rivkat: Wonder Woman reading comic (wonder woman reading comic)
rivkat ([personal profile] rivkat) wrote2008-07-07 02:19 pm

Free speech and a grab bag of reviews

A Washington Post article uses Strikethrough, among other incidents, to discuss the difficulties of defining and protecting free speech online. It's interesting that the article, while clearly free speech-friendly, turns the suspended LJs into "fiction," eliding the fan element. That makes sense--it's yet another thing that would have to be explained, detracting from the larger story--and yet I can't help wonder what other flattening has gone on in the other stories of suppression recounted.

David Sedaris, When You Are Engulfed in Flames: I found Me Talk Pretty One Day really enjoyable, but I’m not sure I smiled more than once at this similar book of autobiographical essays. Sedaris writes about horrible neighbors, quitting smoking, and learning Japanese, and I just felt bad most of the time he was being nasty about other people—he’s so good at describing cringeworthy details, and I just imagined myself in their place. The compassion I found in Me Talk Pretty seemed to lurk in the background here, and without it, I just felt sad. As for the quitting narrative, I expected more of a focus on the attractions of cigarettes, but he referred to those attractions without ever really describing them in a way that engaged my empathy. I’ve never smoked, but I think I can imagine the pull of an addiction like that; Stephen King has made me feel it in the past, but not Sedaris.

Jeannine Hall Gailey, Becoming the Villainess: Superheroine-themed poetry! Okay, so I didn’t get much out of it beyond that initial stab of coolness. Making the connection between modern and older myths, there are also a bunch of poems about Greek myths, particularly Philomel. Often the women are modernized—Persephone a woman who’s moved to someplace like Seattle. Female victimization and power ebb and flow in the poems; the superheroines of today are redressing wrongs done for thousands of years. There’s a fair amount of sympathy for the villainesses, e.g., “Conversation with the Stepmother, at the Wedding,” which ends, “They never blame their father/who brought me here, to a house/full of strangers, where even the servants/worship images of the dead./I say, make room for the new.”

Christopher Buckley, Boomsday: Cassandra Devine, a young PR exec, has a side passion: blogging about the Social Security disaster that Baby Boomers’ greed is bringing on us. Her proposed solution: Transitioning, or paying older folks to commit suicide. When Senator Randy Jepperson takes up her cause, sparks fly—especially since most people think that the two of them were having sex in a Bosnian minefield when a mine exploded, costing Jepperson his leg and Devine her military commission. Buckley is arch enough, but I have the same reaction here that I did to the last book of his that I read—satire of American politics is another casualty of the last eight years. You can’t get over the top. I’m not even sure there is a top. I’ll stick with The Daily Show.

[identity profile] margueritem.livejournal.com 2008-07-07 06:35 pm (UTC)(link)
When Senator Randy Jepperson takes up her cause, sparks fly—especially since most people think that the two of them were having sex in a Bosnian minefield when a mine exploded, costing Jepperson his leg and Devine her military commission.


... What?

[identity profile] rivkat.livejournal.com 2008-07-07 06:51 pm (UTC)(link)
Uh, yeah. It's the backstory--he goes on a factfinding mission to Bosnia where she's posted; she's assigned to show him around, and he drags her into a minefield where they get blown up. They weren't having sex, but everyone thinks they were. He becomes an injured American hero; she becomes a PR flack.

[identity profile] margueritem.livejournal.com 2008-07-07 07:16 pm (UTC)(link)
They assume these two people were stupid enough to have outdoor sex in Bosnia, on or near a minefield?

[identity profile] rivkat.livejournal.com 2008-07-07 09:08 pm (UTC)(link)
Well, they were stupid enough to enter a minefield, though really it was Jepperson's fault.
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[identity profile] cryptoxin.livejournal.com 2008-07-07 07:29 pm (UTC)(link)
yet I can't help wonder what other flattening has gone on in the other stories of suppression recounted.

I wondered the same thing, and could only imagine that the other case studies were well-networked minor causes célèbres in their communities. It was actually odd to see LiveJournal mentioned alongside MySpace, YouTube and flickr.

[identity profile] j-bluestocking.livejournal.com 2008-07-07 08:30 pm (UTC)(link)
Some of the suspended LJs may have been straight fiction -- we in the fan community tend to hear loudest what affects us. And after all, fan fiction is a subset of fiction.

[identity profile] rivkat.livejournal.com 2008-07-07 09:10 pm (UTC)(link)
That's true, though I read relatively widely about the controversy on LJ and never saw a cross-reference to straight fiction, though there was much talk about abuse survivors' journals and that one dedicated to discussing Nabokov's Lolita. And when more tech-savvy outlets picked up the story (e.g., Cnet), they did focus on fans. I don't think it was a mistaken choice, as I said, just one where the paper probably felt that it didn't want to have to explain too much in one story.
abbylee: (Default)

[personal profile] abbylee 2008-07-07 10:20 pm (UTC)(link)
When I read it earlier, what caught my eye was the use of "crime victims" bit instead of rape (and/or incest).

I also did wonder if they were more concerned about the communities discussing Lolita (etc) rather than any fandom works; there's something with the way "legitimate blogs on fiction" is phrased.

[identity profile] stoplookingup.livejournal.com 2008-07-08 02:01 am (UTC)(link)
I laughed out loud right through Me Talk Pretty One Day, as I did for all DS's NPR commentaries. I was looking forward to When You Are Engulfed in Flames, especially when I heard where he got the title from. Rats.

fanfic and rape

[identity profile] sapphoq.livejournal.com 2008-07-12 06:16 am (UTC)(link)

Must be evil words to the Post.
Le sigh.
spike