Me: I wonder how many works this fandom has on AO3
Me emerging from the depths: what day is it?
Game of Thrones Daily
trying on a metaphor
Jules of Nature
cherry valley forever
d e v o n
will byers stan first human second
One Nice Bug Per Day
Aqua Utopiaď˝ćľˇăŽĺşă§č¨ćśăç´Ąă

bliss lane
almost home

titsay
EXPECTATIONS
Sweet Seals For You, Always
Stranger Things
đ
NASA

Product Placement
art blog(derogatory)
Monterey Bay Aquarium

seen from Canada
seen from United States
seen from United States

seen from United States

seen from United States
seen from India

seen from United States

seen from United Kingdom
seen from United States
seen from United States

seen from United States

seen from Ukraine
seen from Germany
seen from United Kingdom

seen from United Kingdom

seen from Malaysia
seen from Denmark
seen from Indonesia
seen from United States

seen from France
@prose-mortem
Me: I wonder how many works this fandom has on AO3
Me emerging from the depths: what day is it?

Anya is live and ready to show you everything. Watch her strip, dance, and perform exclusive shows just for you. Interact in real-time and make your fantasies come true.
Free to watch ⢠No registration required ⢠HD streaming
ăăstarry sky in late autumn ăăďź Nikko station
Rest in peace to our lovely, talented girl;
1949-2024 ~ Shelley Duvall <3

Anya is live and ready to show you everything. Watch her strip, dance, and perform exclusive shows just for you. Interact in real-time and make your fantasies come true.
Free to watch ⢠No registration required ⢠HD streaming
If youâre awake between 3 AM and 6 AM youâre appropriating lycanthrope culture and you need to go to sleep and check your privilege
This is blatant vampire erasure.
Go write a sad poem about it
My name is Vlad and wen its nite or wen the wolves art pohsting shite and all discourse haf gon to dogs - i stay up late. i clik âreblogâ
PEAK TUMBLR
The chalk cliffs of RĂźgen, a popular tourist spot to catch a glimpse of the alabaster dragon migration.
reblog if you enjoy napping, being cozy, being conked out, snoozing, wrapping up in blankets, sipping a hot drink, catching some z's, hugging a plushie, or otherwise relaxing and resting
i like how this post gets circulated the most around evening. like yes gang settle down! we know when it's bed time!
the fact that i'm no longer the same age as the protagonists of novels and films i once connected to is so heartbreaking. there was a time when I looked forward to turning their age. i did. and i also outgrew them. i continue to age, but they don't; never will. the immortality of fiction is beautiful, but cruel.
060623

Anya is live and ready to show you everything. Watch her strip, dance, and perform exclusive shows just for you. Interact in real-time and make your fantasies come true.
Free to watch ⢠No registration required ⢠HD streaming
quick reminder that itâs ok to say that you love reading and that reading is your passion without reading 30+ books in a year. if you connect with books and love the power of the written word, youâre bookish. you donât need to justify your love of reading.
vellichorblues on Instagram
The trinity of ghost hunting girls

Anya is live and ready to show you everything. Watch her strip, dance, and perform exclusive shows just for you. Interact in real-time and make your fantasies come true.
Free to watch ⢠No registration required ⢠HD streaming
âThe fact that colonialism is so central to science-fiction, and that science-fiction is so central to our own pop culture, suggests that the colonial experience remains more tightly bound up with our political life and public culture than we sometimes like to think.â
â The Atlantic discusses the link between science fiction and colonialism. (via ceeturnalia)
Why Sci-Fi Keeps Imagining the Subjugation of White People
APRIL 25, 2014
Science-fiction âcontemplates possible futures.â So says a new Smithsonian article, and it doesnât seem like a particularly controversial thesis. As the piece says, sci-fi tries to think about whatâs to come for civilization. âThe future is a safe, sterile laboratory for trying out ideas in,â as Ursula K. Le Guin says.
But itâs worth remembering that in sci-fi, the future actually isnât safe or sterile at all. On the contrary, with its alien invasions, evil empires, authoritarian dystopia, and new lands discovered and pacified, the genre can look as much like the past as the future. In particular, sci-fi is often obsessed with colonialism and imperial adventure, the kind that made the British Empire an empire and that still sustains Americaâs might worldwide.
The link between colonialism and science-fiction is every bit as old as the link between science-fiction and the future. John Rieder in his eye-opening book Colonialism and the Emergence of Science-Fiction notes that most scholars believe that science fiction coalesced âin the period of the most fervid imperialist expansion in the late nineteenth century.â Sci-fi âcomes into visibility,â he argues, âfirst in those countries most heavily involved in imperialist projectsâFrance and Englandâ and then gradually gains a foothold in Germany and the U.S. as those countries too move to obtain colonies and gain imperial conquests. He adds, âMost important, no informed reader can doubt that allusions to colonial history and situations are ubiquitous features of early science fiction motifs and plots.â
The iconic example of colonialism-inspired sci-fi is that most important of sci-fi stories, H.G. Wells's War of the Worlds. As Rieder says, Wells begins his book with an explicit comparison of the Martian invasion to colonial expansion in Tasmania. âThe Tasmanians,â Wells writes,
in spite of their human likeness, were entirely swept out of existence in a war of extermination waged by European immigrants, in the space of fifty years. Are we such apostles of mercy as to complain if the Martians warred in the same spirit?â
Here the Martian conquest is presented as analogous to, and even as just retribution for, Britainâs colonial genocide. As has been visited on them, so shall it be visited on us.
With Wells in mind, itâs easy to see colonial metaphors throughout the sci-fi that followed him. In many cases, as with Wells, these works flip the racial dynamic that characterized the most influential imperialist ventures of the last few centuries. In such stories, sci-fi is about âthemâ (a non-white, foreign civilization) doing to us (Western, largely white powers) as we did to them. Star Trek: The Wrath of Khan and Into Darkness, for example, imagine a non-white antagonist who preaches the colonial ideology of eugenic culling against the less biologically perfect, Western-ish protagonists.
Even works in which the invaders are white can come off like historical fiction envisioning an inversion of Anglo hegemony. Take Terry Gilliamâs film Brazil, about a totalitarian Britain conquered and occupied by Germany, in which native English people are second-class citizens. From Brazil, itâs only a brief hop to 1984, which, as Iâve pointed out here at The Atlantic, can also read as a reverse colonial parable. Rather than seeing the novel as a riff on Hitler and Stalinâs brand of totalitarianism, as itâs usually interpreted, you can instead think about it as inspired by the repressive state in which Orwell servedâBritish-controlled Burma.
Even the Terminator films fit pretty easily into a colonial narrative. At first, they may seem far afield from geographic conquest; the plot, after all, hinges on time-traveling robots, not invading aliens. But Rieder points out that for Wells, the War of the Worlds was a battle not only across space, but across time. Wellsâs Martians, with their giant craniums and atrophied bodies, were meant to be a warning of our own evolutionary future, just as the Tasmanians were generally viewed by Westerners as preserved, primitive living remnants of the evolutionary past. Thus, the computers in Terminator can be seen as not-fully-evolved colonial servants, who eventually evolve into more-advanced colonial masters.
So what to make of this colonial obsession? What does it mean that all of these novels and films, from War of the Worlds more than 100 years ago to Into Darkness in 2013, are powered by colonial inversion, a dream of Western imperial violence inflicted upon Westerners?In some instances, itâs clear that sci-fi reverse colonialism is anti-colonial. In others, itâs a justification for imperialism.
To some degree, and in some instances, itâs clear that sci-fi reverse colonialism is anti-colonial. Again, Wells uses the Mars invasion to directly criticize European colonial practices.  Similarly, Gwyneth Jones in her 1994 book North Wind imagines an alien race, the Aleutians, who are almost-but-not-quite exactly like humans. When they take over the earth, they nonchalantly decide to sheer off the top of the Himalayas to improve the planetâs climate. Despite worldwide protests (which confuse the Aleutians; why would anyone object to sheering off the mountains, they wonder?) the Aleutians go ahead with their plan, and accidentally destroy most of earthâs farmland (as we see in the follow up novel, Phoenix CafĂŠ.) The depiction of bland imperial arrogance directed, specifically, at the subcontinent, is an obvious satire of Britainâs own history of empireâand of the intertwined violence of Western expansion and environmental devastation more generally. In a similar vein, Octavia Butler's Xenogenesis Trilogy, told from the perspective of a family of black humans who survive and thrive after an alien invasion, cannily inverts and crosses identities of colonized and colonizers, self and other.
Reverse colonial sci-fi donât always have to be anti-imperialist, though. Enderâs Game, both film and book, use the invasion of the superior aliens not as a critique of Western expansion and genocide, but as an excuse for those things. The bugs invade human worlds, and the consequence is that the humans must utterly annihilate the alien enemy, even if Ender feels kind of bad about it. Olympus Has Fallen runs on the same script, as a North Korea with impossibly advanced weapons technology lays sci-fi siege to the White House, giving our hero the go-ahead for torture, murder, and generalized carnage. In Terminator, as well, the fact that the robots are treating us as inhumanly as we treated them doesnât exactly create any sympathy. Instead, the paranoid fear of servants overthrowing masters just becomes a spur to uberviolence (as shown in Linda Hamiltonâs transformation from naĂŻve good girl to paramilitary extremist). The one heroic reprogrammed Terminator, who must do everything John Connor tells him even unto hopping on one leg, doesnât inspire a broader sympathy for SkyNet. Instead, Schwarzenegger is good because he identifies with the humans totally, sacrificing himself to destroy his own people. Terminator II is, in a lot of ways, a retelling of Gunga Din.
On the one hand, then, the reverse colonial stories in sci-fi can be used as a way to sympathize with those who suffer under colonialism. It puts the imperialists in the place of the Tasmanians and says, this could be you, how do you justify your violence now? On the other hand, reverse colonial stories can erase those who are at the business end of imperial terror, positing white European colonizers as the threatened victims in a genocidal race war , thereby justifying any excess of violence. Often, though, sci-fi does both at onceâas, Rieder argues, Wells does in The War of the Worlds, which both sympathizes with the oppressed and suggests that survival-of-the-fittest colonial exploitation is natural, inevitable, and unstoppable (there is, after all, no talking to the Martiansâor, therefore, to the Tasmanians?).
The fact that colonialism is so central to science-fiction, and that science-fiction is so central to our own pop culture, suggests that the colonial experience remains more tightly bound up with our political life and public culture than we sometimes like to think. Sci-fi, then, doesnât just demonstrate future possibilities, but future limitsâthe extent to which dreams of what weâll do remain captive to the things weâve already done.