sythyry: (sythyry-doomed)
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Mirrored from Sythyry.

A copy of The Terrors of Tarragina was duly procured (from Vind — I refuse to allow more teasing of Alzagonde until she does something else horrible). The crudely-imagined and crudely-drawn cover shows a nearly-naked, voluptuous, and quite aroused Herethroy woman, holding a crowbar in a midhand, staring at it as if it were a serpent about to bite her. Beside her are four very full washbasins, one overflowing, and a Cani man with a hammer in one hand and a tremendous erection visible under his skirt.

I, sacrifically, read the cursed thing, since I have plenty of time on my paws when I want it.

Tarragina is the sixth daughter of a countess of Barency. She has a single passion in life: “rejoicining in elegant circumstances”. Through a sequence of misfortunes too implausible to mention, her family loses fortune and title in chapter two. (OK, I’ll mention the guntry race. They’ve got a prize running-guntry that always wins every race. They bet their last village on the guntry in a race against a stranger — who turns out to be a wizard, whose guntry is a transformed air elemental, and wins in a whoosh. Somehow they neglect to mention that this may be considered cheating.)

Anyhow, by chapter 3, Tarragina is condemned to wander the city and country in a life of toil, a thing which she finds utterly abhorrent. She picks up odd jobs here and there — helping a Cani family demolishing a shed in chapter five (hence the crowbar), and washing clothes for some Herethroy farmers in chapter eight (hence the basins). In each case, she attempts the job briefly throws up her hands and hand-feet at how horrid and vulgar it is, and, um, renegotiates the arrangement to be one in which she performs bodily pleasures upon her employers rather than having to do the work. Then, for reasons unspecified, she is off at a different employer the next chapter, evidently the next day.

For a bit of socioprosody of my own: the description of the chapter’s circumstances take 1-3 paragraphs. The attempts at performing the job, and Tarragina’s abhorrence thereof, take another 3-5. The seduction of the employer takes a single paragraph more. The rest of each chapter — five to fifteen pages — is a description of the encounter.

For what it’s worth: About half the time she’s involved with Herethroy, and half with other species. Nobody seems to find this the least bit noteworthy — not that there is much actual conversation involved.

Also, a half-page of action from chapter 5 appears again, word for word, in chapter 21. Perhaps the author did not think anyone would read that far. In any case, it was dull the first time, and extra-dull the second.


I cannot recommend the book, either as literature, pornography, or a source of threats.

Date: 2010-12-16 03:23 pm (UTC)
From: [identity profile] brynndragon.livejournal.com
Erm, maybe if the people in question are the ones writing the fiction/poetry, but how does he presume to know if the author is actually traff themselves? In my world, there is a subgenre of fiction written almost entirely by females about male-male love - the authors are neither male nor interested in lovers of the same gender, nor do they necessarily even know any male same-gender lovers (on our iron ball of a world, same-gender affection is considered much like transaffection on the World Tree). So making conclusions about male-male love from such stories would be poor scholarship; making conclusions about how some non-same-gender-lovers view such pairings is the only possible rigorous examination.

Date: 2010-12-16 03:37 pm (UTC)
From: [identity profile] shurhaian.livejournal.com
...this too is true. Though I fear that Mump is not much concerned with scholastic rigour so much as with his own viewpoint and agenda.

Date: 2010-12-16 03:39 pm (UTC)
From: [identity profile] sythyry.livejournal.com
The details of Mump's methods are beyond me, so I have asked Vind, who looked somewhat worried at the concern. Vind once asked Mump the same question, and had it answered to Vind's satisfaction at the time, but Vind is unable to recreate the answer.

Date: 2010-12-16 06:01 pm (UTC)
zeeth_kyrah: A glowing white and blue anthropomorphic horse stands before a pink and blue sky. (Default)
From: [personal profile] zeeth_kyrah
This is because of Mumps inveterate bloviation skills. Were he an adventurer, he could convince scawn that their weapons were diseased and killing them.

Date: 2010-12-16 06:08 pm (UTC)
From: [identity profile] sythyry.livejournal.com
How mighty! He's certainly defeated a wizard once or twice...

Date: 2010-12-16 03:39 pm (UTC)
From: [identity profile] shurhaian.livejournal.com
Oh. It's worth noting, though, that women who aren't interested in other women, but are interested in men, can find a good deal to interest themselves in fiction involving male lovers. This is much less the case where cisaffection/transaffection are concerned. Anyone who writes transaffectionate porn - especially if their own species is not involved - can be fairly argued to have at least some traff leanings, in a manner that heterosexuals finding appeal in a one-sex couple of the opposite sex to them cannot.

Date: 2010-12-16 03:48 pm (UTC)
From: [identity profile] brynndragon.livejournal.com
I don't know if you are on the same world as me or not, but I am not sure we can make that conclusion that different-species porn would not be so titillating on a world with many sentient species as same-sex porn is for us. There's certainly enough taboo and exoticism to fuel such interest, assuming the psychology is sufficiently similar.

Date: 2010-12-16 04:02 pm (UTC)
From: [identity profile] shurhaian.livejournal.com
Thing is, where the same-sex porn features the opposite sex to the person writing it, they could be well argued to have plain opposite sex interest in it - if one guy is hot, two guys together are better, right? The same-sex element need not be relevant save that it excludes the sex which the writer or reader isn't interested in. Maybe it is, maybe it isn't; but there's a plausible argument that it's all about putting in more of the desirable sex and nothing more.

The same does not apply to transaffectionate literature. Anyone who is making such probably does have some interest in transaffection, be it positive or negative, practical or academic. And if it's just trashy porn, the odds of it being academic interest are pretty slim - how can you be exploring the attached issues through the work if the work doesn't touch on those issues at all?

Date: 2010-12-16 09:13 pm (UTC)
From: [identity profile] sythyry.livejournal.com
Through the miracle of socio-prosody?

Date: 2010-12-16 07:05 pm (UTC)
From: [identity profile] terrycloth.livejournal.com
Meh, I don't think that follows. Most of the primes (except maybe zi ri and herethoy and khtsoyis) have all the same bits, and having things done to those bits can be titillating even if the bits in question aren't ones that you personally would actually mess with.

Think of tentacle porn (esp. if their own species *is* involved), or the strange prevelance of mating scenes on animal planet.

Date: 2010-12-16 09:09 pm (UTC)
rowyn: (Default)
From: [personal profile] rowyn
I'm with Terrycloth here. Plenty of people on my world enjoy fantasies about non-existant creatures, or even real animals, without having any real-world interest in anyone but members of their own species.

Date: 2010-12-16 09:13 pm (UTC)
From: [identity profile] sythyry.livejournal.com
I must say that "enjoying fantasies about thus-and-so" counts as prima facie evidence in "interest in thus-and-so". It may not count as any desire to participate in thus-and-so in person, say.

Date: 2010-12-16 09:19 pm (UTC)
rowyn: (Default)
From: [personal profile] rowyn
Well, Shurahian's original comment was 'you'd have to have traff leanings to enjoy traff writings', which is what I disagree with. You can fantasize about things that you have no intention whatsoever of doing anything like. You have to be *interested* in the sense of "find it interesting" but not in the sense of "interested in experimenting with it".

A better and more extreme example -- a lot of women of my world have rape fantasies, which is in no way remotely indicative of an actual interest in *being raped*. Or in raping anyone. And people don't generally regard those who enjoy horror movies as proto-victims, or proto-serial killers.
Edited Date: 2010-12-16 09:22 pm (UTC)

Date: 2010-12-16 09:25 pm (UTC)
From: [identity profile] shurhaian.livejournal.com
No, my original comment was not that "you'd have to" anything. Only that it is a more compelling argument, in that there isn't the same easy explanation that a heterosexual being interested in same-sex porn of the opposite sex could simply be indulging in their heterosexuality to its fullest and not be homosexual themselves.

One could certainly write traff pornography as a literary excersize or a social statement, say, but I'd think it less likely to come off as trashy porn in that case, simply because there'd be more focus on either the craft or the social aspects. It could just be done badly, to be sure, but the simplest explanation for horrible and indulgent porn of the type described is that the author had a prurient interest in the subject matter, which would indicate some traff sensibilities even if the author would never act on them personally.

Date: 2010-12-16 09:33 pm (UTC)
rowyn: (Default)
From: [personal profile] rowyn
Well, your exact words were:

Anyone who writes transaffectionate porn - especially if their own species is not involved - can be fairly argued to have at least some traff leanings.

If by "traff leanings" you mean "prurient interest in fantasizing about traff behavior", I will grant you the likelihood of it. If by "traff leanings" you mean "must be interested in engaging in traff behavior, even if they're too timid/repressed/etc to actually do so", then I can't agree.

Date: 2010-12-16 09:55 pm (UTC)
From: [identity profile] shurhaian.livejournal.com
I meant neither of those things, since I would also include "sympathizes with the transaffectionate" or "intellectual curiosity on the matter" in what I was getting at.

For that matter, someone who has a distinctly anti-transaffectionate agenda could also write traff-involving porn to demonize it, but again, that sort of agenda does not seem present here.

I will rephrase my statement as: Anyone who writes transaffectionate porn, especially that which does not involve their own species, can be generally assumed to have some personal interest on the topic. Note that "personal interest" covers a lot of ground, supportive and otherwise, and note also the key word "generally". I am not speaking of absolutes here, and I get very irritated, very fast, when people set up a strawman by assuming that I am.

Date: 2010-12-16 09:29 pm (UTC)
From: [identity profile] shurhaian.livejournal.com
Missing the point. A heterosexual female can enjoy male-male porn because she is heterosexual, not because she has any latent homosexuality, above or below the threshold of actually acting on it in the real world. In fact, a homosexual female would be much less likely to have any interest in male-male porn. The heterosexual male vs homosexual-female porn counterpart, ditto. The same can't be said of traff pornography, because sameness is the norm in that case, not the exception.

Date: 2010-12-17 12:19 am (UTC)
From: [identity profile] foomf.livejournal.com
That does not necessarily follow. I know at least two lesbians who are connoisseurs of yaoi AND bara of the most blatant form, as well as enjoying heterosexual porn. Sometimes it's simply the IDEA of sex that piques the interest.

Date: 2010-12-17 09:13 am (UTC)
From: [identity profile] shurhaian.livejournal.com
MISSING. THE. POINT.

How many times do I have to say I am not talking about absolutes? Of course it doesn't necessarily follow. But it frequently does.

Date: 2010-12-17 11:02 am (UTC)
From: [identity profile] foomf.livejournal.com
Not missing the point and don't shout.

It's really meaningless unless you can say HOW frequently, and I don't believe that data has been gathered.

Your implication is that it's frequent enough to be predominant and that anything else is abnormal; my response is a counter that suggests it's far from abnormal and may in fact be frequent. I used the following technique: 1)I know several hundred people, set estimate at 250 women for estimation; 2) set of known lesbians is counted at at least 5 where probability suggests at least 25 of the women I have met are lesbian based on lowest interpretation of Kinsey, and given that selection of 5 women, 2 having said that they enjoy males in erotica, 2 having expressed no opinion or not discussed the topic, one having said she dislikes it, then we have a sufficient random sample to estimate that the hypothesis that porn preference strongly matches one's own sexual orientation (OR that it's OK only if the participants are one's own target sexual group) is not a true hypothesis.

This is of course subject to small sample bias, but it's just an estimate, just as your own claim was at best an estimate.

Date: 2010-12-17 11:29 am (UTC)
From: [identity profile] shurhaian.livejournal.com
"Your implication is ..."


You're putting words in my mouth. It's very aggravating. Stop it.

I was making a qualitative argument, because I know full well I don't have the data for more than that.

Date: 2010-12-17 04:37 pm (UTC)
From: [identity profile] foomf.livejournal.com
And I scarcely know you. My apologies.

Welcome to communication. You were using the phrasing I have come to understand as being part of a conclusive argument without wrapping it with the conditionals that mark it as qualitative. Thus my misinterpretation. I will sit back then, and attend only.

Date: 2010-12-17 04:45 pm (UTC)
From: [identity profile] shurhaian.livejournal.com
My irritation largely came from having repeatedly said already that my position wasn't meant to be read as an absolute.

On reflection, a point that seems to have been lost on the way and might make things a bit more clear: I wasn't saying anything about the enjoyment(or lack thereof) that homosexuals might gain from homosexual erotica of the opposite sex. All I meant to state was that heterosexuals can freely enjoy porn that involves only the opposite sex, despite the homosexuality of that pornography, for no more complex reason than that they appreciate that sex. There may be other reasons to do so, certainly, but the most obvious one is their very heterosexuality.

This is a parallel which is not present in transaffectionate pornography. If the reasons for enjoying that are prurient vis-a-vis the species involved, it suggests at least some latent transaffectionate inclination, even if subliminal to the point of being unfit to act upon. There are other possible reasons, of course - an appreciation for sex in all its forms, or a variety of more intellectual concerns - but the simplest reason for a woman to like gay male porn doesn't apply for, let us say, a cisaffectionate Rassimel looking at porn of a Herethroy and a Cani.

In the case of the Rassimel which sparked all this, granted, the cisaffection may well be in doubt. (The Rassy doth protest too much, methinks.)

Date: 2010-12-17 10:05 pm (UTC)
From: [identity profile] foomf.livejournal.com
Ah. That point is clearly made and I agree most frumiously. However, I am wont to avoid applying Occam's Razor too freely around the field of sentient psychology, where the tendency to grab onto the simplest explanation is frequently not only wrong but confuses the issue for other kinds of inquiry. Since you provide a simple explanation, I was trying to dodge the razor-wielding maniacs, which confused the issue a completely other way.

However, my brain refuses to stop free associating.
Using the word "fetish" only in its most neutral sense of 'conceptual framework which engenders erotic feeling in a given individual' ...

In a society where there is no other actual sentient species, there are two parallels: the first to subspecies (racial, ethnic, or cultural groups dramatically different to those of the individual) and the second to non-sentient or less-sentient species (Discovery Channel.)

And now I am trying to get that song out of my head.

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