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What I don't like

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Re: What I don't like
Post by roseandheather   » Tue Apr 15, 2014 1:37 am

roseandheather
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I have one thing, and one thing only, to add to this discussion.

In case it's escaped any of your notice - which it probably hasn't, given my well-known predilections where certain petite diplomats are concerned - I'm bisexual.

And the last goddamned thing I ever want to see, outside of books written specifically to make a point about that sort of thing, is a character sharing my orientation as a case of tokenism. I also have multiple gay and lesbian friends who feel similarly.

My orientation is not an accessory you can add to a character to increase the political correctness of your work. Thank you, and good night.
~*~


I serve at the pleasure of President Pritchart.

Javier & Eloise
"You'll remember me when the west wind moves upon the fields of barley..."
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Re: What I don't like
Post by Michael Everett   » Tue Apr 15, 2014 2:56 am

Michael Everett
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I myself completely fail to see what is so important about whether someone is gay, straight, curved, bi, whatever.
So long as it's consensual and everyone is old enough to fully understand what's going on, it's fine.

It's not like being gay is banned by the bible. The part that many quote as "man will not lie with man as like husband with wife" is a mis-translation. If you translate straight from the original Aramaic, it is "man will not lie with CHILD as like husband with wife".

Although that does raise some rather uncomfortable questions about Mohammed's favourite wife...

If, however, you want a well-written book with a hero who just happens to be gay, I would really recommend the Last Herald Mage books, Magic's Pawn, Magic's Promise and Magic's Price by Mercedes Lackey. I personally have them n my bookshelf in well-worn paperback versions.
Perhaps someday they'll be available on Kindle...
~~~~~~

I can't write anywhere near as well as Weber
But I try nonetheless, And even do my own artwork.

(Now on Twitter)and mentioned by RFC!
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Re: What I don't like
Post by Vince   » Tue Apr 15, 2014 3:32 am

Vince
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Posts: 1574
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Some thoughts on science fiction:

One of the characteristics of good science fiction is that it pushes at a society's boundaries. That said, it can't push too far past them or else the listeners/readers/audience either will actively reject the ideas being presented, fail to understand them at all, or simply lose interest in the author's material.

Most successful science fiction has (main and/or secondary) characters that are humans, neither saints or devils, with all the strengths, weaknesses and foibles of humanity (in varying proportions) in circumstances that are extraordinary and challenge them to rise to the occasion [and if they don't or don't succeed in doing so, the circumstances extract a cost from the character(s)]. The audience can recognize and identify with the characters, as well as the events and background of the story.

A (science or any other genre) fiction author (in any medium) has to make the both the story and the characters interesting enough to keep the audience engaged, or risk losing the audience. One of the worst things that can be said about a story (any story, any genre) is the Eight Deadly Words.
-------------------------------------------------------------
History does not repeat itself so much as it echoes.
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Re: What I don't like
Post by Hans   » Tue Apr 15, 2014 7:52 am

Hans
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Posts: 65
Joined: Sun Nov 21, 2010 3:54 pm
Location: Stuttgart - Germany

Hello,

my god :o what have i done?

@David:
There was no offense meant, like I wrote in the post before.

@Yow

I agree that we have a different view. Its been my experience when I travelled abroad also.
I wanted to know if you or anyone else for that matter thought these names were foreign or exotically new to you. Myself, I see these names on a regular basis.

I myself have a serbian family name (which appears in one of the Books :mrgreen: ), my parents are Hungarians with mostly German, but also Hungarian, Gipsy, French andandand roots.
All this names are familiar to me, besides my family roots, I grew up and still live in Stuttgart, which is one of the most international places in Europe (~23% are foreigners & ~40% have an immigration background). As a technician I worked in USA, & Italy. The company I work for right now, is one of the Big 3 audit companies and a part of my job is to communicate with people from all over the world. I have a break now, later I got ta set up a video conference with India, Britain and Cleveland.

I would like to know if you have read both the English and German versions? If you have, does it translate well or do you feel you get a different reading than from the other? I notice this when I watch a foriegn film translated by two different translators. Some wording doesn't sit well with what I am watching, but how would I know if a book was translated well?

Sorry I can't judge the translation :roll:
Because the first books I read in German, never in English and since 'Shadow Of Saganami' I read all the books in English.
But I have seen a lot of movies in both languages.
In the USA I saw a old german movie , that was undertiteled. I got a couple of laughs exclusivly. Also when I watched american movies in Germany. Do you know the movie 'Smoke'?
http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Smoke_(film)
In the opening sequence, the guys in the tobacco shop of 'Auggie' are talking 'bout the '86 New York Mets title in the World Series. Anybody but me was bored! I have been the only one who could follow the story - 'Moooookieee' because right at that time I lived in New York and was watching and understanding a game thats important to the Americans, but almost nobody else outside the USA.
Why do I mention this? It shows that the cultural background is an important part of the communication.
Another example - if we speak about football, we're speaking about two games which have nothing in common. Not even the Ball :D
I'm with you - understanding the language does not mean to understand one another automatically.
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Re: What I don't like
Post by Gun Boat Diplomacy   » Tue Apr 15, 2014 2:39 pm

Gun Boat Diplomacy
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Location: Sanger, Ca.

I've always felt (and believe its been mentioned a time or two) that the sexual mores of people (in the star empire at least) are nobodies business but their own. in fact I believe that Honor's mother has stated a time or three, that if she were so inclined, she could have had any number of women during her life.
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Re: What I don't like
Post by pokermind   » Tue Apr 15, 2014 3:04 pm

pokermind
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Location: Jerome, Idaho, USA

In the late seventeenth and early eighteenth century (1600s-1700s) the enlightenment came to Europe with the radical idea that the State should be separate from religion. :o And we are shocked that some 2,500 years after it has became a non issue with mankind in the main. So you can believe certain sexual activities are a sin but, you cannot force your beliefs on those who don't believe it.

However there are places that have chosen to have theocratic states and, surprise, surprise, surprise they are considered barbarous and backward. :D

Poker
CPO Poker Mind Image and, Mangy Fur the Smart Alick Spacecat.

"Better to be hung for a hexapuma than a housecat," Com. Pang Yau-pau, ART.
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Re: What I don't like
Post by runsforcelery   » Tue Apr 15, 2014 3:14 pm

runsforcelery
First Space Lord

Posts: 2425
Joined: Sun Aug 09, 2009 11:39 am
Location: South Carolina

Hans wrote:Hello,

my god :o what have i done?

@David:
There was no offense meant, like I wrote in the post before.

@Yow

I agree that we have a different view. Its been my experience when I travelled abroad also.
I wanted to know if you or anyone else for that matter thought these names were foreign or exotically new to you. Myself, I see these names on a regular basis.

I myself have a serbian family name (which appears in one of the Books :mrgreen: ), my parents are Hungarians with mostly German, but also Hungarian, Gipsy, French andandand roots.
All this names are familiar to me, besides my family roots, I grew up and still live in Stuttgart, which is one of the most international places in Europe (~23% are foreigners & ~40% have an immigration background). As a technician I worked in USA, & Italy. The company I work for right now, is one of the Big 3 audit companies and a part of my job is to communicate with people from all over the world. I have a break now, later I got ta set up a video conference with India, Britain and Cleveland.

I would like to know if you have read both the English and German versions? If you have, does it translate well or do you feel you get a different reading than from the other? I notice this when I watch a foriegn film translated by two different translators. Some wording doesn't sit well with what I am watching, but how would I know if a book was translated well?

Sorry I can't judge the translation :roll:
Because the first books I read in German, never in English and since 'Shadow Of Saganami' I read all the books in English.
But I have seen a lot of movies in both languages.
In the USA I saw a old german movie , that was undertiteled. I got a couple of laughs exclusivly. Also when I watched american movies in Germany. Do you know the movie 'Smoke'?
http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Smoke_(film)
In the opening sequence, the guys in the tobacco shop of 'Auggie' are talking 'bout the '86 New York Mets title in the World Series. Anybody but me was bored! I have been the only one who could follow the story - 'Moooookieee' because right at that time I lived in New York and was watching and understanding a game thats important to the Americans, but almost nobody else outside the USA.
Why do I mention this? It shows that the cultural background is an important part of the communication.
Another example - if we speak about football, we're speaking about two games which have nothing in common. Not even the Ball :D
I'm with you - understanding the language does not mean to understand one another automatically.



Hans --- Believe me, no offense was taken, either. The questions you raised were certainly germane from any reader's viewpoint, and I never meant to imply that they'd ticked me off in any way, because they didn't. I was rushing to get my post --- which, as my posts have had a tendency to do upon occasion, was running rather longer than I'd anticipated when I started writing it --- finished before I dashed off to a church activity with my kids. Because of that, I may have sounded more brusque than I intended to, and if it came across that way, I apologize. I saw it more as an opportunity to answer questions I've been asked several times at cons than as a way to whack anyone for raising them on the forum.

As I think I said in my response (which was directed to everyone in the thread, which is one reason I didn't quote any specific poster in my post) every reader has an absolute right to his/her own interpretation of what I write and, even more absolutely (if you'll pardon the redundancy) to his/her own opinions about what I write. I simply wanted to share what I think when I write.

Take care.

Oh, something I meant to mention earlier. I believe that someone commented on the Hungarian names used in a certain star system in Cauldron of Ghosts, and there were two points I wanted to make in regard to that. First, the system in question was used primarily because it was already located --- and named --- on the master star map for the Honorverse and it lay within the proper proximity to Torch. The system name determined the ethnic origins of the characters in the novel who were from that star system rather than any design inherent in this particular book. Second, the presence of the Jessyk Combine and Manpower in the system was the result of outsiders moving in on the system's main orbital platform exactly as OFS and corrupt transstellars have moved in on many a system throughout the Verge and the Shell. Some of the locals had signed up in full knowledge of what was going on and without any qualms whatsoever about their association with it. The majority of locals working on the platform, however (like the viewpoint character who finds herself captured by the raiders), are working there because it's the only game in town --- the only job available to them --- when they need the money . . . in many cases desperately. For what it's worth, Eric and I intended to portray the system's inhabitants far more as victims of the criminals operating in their star system than as their accomplices.


"Oh, bother!" said Pooh, as Piglet came back from the dead.
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Re: What I don't like
Post by MAD-4A   » Tue Apr 15, 2014 3:36 pm

MAD-4A
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Hans wrote:...But I have seen a lot of movies in both languages.
In the USA I saw a old german movie , that was undertiteled. I got a couple of laughs exclusivly. Also when I watched american movies in Germany. Do you know the movie 'Smoke'?...
I recently watched “Into the White”, a very interesting movie, I also have the (4hr) director’s cut of "Das Boot" (saw it in the theater), I really liked “Cross of Iron” but I can’t understand German (sorry – tried to learn with a PBS educational show but just couldn’t get it – I’m a math person – I speak "Texan" not “English” I have trouble with those rules) anyway I don’t know how many Japanese Animi I’ve watched & can’t remember many blue eyed blonds or redheads on them that didn’t have a Japanese name! (Yea this hot red head is “Kakizaki Misa” & these blondes are “Ino Yamanaka”, “Tsunade Senju”, “Rangiku Matsumoto”, “Hiyori Sarugaki”…) gripe at them :lol: (Course they also have green, purple & blue hair characters too.)
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Almost only counts in Horseshoes and Nuclear Weapons. I almost got the Hand-Grenade out the window does not count.
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Re: What I don't like
Post by runsforcelery   » Tue Apr 15, 2014 6:46 pm

runsforcelery
First Space Lord

Posts: 2425
Joined: Sun Aug 09, 2009 11:39 am
Location: South Carolina

pokermind wrote:In the late seventeenth and early eighteenth century (1600s-1700s) the enlightenment came to Europe with the radical idea that the State should be separate from religion. :o And we are shocked that some 2,500 years after it has became a non issue with mankind in the main. So you can believe certain sexual activities are a sin but, you cannot force your beliefs on those who don't believe it.

However there are places that have chosen to have theocratic states and, surprise, surprise, surprise they are considered barbarous and backward. :D

Poker


Only point I'd make is that the separation of state and church has yet to become a "nonissue with mankind in the main." I believe you were alluding to that point in your reference to "theocratic states," but I think perhaps you over estimate the number of people to whom it is a nonissue, both pro and con. There is, for example, the case of the Republic of China, with about 20% of the world's total population, where the state's opposition to all religion is very much an issue. And while 32% of the world's population is Christian, 23% of the world is Muslim. I mention this latter point not out of Islamophobia, but because there are an awful lot of Muslims in the world, and I would argue that most Muslim countries are far from accepting the separation of religious and secular law. For that matter, given the tenets or Islam, they shouldn't be accepting that separation. And there are quite a few countries outside the US and Western Europe where religion continues to wield enormous influence in government and the state. In other words, this remains far from a "done deal" for humanity in general.

For myself (and not wishing to throw any hand grenades), I would observe the following.

I thoroughly support the separation of church and state in the sense (as I think the Founders originally intended) the prohibition of a state church and/or provisions similar to the Test Acts of Great Britain, which made membership in the Anglican Church a requirement to hold office and imposed disabilities on Catholics. (I'm not picking on the Brits here; there were similar statutes in a lot of European states --- and they could go either way --- during and after the Reformation. I'm just using the example with which I'm most familiar and the one which specifically led to the First Amendment of the US Constitution.) I also believe, however, that religious belief is as valid a reason as any for voting, supporting a candidate, or supporting a political platform. The opposition to slavery, the emancipation of women, and the current move to extend the civil and legal rights of women, minorities, and gay citizens have all been driven for, not simply against, by people acting in accordance with their religious consciences.

While I am not imputing this sort of behavior to anyone on the forums, I find it personally offensive when someone takes the position that people of faith (in which group I obviously include myself) are always in favor of repression and intolerance and always act somehow as a drag on the progress and improvement of human societies.


"Oh, bother!" said Pooh, as Piglet came back from the dead.
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Re: What I don't like
Post by KNick   » Tue Apr 15, 2014 8:44 pm

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Another point to consider when thinking about names: How many names where changed by various Immigration Services throughout the world because the interviewer didn't have a clue how to spell it? In my families case, when my grandfather came to America in 1905, he had trouble with the English language. Since he could not understand what he was being asked, the interviewer simply gave him a new name. He later added to it to more closely reflect the family heritage, but my father and my oldest uncle both had to go to court with him and get their names changed at the same time. Both of their birth certificates still carry the original name, not the one it was changed to.


On the sexual preference issue. There are clues as far back as On Basilisk Station that as far as the Hverse is concerned, it is a non-issue. While I can not point to a specific passage, the overall tone of how the matter was handled from the first left me with that impression.
_


Try to take a fisherman's fish and you will be tomorrows bait!!!
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