JustKneller
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I think I might change my position and support @O_Bruce here, but I can be swayed.
This whole thing has me thinking about bioessentialism in RPGs, which I think is an absurd debate. To give an example, the anti-bioessentialists would have a major issue with B/X D&D because the "classes" are fighter, mage, cleric, thief, dwarf, elf, and halfling. That's right, race as class. There are two camps that oppose this. One consists of people who want to play characters like dwarf clerics, which you can't technically do RAW. There are some house rules and hacks to make that happen, some effective, some just silly. Anyway, I don't really dispute that camp. I don't find this taxonomy to be supported by the narrative (and actually it contradicts it in places). The other camp of naysayers are anti-bioessentialists who would claim that having race as class (and effectively barring non-humans from any kind of spellcasting) is morally wrong. This, I find to be seriously absurd. I'm very much pro-civil rights, but I could care less about the civil rights for fictional species. It's a fictional creature. It has no true sentience. It's really just a plot device.
And this is why I'm swaying to Bruce's side. The only difference between an elf and a woman is that women exist in the real world. However, does fictional women being barred from what seems like the shittiest job in Witcher-world have any impact on the gender narrative in the real world? I'm pretty sure that (despite its popularity) The Witcher isn't the tastemaker for gender politics in real life. In fact, you might even be able to draw a metaphor between women's lack of representation in Witchery and the real world lack of female representation in a lot of dirty jobs (at least in the U.S.). But, that's a bit of a tangent.
Sure, we can argue that reinforcing potential gender discrimination in fiction provides an avenue to reinforcing it in the real world. But, that's not enough to win me over. It's the same logic that built the Satanic Panic of D&D in the 80s, and that was a load of crap. So yeah, I'm running out of road to argue against @O_Bruce on this one.
This whole thing has me thinking about bioessentialism in RPGs, which I think is an absurd debate. To give an example, the anti-bioessentialists would have a major issue with B/X D&D because the "classes" are fighter, mage, cleric, thief, dwarf, elf, and halfling. That's right, race as class. There are two camps that oppose this. One consists of people who want to play characters like dwarf clerics, which you can't technically do RAW. There are some house rules and hacks to make that happen, some effective, some just silly. Anyway, I don't really dispute that camp. I don't find this taxonomy to be supported by the narrative (and actually it contradicts it in places). The other camp of naysayers are anti-bioessentialists who would claim that having race as class (and effectively barring non-humans from any kind of spellcasting) is morally wrong. This, I find to be seriously absurd. I'm very much pro-civil rights, but I could care less about the civil rights for fictional species. It's a fictional creature. It has no true sentience. It's really just a plot device.
And this is why I'm swaying to Bruce's side. The only difference between an elf and a woman is that women exist in the real world. However, does fictional women being barred from what seems like the shittiest job in Witcher-world have any impact on the gender narrative in the real world? I'm pretty sure that (despite its popularity) The Witcher isn't the tastemaker for gender politics in real life. In fact, you might even be able to draw a metaphor between women's lack of representation in Witchery and the real world lack of female representation in a lot of dirty jobs (at least in the U.S.). But, that's a bit of a tangent.
Sure, we can argue that reinforcing potential gender discrimination in fiction provides an avenue to reinforcing it in the real world. But, that's not enough to win me over. It's the same logic that built the Satanic Panic of D&D in the 80s, and that was a load of crap. So yeah, I'm running out of road to argue against @O_Bruce on this one.