02-08-2010, 12:13 AM | #61 |
Join Date: Dec 2006
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Re: [Banestorm] Female Adventurers
Another issue is that- gender inequality stems from times of plenty, when times are scarce and dangers are high you cannot afford gender inequality, everyone must work, fight, and care for children if the society is to survive, issues of 'that is men/women's work' do not arise until such time as social upheval due to external forces is at an end.
Between raging supernatural forces, indiscriminate and rare occurrence of magery in children, threats from other races, and the occasional power mad rogue trying to take over the world GURPS banestorm cannot afford to be sexist. As such while sexism may exist in terms of 'lip service sexism' (likely a relic passed down from the original groups when they were delivered on the planet) there will be minimal room to turn down training to someone willing to raise a sword in the kings/dukes name, and definitely no room to say 'no we will not teach you magic because of ...' --------side note------- Also I have read several convincing thesis that gender inequality is a relatively new phenomenon which replaced social inequality only a few hundred years ago with only a few exceptions (most armies were of one gender, but not all armies were men); before a few hundred years ago the differentiation between peasant/surf and noble made up the inequality and a female noble was just as important as a male one, and a male surf just as abused and pigeon holed as a female. Documentation seeming to indicate a progressive male bias through the ages may be a result of the male bias of the record keepers, rather then the society at large. The most touted test cases for this idea lies in Cleopatra (a single, beautiful, well loved queen with no male counterpart leading an entire country unquestioned), and countess Elizabeth Bathory - who owned land and estate before marriage, and after her husbands death kept and managed all of his land as well. Then went very crazy and started killing local peasants by the hundreds, even then, when everyone knew she was doing this it took them YEARS to finally go and charge her with anything, ultimately her punishment essentially consisted of house arrest (though a particularly brutal variant). |
02-13-2010, 07:38 AM | #62 |
Join Date: Jan 2005
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Re: [Banestorm] Female Adventurers
When Johnny Orc (or for that matter, any group of human mercs) comes calling, I bet the rule is 'everyone fights.'
Unless humanity's numbers have shrunk dramatically and is in danger of being wiped out (a la Wendy Pini's ElfQuest where Cutter orders his female fighters not to engage in an early rescue attemps), I see no reason to deliberately exclude women from 'male' roles in a medieval society. |
02-13-2010, 09:20 AM | #63 | ||
Join Date: Dec 2007
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Re: [Banestorm] Female Adventurers
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Well let me put it this way. The first female ruler of England was Matilda...sort of. Because even though she was legitimate in every way except being female, the moment her father died, a whole bunch of nobles threw off the oaths they had sworn to accept her as Queen and she was never actually crowned over 9 years of civil war ended only when she agreed to step down in favour of her infant son who had that thing she lacked to be qualified to rule England. Masculinity. One can not evaluate the status of women just by looking at the exceptions. All exceptions prove is that exceptions exist, and when it comes to human social behaviour, exceptions always exist. |
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