call my girl the bit the way i’m committed to her
he wasn't even looking at me and he found me
PUT YOUR BEARD IN MY MOUTH
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Aqua Utopia|海の底で記憶を紡ぐ
I'd rather be in outer space 🛸

oozey mess
hello vonnie

styofa doing anything
Misplaced Lens Cap

❣ Chile in a Photography ❣
TVSTRANGERTHINGS
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Cosimo Galluzzi
noise dept.

if i look back, i am lost
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@marielda
call my girl the bit the way i’m committed to her

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[citation not needed. no prablem]
pulling yourself up by your strap-on or whatever they say
sex position: you, sitting on your throne. me, standing behind you, resting my arm on the back of your throne and sniling so sneetly at your ministers like i have any right to be there

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stuck in a creative rut when i wish i was creatively rutting!! or something. whatever. puts my hands in my pockets and walks away slumped
really factual recounting with no embellishments whatsoever
they told me not to get lost in the weeds, but these are lush, beautiful, and ecologically necessary native plants so it's probably fine
i just apolitically killed the king like i have no agenda or whatever im just the jester here but i stabbed him anyway LOL all the courtiers and advisors are trying really hard to figure out who did it LOL all of them wanted him dead but they dont know whose scheme it was so nobody can promulgate a coherent political maneuver based on the circumstances LOL just playing my lute #MyLute
actually creators can be wrong about their characters sometimes. for example sometimes a creator thinks their character has blue eyes

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the author’s thinly veiled nothing #notwriting #straightupnotwritingit
the author’s thinly veiled something #straightupfinishingit #hopecore
ok ill bite. whats hockey
✨ A slow day for the Vigil's Keep Grey Wardens ✨
i always find it funny (and a little pathetic ngl) when people write 19th century european and specifically english historical fiction and try desperately to show these characters as “progressive” (i.e. outspoken whig party member etc) while avoiding implicating their characters in imperialist and colonialist actions despite being technically complicit just by virtue of living in the empire and benefiting as a citizen, like imo if you’re writing stories about these characters in this setting you just have to “accept” their sense of english exceptionalism at the very least. personally i notice asian diaspora especially brown 2nd gen immigrants do this a lot (makes sense maybe because they themselves benefit from american imperial hegemony despite often having “progressive” politics in general). which is why i find shows like bridgerton etc kinda funny bc back home these race traitors would hopefully all be jailed or executed by revolutionaries or something ngl and i can’t really feel for them regardless of whatever racism or prejudice they experience. (I like reading irish fans’ thoughts because of stuff like this)
but anyway this is all to say i especially find persuasion funny because this kinda happens with wentworth in canon despite austen herself being a 19th century upper class woman and not a writer on ao3 LMFAO. all the actions he’s involved with as mentioned in canon are restricted to direct engagement with the napoleonic empire only with the exception of the battle of st domingo… where he would be allied with haitian revolutionaries against french slavers 😭 this coupled with the fact that the next major british naval actions were all in the mediterranean for greek independence like navarino or anti-smuggling/slave trade actions along west africa (like francis austen) means you could credibly and conveniently say wentworth will never step into the colonies despite being a part of one of the largest colonizing forces in his time, it’s so absurd. i think it’s especially strange because other austen novels don’t escape this looming sense of empire and its acceptance/accompanying nationalism, if that makes sense - tilney’s “we are English, we are Christians,” darcy’s “every savage can dance,” even the treatment of roma in emma, in a sense. and yet in the novel wherein i most expected to see this sort of thing, it never properly came… i wonder if it’s because austen says “anne wanted…a much higher tone of indifference for everything but justice and equity.” or am i giving austen far too much credit here? i would really be interested in your thoughts if possible
mwah anon. im assuming we've all read edward said on austen in culture and imperialism re: mansfield park? its explicit where austen's positioning is – fanny price (our heroine, who is relatively the moral centre considering the narrative's contempt for everyone else in her house) asks her uncle about the slave trade in antigua that finances their living and the answer is a dead silence. it does not go beyond that for fanny price. we know (1) austen is pro abolition (2) she is aware of the slave trade in the west indies (slaves not emancipated till the 1830s after her death) and the plantations powered by it.
the reason you identify something of the sentiments of modernity in persuasion is because persuasion is a novel about modernity! it celebrates the merit based british navy where a man's courage and competence can grant him the just deserts that profligate, inherited aristocracy excludes him from because of his birth. it is an endorsement of the new british world order, opposed to slavery but not opposed to colonial plantations, opposed to aristocratic rank as organising force but not opposed to class as a system, opposed to provincial chauvinism but not to imperial nationalism. its heroes are middle class and cosmopolitan. they have bravely fought for the nation. they collect foreign curios they selected on their own travels for their homes. this is the bourgeois revolution happening in literature. austen's notion of appropriate moral sentiments towards those below the middle classes have always been nothing more than patrician and responsible charity throughout the books, see: anne doing so at kellynch.
i think you identify very accurately that wentworth is arguably relieved of having been a slaver. but i don't think austen is intending to soften imperial plunder or its violence at all unlike the elisions being made w modern writers that aim for racial reconciliation. poor, disabled mrs smith's concerns is that her dead husband's "properties" in the west indies could be recovered from mr. elliot's greed and negligence as the executor of the will. this revelation results in anne expressing sympathy for mrs smith, condemning mr. elliot and helping her retrieve said properties so she can be restored to her status. this is anne's dispensation of justice. in 1817, everyone knows said properties in west indies are plantations. it is known that the "prizes" of navy men like wentworth come from war and the capture of enemy ships and seizing their loot. mr & mrs croft talk intelligently of their time in the east indies. the navy men are feted for risking their lives, being entrepreneurial and living in discomfort away from home at the frontier. these are colonial national logics and i don't think austen is staking out a position opposed to them.
ok some fun citations
how it feels when the character doesn’t break the cycle and in fact actively perpetrates it

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Everything is exceedingly normal until it isn't.
from twitter user nomadsvagabonds
Thinking about how Inquisition seems to criticize the Grey Wardens for their methods (doing whatever it takes to end Blights) and then remembering how Veilguard also seems to criticize Solas for his methods in, presumably, dealing with the Blight and / or the Evanuris, and it made me realize that Weekes really is the kind of person who thinks there is no catastrophe great enough to justify extreme methods in stopping it, and I've been feeling a bit insane trying understand how anyone could believe that. Am I, somehow, missing something? Or is Weekes the insane one here?
my take on this was & continues to be that the idea that bioware keeps doubling down on that “fixing everything” requires measures that would be catastrophic for the majority population and therefore is unjustifiably cruel is one that stems from canadian settler-colonial anxieties about land back.
it’s a perfectly constructed strawman argument that from the liberal perspective is intended to always result in the answer of: let’s just do incremental change & maintain the institutions we have now. that’ll make things better. eventually :)