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jayaprada:

Chicago Students Protest in Support of Persepolis

There’s a reason behind the banning. AmericanĀ chauvinistsĀ do not want the working class and the people to know the reality behind the revolutionary movement in Iran. The book does a great job in visualizing the Iranian left during the 1979 revolution. The banning of the book dehumanizes the essential meaning ofĀ educationĀ and wants toĀ advocateĀ a Orientalist perspective of the state post-revolution. Banning this book can make itĀ easierĀ for the imperialists to invade the country for ā€˜humanitarianĀ reasons’. The book does a great job inĀ depictingĀ theĀ brutalityĀ behind the Shah regime and the ban just simply neglects the prospects behind the revolution.Ā 

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yugimew:

You know how Wheatley’s lens get cracked in the game?Ā  I’ve seen people draw their humanoid Wheatleys with cracked glasses, but I don’t think I’ve seen one with an eyepatch.

Something I’d probably consider if I were to ever design a human Wheatley.

Actually, speaking of that idea, I have been having a lot of fun lately anyway with drawing my own characters as different things, so even though I do tend to prefer Wheatley as a core, and told myself I was probably never going to jump on the human-Wheatley bandwagon, maybe…

I like the eyepatch idea, too.Ā  When a friend of mine cosplayed as Human!Wheatley, she wore a Mad-Eye Moody-style blue ocular thing over one eye, which I thought was a nice touch.

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tryinghuman:

I just found out that someone who ordered the TH artbook lives really close to me. Ā I’m so tempted to hand delivery the book, ā€œI was in town and thought I’d drop it off.ā€

I don’t want to scare the bejeebus out of them though, haha ;u;

Yeaaaaaah this one time years ago I prereg’ed for an anime con and the conchair happened to live in a nearby dorm and came over to say hello that afternoon. Awkward.

Caroline, GLaDOS, and Gender in Portal

bahahahorel:

So, did someone say Portal and feminism?

I’m neither intellectual enough to write this academically nor creative enough to relate this in a fic, so here is some semi-organized brainspawn.

For the purposes of this post, if I refer to men as group disparagingly I’m talking about them as extensions and symbolic representations of the patriarchy, not as individuals. I don’t hate men.

Also, I do not agree with the tenets of second wave feminism. While my history of feminism 101 course was a formative part of my youth, I’ve since learned much about feminism that I try to apply to my own politics and opinions. So, connecting Portal to second wave feminism is not a wholesale endorsement of it.

Caroline. She’s a white, probably middle-class woman who is in her youth in the 50’s and 60’s. She has a career that is typically gendered (secretary), and the little canon information we have about her seems to show us that she is accommodating and hardworking (ā€œYes, sir, Mr. Johnson!), as a woman in her position would be expected to be. But as people much more analytically inclined than I am have pointed out here, Caroline actually uses her situation to her advantage, and occupies one of Aperture Science’s most influential roles.

SoĀ  she is the perfect person with which to begin this allegory for second wave feminism.

She is not a doting housewife, but she is doing ā€œwomen’s workā€, and she is using her ā€œā€ā€submissiveā€ā€ā€ position to influence the world in significant ways.

But then, suddenly, she is given power Ā when she is used to create GLaDOS.

In order to keep the historically oppressed women GLaDOS from starting a riot dispensing neurotoxin, the scientists (mostly represented by men in Lab Ratt and Doug’s art) hook her up to some cores.

The cores are supposed to suppress her personality by forcing her to adopt traits that are not native to her.

They ingrain these traits that are not hers into her in order to make her behave and submit. They try to shape and mold her personality into something it is not.

Let’s take a look at these cores.

There is morality core, because (white) women are supposed to be good and kind.

There is curiosity core, who is childlike because women are supposed to be childish (which feeds into paternal patriarchal feelings).

There is cake core, which literally just reads off recipes, because do I even have to explain?

And there is anger core, because women are irrational and overemotional.

The men in Caroline’s life perceive that she has power and have to stop her from using it by making her believe that she has to be these things she is not and forcing the traits on her.

Note that this power she has is now explicit overt power, rather than the power she managed to get by being close to Cave. That is the power that threatens men.

So Caroline goes from ā€œknowing her placeā€ as a woman to having power and threatening men, to being silenced by having a formulaic femininity thrust upon her with the cores.

And sexism cuts both ways! The cores that destroy Wheatley, that corrupt him, are traditionally ā€œmasculineā€ traits: macho bravado, factual rationale, and intrepid pioneerism. The expectations of masculinity destroy the ā€œmaleā€ core. Ā 

It isn’t a perfect metaphor. It isn’t a perfect feminist narrative. But there are definitely traces of feminism in the story and characters that are important because media matters.

This is not a definitive essay post, it is the beginning of a conversation. I haven’t even mentioned the power of having a (possibly disabled) woman of color as the hero of a game, or what it could mean that she strips GLaDOS of the expectations that the men have put on her. I haven’t matched up the dates to feminist movements. I haven’t talked about how the narrative surrounding two fully fleshed out women is feminist. But Portal is undoubtedly a feminist game.

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fuchsiamae:

Reasons why the ā€œPortal and feminismā€ conversation is important

  1. Feminism is important
  2. Especially in notoriously sexist places like the gaming community
  3. As both feminist games and games that are popular and well-recognized, the Portal series is a step towards equality for female characters and female gamers

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devidsketchbook:

Extraordinary photos of young hitchhikers and freight train hoppers by Mike Brodie

Mike BrodieĀ (tumblrĀ |Ā facebook) first began photographing in 2004 when he was given a Polaroid camera. Working under the moniker, The Polaroid Kidd, Brodie spent the next four years circumambulating the U.S. amassing an archive of photographs that would go on to make up one of the few, true collections of American travel photography. Having never undergone any formal training, he chose to remained untethered to the pressures and expectations of the art market.

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bonkalore:

A while back I had some Blue Sky feels when this song came on suddenly of course and proceeded to never finish it all the way like all my other art… ;A; *sobs*

But I’m making a point to post things anyway because geez. New Years resolution I guess it is…

Yeeeeeeaaaaaaah need this on my dash.