a BRILLIANT read, and even more incentive for me to make my own wizards trope-defying and excellent.
God itās fascinating to look at the timestamp on this one and then realize that Pratchett went on to write his Witches Series and Granny Weatherwax,Ā whoās strong andĀ fierceĀ and brilliant and austere and so achingly, bitterly,Ā intenselyĀ good. I think Granny Weatherwax would give Gandalf a hard look and Gandalf would remember he had a very urgent appointment three shires away and stroll off really fast.Ā
Holy fuck, everybody go read this right now.Ā
Pratchett is one of the people whose work is not only hilarious, but legitimately brilliant. I learned so much from reading his books. Even this talk is peppered with the kind of thing that makes you snort out loud and get stared at by coworkers:Ā
No wonder witches were always portrayed as toothless ā it was living in a 90,000 calorie house that did it. Youād hear a noise in the night and itād be the local kids, eating the doorknob.
And he fucking nails the witch/wizard dichotomy. Wizards = wise, powerful, organized, educated; witches = crones who give you warts. The Tiffany Aching series addresses this directly, as do the regular Discworld books focusing on the Lancre witches. Like Roach says, Granny Weatherwax is achingly, bitterly, intensely good, and thatās partly because sheās constantly aware of how easy it would be to be bad. How someone has to do the mucky jobs and help the obnoxious and stupid and never, ever take credit for anything you didnāt do; how the hardest thing is to stay balanced just on the edge between extremes, maintain that equilibrium, do what needs to be done no matter how awful or difficult it may be. Wizards never have to think about this. They just forge straight ahead, eating big dinners and squabbling amongst themselves and taking their power for granted.
Come to think of it, thatās one of the most significant divisions of power in Discworld: the men all gang up into this big elitist mob and loll around indolently, specificallyĀ not doing magic. Their magic is so powerful and dangerous that itās a better use of their time to all keep each other down, all the wizard books basically revolve around āOh no, someoneās doing magic, weād better stomp them flat and then go home for second breakfastā. They keep the world from turning inside out but not much more than that, and theyāre kind of a bunch of assholes about it too. Meanwhile the witches are just grimly slogging along, delivering babies and rousting out vampires and changing compresses, like, they stake out territories and then take care of everyone in it⦠while everyoneĀ still thinks that wizards are respectable and witches are shady.Ā
The line about equal rites killed me, though. The insightful commentary (on the internet no less) here helped buffer that.
Discworld Heritage Post
Itās the difference between status and value. Who does the necessary work, and who takes the credit. Who the world would actually fall apart without, and who reaps the rewards of being considered important.
Thereās gender in it, but shades of poor-and-rich as well.
Whatās marvellous I think here is that Pratchettās criticism of Le Guin, on Earthsea, was made in 1985 - and in 1990, she wrote Tehanu, which is a fantastic indictment of the sexism and misogyny of the earlier Earthsea books. Doesnāt meant she saw this, she probably didnāt - her own unease with the earlier Earthsea books was evident in other places - but itās what Pratchett himself is saying, reality creates fantasy creates reality.
Terry being brilliant, and read the comments.























