processing the trauma. I'm not saying that this would be a bad thing or a good thing in reality, btw. If that was actually possible for us, it should obviously remain a choice/option for people who suffer from trauma: for some people it could be a good thing, for some other a bad thing, but what's lost in this process should always be made clear to the person (also because this has practical downsides along with the upsides, especially in traumas due to abuse).

For example, in the case of this story, maybe the protagonist would have still become as a more assertive person if her memories had remained and she had processed her trauma, but her experiences could have reinforced her compassion and empathy towards others, and given her a different perspective on her power (using it only for dire needs, for example, because possessing people is a violence. Also, imposing herself limits on what to influence of aperson's life, etc...). Heightened compassion and empathy would have been the result of the part of her identity that the memory erasure sacrificed. Just making assumptions here, to explain what I mean.

About the story itself, IMO, it would have been more interesting if she had chosen to lose her memories, and we were shown the consequences of that choice--both positive and eventually negative--and she had to deal with all that. The choice should have been tied to the fatal flaw of the protagonist, which would have made all the consequences meaningful, rather than having the memory loss happen to her (which is my impression of what happened, from your description). But perhaps the focus of the story wasn't the loss of memory, and that was just a device to get the protag going for the 'real' plot (though in that case I'm left wondering why the author chose to even include the loss of memory and the processing of trauma if they weren't relevant to the core of the story--it would have been better to just start with an assertive character who possessed that power, give her a fatal flaw, and focus on the point of the story).

Basically, from a narrative perspective, if something like memory loss to overcome trauma is included, it's important to the story, so it shouldn't just "happen to" the protagonist. It should be a choice (or at least the reuslt of previous choices), and the character should face all the consequences (if she chooses to lose memory and all goes well, then that's not much of a story). The processing of a trauma also shouldn't stop being relevant all of sudden, including stuff like that in your story means that it's related to the central theme of the story (or that it actually is the central theme itself). Then again, maybe the story actually kept exploring the topic and did things right, after all the only part that I know is the one related to the memory loss itself.

Mathematics is the art of giving the same name to different things.

Edited by - Irennan on 19 Aug 2021 17:33:19
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Irennan
Great Reader

Italy
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Posted - 19 Aug 2021 :  16:56:17  Show Profile Send Irennan a Private Message  Reply with Quote
quote:
Originally posted by sleyvas


On the blood in the wine thing... it CAN depend on the representation. But for them to specifically call this out in the novels makes me think that the point was to "point out something". Drinking blood is something that has long been thought of as evil (i.e. vampires).... and now my mind as a result of typing this just went somewhere I didn't expect.... or at least somewhat barbaric. What would be interesting to note would be "whose blood"... is it the blood of animals who have been slaughtered for food (wait, they make their food with magic, no)? Is it the blood of their own people or their enemies? Is there secretly a group of vampires living amongst them that like living in the far frozen north because its dark for long periods?




From my understanding of sno4wy's explanation, they have gladiatorial fights in vats filled with grapes, so that the juice is squeezed out (a bit like in the past farmers would "dance" on the grapes to squeeze out the juice--rather 'eww' if you ask me, but yeah....), and at the same time some blood (from the cuts) goes into the juice. However, the fighters don't die, and the wounds are probably healed up like they're nothing afterwards, so there's no harm in this. Slaughtering animals, for example, would have indeed been interesting, and it would have pointed at something given that they can just conjure food, but this is actually harmless.

Idk, it just sounds like some edgy addition to me, given the context. Something like "they're so good and kind, but they still have this 'feral' instinct that they satisfy with harmless gladiatorial combats and blood-flavored wine", a bit like Drizzt and his hunter thingy. Don't get me wrong, channeling dark sides of your personality into constructive or harmless things is actually a worthy topic to explore, but unless it's actually explored throghout the whole story, it's just tacked on for the edge/shock factor ("omg, they drink blood??!1?? So edgy, and dark, and dangerous, and cool, and...")

As for the memory erasure, I pointed it out because if the story had actually tried to tell us something, that would have been golden material to do so. Instead, we see it condoned, which is very telling of what the author was trying to do.

Mathematics is the art of giving the same name to different things.

Edited by - Irennan on 19 Aug 2021 17:09:16
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sno4wy
Senior Scribe

USA
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Posted - 19 Aug 2021 :  19:28:50  Show Profile Send sno4wy a Private Message  Reply with Quote
quote:
Originally posted by Irennan
On an unrelated note, I wonder why they don't just conjure wine like they do with everything else. Is it just because they like the wrestling on grapes thingy?



Very good point, and of course one that Bob just glosses over. It makes little enough sense why they freeze the grapes before crushing them the old-fashioned way (supposedly it's to enhance the flavor but scientifically speaking? Yeah, no.), but then the totally unnecessary procedure... I think it's just fanservice tbh. The wrestlers wear a single layer shift, and at the start of one of the matches, a female aevendrow, to "show off her skill" does a handstand at the edge of the vat, which causes her shift to slide down and reveal all of her "goods". Those grape wrestling matches, along with the brutal basketball on ice that's intentionally played during when magic doesn't work, are all supposed to show that the aevendrow work hard and play hard, and such activities are what keeps them in tip-top shape like how the drow in Menzo are. Bob keeps having the 4 protags observe how oh, the aevendrow do this and that but it's all in the name of fun rather than scheming to achieve the same effect as the Lolthites in Menzo.
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Wooly Rupert
Master of Mischief
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Posted - 19 Aug 2021 :  19:39:51  Show Profile Send Wooly Rupert a Private Message  Reply with Quote
quote:
Originally posted by Irennan

@Wooly
Yep, since human brains are associative, memories of traumas are one of the biggest factors in shaping a brain's "control theory" (a model it creates about how to control your environment, which is a huge part of people's identity).
Even though the example that you made is an interesting situation, and we see a removal of memories leading to a more assertive person, the original identity effectively disappeared. In this case the result was a "more efficient" person, but she could have become that even without giving up her memories. Basically, the erasure of memories made her skip the act of processing the trauma. I'm not saying that this would be a bad thing or a good thing in reality, btw. If that was actually possible for us, it should obviously remain a choice/option for people who suffer from trauma: for some people it could be a good thing, for some other a bad thing, but what's lost in this process should always be made clear to the person (also because this has practical downsides along with the upsides, especially in traumas due to abuse).

For example, in the case of this story, maybe the protagonist would have still become as a more assertive person if her memories had remained and she had processed her trauma, but her experiences could have reinforced her compassion and empathy towards others, and given her a different perspective on her power (using it only for dire needs, for example, because possessing people is a violence. Also, imposing herself limits on what to influence of aperson's life, etc...). Heightened compassion and empathy would have been the result of the part of her identity that the memory erasure sacrificed. Just making assumptions here, to explain what I mean.

About the story itself, IMO, it would have been more interesting if she had chosen to lose her memories, and we were shown the consequences of that choice--both positive and eventually negative--and she had to deal with all that. The choice should have been tied to the fatal flaw of the protagonist, which would have made all the consequences meaningful, rather than having the memory loss happen to her (which is my impression of what happened, from your description). But perhaps the focus of the story wasn't the loss of memory, and that was just a device to get the protag going for the 'real' plot (though in that case I'm left wondering why the author chose to even include the loss of memory and the processing of trauma if they weren't relevant to the core of the story--it would have been better to just start with an assertive character who possessed that power, give her a fatal flaw, and focus on the point of the story).

Basically, from a narrative perspective, if something like memory loss to overcome trauma is included, it's important to the story, so it shouldn't just "happen to" the protagonist. It should be a choice (or at least the reuslt of previous choices), and the character should face all the consequences (if she chooses to lose memory and all goes well, then that's not much of a story). The processing of a trauma also shouldn't stop being relevant all of sudden, including stuff like that in your story means that it's related to the central theme of the story (or that it actually is the central theme itself). Then again, maybe the story actually kept exploring the topic and did things right, after all the only part that I know is the one related to the memory loss itself.




The basic point of the story was that the woman in question was investigating traitors in the ranks of the organization she worked for, and they found out and had her memory wiped. They intended to wipe her whole personality and replace it with something they could use, but she escaped. The story starts after all of this has happened -- so she's got to plug back into her own life, and still figure out who the bad guys were and deal with that.

Luckily, she'd been warned that she was going to lose her memory, so she had prepped by writing letters to herself, giving enough info that the wiped personality could fake it.

The story is kind of an X-Men/X-Files mashup, with the main character being one of the ranking members of an organization filled with supernatural types and working to keep the supernatural out of the public eye.

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sleyvas
Skilled Spell Strategist

USA
11691 Posts

Posted - 19 Aug 2021 :  19:41:50  Show Profile Send sleyvas a Private Message  Reply with Quote
quote:
Originally posted by Irennan

quote:
Originally posted by sleyvas


On the blood in the wine thing... it CAN depend on the representation. But for them to specifically call this out in the novels makes me think that the point was to "point out something". Drinking blood is something that has long been thought of as evil (i.e. vampires).... and now my mind as a result of typing this just went somewhere I didn't expect.... or at least somewhat barbaric. What would be interesting to note would be "whose blood"... is it the blood of animals who have been slaughtered for food (wait, they make their food with magic, no)? Is it the blood of their own people or their enemies? Is there secretly a group of vampires living amongst them that like living in the far frozen north because its dark for long periods?




From my understanding of sno4wy's explanation, they have gladiatorial fights in vats filled with grapes, so that the juice is squeezed out (a bit like in the past farmers would "dance" on the grapes to squeeze out the juice--rather 'eww' if you ask me, but yeah....), and at the same time some blood (from the cuts) goes into the juice. However, the fighters don't die, and the wounds are probably healed up like they're nothing afterwards, so there's no harm in this. Slaughtering animals, for example, would have indeed been interesting, and it would have pointed at something given that they can just conjure food, but this is actually harmless.

Idk, it just sounds like some edgy addition to me, given the context. Something like "they're so good and kind, but they still have this 'feral' instinct that they satisfy with harmless gladiatorial combats and blood-flavored wine", a bit like Drizzt and his hunter thingy. Don't get me wrong, channeling dark sides of your personality into constructive or harmless things is actually a worthy topic to explore, but unless it's actually explored throghout the whole story, it's just tacked on for the edge/shock factor ("omg, they drink blood??!1?? So edgy, and dark, and dangerous, and cool, and...")

As for the memory erasure, I pointed it out because if the story had actually tried to tell us something, that would have been golden material to do so. Instead, we see it condoned, which is very telling of what the author was trying to do.



Interestingly enough, I find it more abhorrent that they're effectively drinking the blood of sentients (its akin in some ways to cannibalism), though like you say... unless there's something else, it was probably added for shock value (and rereading, he says wrestling, not like swordfighting, so imagining the chances of death are generally small, and the amount of blood released is probably small). In my mind though this does break the original presentation that this culture is being presented as superior... they have blood sports... they drink blood from sentients in their drinks... so, as I see it, the drow of say Rhymanthiin might be more civilized than these dark elves, and maybe these guys are essentially bored elitists with a penchant for isolationism.

Alavairthae, may your skill prevail

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Wooly Rupert
Master of Mischief
Moderator

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Posted - 19 Aug 2021 :  19:44:26  Show Profile Send Wooly Rupert a Private Message  Reply with Quote
quote:
Originally posted by Irennan

quote:
Originally posted by sleyvas


On the blood in the wine thing... it CAN depend on the representation. But for them to specifically call this out in the novels makes me think that the point was to "point out something". Drinking blood is something that has long been thought of as evil (i.e. vampires).... and now my mind as a result of typing this just went somewhere I didn't expect.... or at least somewhat barbaric. What would be interesting to note would be "whose blood"... is it the blood of animals who have been slaughtered for food (wait, they make their food with magic, no)? Is it the blood of their own people or their enemies? Is there secretly a group of vampires living amongst them that like living in the far frozen north because its dark for long periods?




From my understanding of sno4wy's explanation, they have gladiatorial fights in vats filled with grapes, so that the juice is squeezed out (a bit like in the past farmers would "dance" on the grapes to squeeze out the juice--rather 'eww' if you ask me, but yeah....), and at the same time some blood (from the cuts) goes into the juice. However, the fighters don't die, and the wounds are probably healed up like they're nothing afterwards, so there's no harm in this. Slaughtering animals, for example, would have indeed been interesting, and it would have pointed at something given that they can just conjure food, but this is actually harmless.

Idk, it just sounds like some edgy addition to me, given the context. Something like "they're so good and kind, but they still have this 'feral' instinct that they satisfy with harmless gladiatorial combats and blood-flavored wine", a bit like Drizzt and his hunter thingy. Don't get me wrong, channeling dark sides of your personality into constructive or harmless things is actually a worthy topic to explore, but unless it's actually explored throghout the whole story, it's just tacked on for the edge/shock factor ("omg, they drink blood??!1?? So edgy, and dark, and dangerous, and cool, and...")




This does seem like it's some edgy thing more than anything else -- because seriously, you're going to have to spill a LOT of blood into a vat of wine for anyone to be able to taste it. I'm thinking galloons of blood, not "oh, this guy got punched in the nose and some of the blood is dripping down" amounts.

Admittedly, I'm not a wine maker (or drinker!), but it's simple math: a few drops of a secondary liquid, dropped into a large vat of another liquid, are going to be diluted to undetectable amounts.

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Irennan
Great Reader

Italy
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Posted - 19 Aug 2021 :  19:51:07  Show Profile Send Irennan a Private Message  Reply with Quote
@sno4wy

Why don't they just store cures and food beforehand (with their unlimited creation magic and with super easy access to ice), so in the days when magic goes away they still have all they need without any effort? Why would they need or want to "work hard", rather than spending time into mastering skills, improving themselves, and so on? Why can't they keep in shape just by doing fitness, training, learning to fight and stuff?

Idk, it feels so pointless to introduce this sport (that apparently everyone enjoys practicing, which is weird) and the grapes thingy as a justification for good physical shape, "just like Menzo". Also because that sport certainly won't give the same result as constnatly being a step from being killed.

Mathematics is the art of giving the same name to different things.

Edited by - Irennan on 19 Aug 2021 20:16:41
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