Subject: Pff.
Author:
Posted on: 2010-12-12 18:40:00 UTC

Having read the article and the discussion so far, I'm content to dismiss the article as the drivel it is. As Sylibane points out so entertainingly, the author fails at every turn to support his arguments with evidence, and therefore can be dismissed as a serious essayist.

I actually considered that it might be a piece of sarcasm, mocking other people who actually do believe those things, but I doubt it. It's just a screed.

Now, I do take issue with anyone applying this kind of thinking to a fantasy world. Here's the thing: if you're writing about countries that are at war, you are naturally going to characterize the "bad guys" in a way that makes them seem bad to your audience, so they can cheer for your protagonists. If you're going to tell me that it's racist to characterize cannibalism and/or human sacrifice and/or serving an evil demigod as bad, or that it's racist to make people from a hot place have dark skin, then we have a serious problem. Using the prejudice of your audience as a shortcut for that characterization--"brown people = evil" in the absence of any other defining characteristics--that's a different issue, but I'd like to see the proof for that in Tolkien's or Lewis' case.

~Neshomeh

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