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WisCon 32!

Friday, May 23rd, 2008 12:24 pm
fullygoldy: Yellow Roses (Make Books)
Heading out from the office now (momentarily).
Home for food and shower and change of clothes
Hit the bank for cash
Arrival at WisCon no later than 3:00
Dinner with newbies and friends from last year
Opening Ceremony
Perhaps a panel
Parties/socializing

Saturday - I've got back-to-back panels in mind for most of the day.  Including 5 vying for my attention in the 2:30 pm time slot and 1 in each of the 2 time slots AFTER the auction.  I'm not sure I'll be capable of appreciating panels that begin after 8 pm, but I'm gonna give it a shot.

Sunday - less jam-packed list of panels, longer breaks and Guest of Honor Speeches.

Monday - 2 things I kinda want to attend, but I'm not sure if it'll be worth going all the way downtown for the last day.

I am tres disappointed that there are no "Lady Poetesses from Hell" on the program this year. ::pout::

Also, I have a sparkly tiara-like headband, but I haven't decided which outfit to wear it with.

Last WisCon 31 Post

Wednesday, July 4th, 2007 09:06 am
fullygoldy: Yellow Roses (Polycon)
I had said before:  attending this on my own was a pretty big stretch for me.  By and large, everyone I spoke to was thoughtful, intelligent, sincere and friendly.  

It's true.  I'm a borderline introvert, hooked up with an extreme extrovert in RL.  I like to live inside my head.  I like my space, my quiet.  It's definitely how I recharge.  But. I also like to socialize and entertain.  I'm very comfortable in groups where I know most of the people.  I've got very little problem with standing up in front of a room full of strangers and "performing" as long as I feel my material is well-prepared.  It's actually harder to stand up in front of a small group of people I know, LOL.  So most people who know me casually think I'm much more of an extrovert than I really am.

I had to approach WisCon like I would if I were attending a conference at my employer's behest.  I had to act like I was getting paid to be outgoing.  It helped.  It's really hard to overcome inertia and make those first couple of steps toward a stranger just to introduce myself.  It's really hard when I'm not intending to flirt with said stranger.  How weird is that?  I like to flirt, and I've been doing it all my life, so if I see someone interesting, I'll just find a way to walk on over (usually I just convince myself I've been invited).  K and J were easy to approach in that respect on Friday and Sunday nights.  J was a little harder because I'm pretty stupid when it comes to flirting with women.  Not enough practice.


All in all, it was a great experience, and I'm looking forward to next year.  I hope I'll stay in touch with a few new folks until then too, especially since a couple of them are right here in town.
fullygoldy: Yellow Roses (Polycon)
70 Sexism: A Spotter's Guide
Feminism, Sex, and Gender•Capitol B• Saturday, 1:00-2:15 p.m.
It's relatively clear what makes a work feminist—relatively—but in these days of more subtle sexism, when at least lip service to equality is required, what makes a work non-feminist, or anti-feminist?
M: Lyda Morehouse, Lee Abuabara, M. J. Hardman, Betsy Lundsten, Graham Sleight

Listen up, you women and men, I found this panel to be extremely informative and thought provoking. I had considered attending Liking Your Life in an Unlikeable World: Personal Energy for Political Work, in this timeslot, but the Sexism panel kept cropping up in my mental to-do list. I was also concerned that it would turn out to be nothing more than a litany of “that’s anti-feminist” objections and I would be expected to apologize for not noticing, or worse, liking something objectionable. Of course, I was a n00b, so I didn’t really know what to expect. I certainly didn’t expect the excellent moderating skills of Lyda Morehouse. Besides being witty and sharp, Lyda kept the conversation moving, and made sure there were lots of opportunities for interaction and clarification. She wasn’t afraid to wrest everyone back on topic, nor was she hesitant about sharing her very strong opinions. I like that in a moderator.
[livejournal.com profile] vito_excaliburbegan a summary of this panel, and as vito says, “Well, MJ Hardman was on the panel, and largely as a result of that, I just don't think it could have gone better.” I totally agree. MJ is a doctor of linguistics and a professor. She is studying the language of a culture that has no hierarchy or ranking in its expression. It’s a very weird concept for us traditional westerners, and one she had difficulty mastering. I’m not sure if the study of Jaqi languages caused her to notice the sexism inherent in our western languages, or if she was already aware of this phenomenon and was searching for an exception. MJ is very passionate about the topics of linguistics, feminism and equality, and her passion kept the conversation from ever becoming dry or boring.

The first new thing I learned about is “denial of agency.” English is constructed and expressed in a way that “denies” a female’s “agency,” where denial ~ negates, denigrates or ignores, and agency ~ action, will or ability. As an example, MJ shared a story a student told her: He had been keeping his 4-month old daughter entertained in a hospital waiting room. Her favorite game was pulling herself to a standing position in his lap while holding onto his fingers. A woman who was waiting also, tried to strike up a conversation by opening with, “Aren’t you the strong little boy, pulling yourself up like that?” The father answered, “yes, SHE is very strong, and she loves this game.” To which the woman replied, “Oh, how cute you are letting daddy pull you up over and over!” Can you hear the pins dropping? The room was silent for a second before the outraged gasp took over. As MJ pointed out, this woman had no agenda for saying this. It’s just the way our society has ingrained us to automatically deny a female’s agency, and the tool that keeps it ingrained is the structure of our language.

Even when a woman does something that is clearly active, her accomplishments are expressed in the most passive terms possible. A female cannot be the subject of the sentence, only the object, especially if there is a male in the sentence too. So, if I excel at my job, and my boss notices, my co-workers are way more likely to say “The boss promoted her again,” instead of “she worked hard for (or deserved) that promotion.” The only time our language structure allows for the woman to be the subject, is when she is also a victim. MJ rather flippantly called this “taking the perp out of the subject.” But it has merit. e.g. If you are going to discuss the crime of rape, you will say, “She [subject] was raped [passive verb].” You might also add, “…by the frat boy, milkman, whomever” but the very structure of the sentence makes the perpetrator-as-object forgettable, and does nothing to hold him responsible for his action. The properly equal way to express this crime is “He (or the frat boy, milkman, whomever) [subject] raped [active verb] her [object]. In the first case, the victim is made the ‘responsible party’ because she is the subject. But the true responsible party can only be held accountable if he is the subject. As I was listening to the words ‘subject’ and ‘object’ being bandied about, I recalled that I had read a book several years ago that hammered home the definitions of those terms for me, “The Bonds of Love, Psychoanalysis, Feminism, and the Problem of Domination,” by Jessica Benjamin. From the overleaf: “She reveals that domination is a complex psychological process which ensnares both parties in bonds of complicity, and shows how it underlies our family life, our social institutions, and especially our sexual relations, in spite of our conscious commitment to equality and freedom.” It was a fascinating read that would have been even more noteworthy if Benjamin had also examined how our language reinforces this structure and complicity.

The group spent a good deal of time identifying movies that appeared to be about strong female leads, but were still subtly denying the agency of those women. Lyda’s favorite example is “Alien.” She stated that it was a great movie with the first female action-hero right up until “she went back for the damn cat. And then she took her clothes off.” Would James Bond ever go back for the damn cat? No! And would anyone hate him for it? Also no! So why would the female hero who spent not one moment exhibiting any kind of nurturing or sexy characteristics in the previous 114 minutes spend the last two rescuing the cat and taking her clothes off? Lyda, that’s a damn good question. I used to love that movie, and now I am mad. Yes, that’s just the kind of thing I was afraid would happen, but as Lyda said, cut the last two minutes off and it’s still a kick-ass movie, and besides, I got more out of this discussion than I lost. (Also, Bond does tend to at least imply taking his clothes off in the last few moments of his movies too, but it’s really not the same thing.) Afterward, I asked her what her response to ‘Ever After’ was, because ‘Cinderella’ does a heck of a lot of rescuing in that movie, including a very physical rescue of the prince. Lyda hadn’t seen it, but wrote down the information and promised to look it up. I hope we get to discuss her reaction to it someday.

I have been hyper-aware of active vs. passive and subject vs. object for the past 10 days. And this idea has been percolating in my head all this time. This isn’t the newest hypothesis in the world, but maybe the reason I like slash fiction is that the characters are both always the subject. I have heard many times, people explaining their love of slash by saying it’s because the men are more equal than in a female/male relationship. For me, the best, most well-written slash, the stuff that keeps me coming back for more, is the stuff that has both guys in an active mode. They are equals in the relationship. They’re both the subject and they have to trade off. They both are always guys. I can’t abide reading the stuff where one or both of them starts acting like a girl (not even a woman, but a girl). My preference really became apparent when a friend asked me to beta her first slash story last week. There were these weird places where the younger character would go distressingly passive for no reason that would advance the story. And whenever that was happening, there would be tense changes and overly flowery language to accompany it. (Don’t worry, we tracked it all down and stomped it all out before the story was posted. I knew I was on the right track because the author didn’t object to it at all.)

It made me think of Harlequin romances, written ‘for women.’ The language is always flowery and passive. The heroine is always being done to. Ripley and Laura Croft are female action-heroes. They are not action-heroines. Action-heroine is an oxymoron. Heroine is a derivative of hero, just as woman is a derivative of man. According to MJ, the derivative is always considered secondary in importance in language. This is why she says we should say ‘women and men’ from now on, or until it doesn’t matter anymore. This is the final cool new thing I learned in the Sexism panel. You don’t need to say the male part first, because as the root, no matter where it is placed in the order, it will be perceived as most important. Also, whatever comes after the most important part of the order, will automatically be reduced in importance, and thereafter, forgotten. So, if you place the derivative first, you elevate its importance to nearly equal that of the root, and then they are heard and remembered equally. Always saying “women and men” is simple, eye-opening, and subversive, in the best possible way, but it is certainly not easy to implement. I think it will be worth the effort though. Call it part of my ‘conscious commitment to equality and freedom.’

I’m not sure the panelists actually answered the questions in the blurb, but I don’t care. It was a great panel.
fullygoldy: Yellow Roses (Better than sex)

Yes, it's been nearly a week.  I work for a living, LOL.  Also, I've been having the happiest beta experience of my life.  An author who can take concrit in the spirit in which it is intended is a rare and beautiful thing (InMyLimitedExperienceTM). The current author isn't the only one, but she's the only one I also know in RL, and that adds a bunch of dimensions to the process.  I'm having *fun.*

So, I asked my wise and wonderful friendlist for advice on which panel to attend at 1:00pm on Saturday.  The only responses I got implied that I *must* attend "Lady Poetesses from Hell* or be deemed the most uncool of all.  I am a sheep in this regard.  I attended the panel. (I also sat in the back row to make a hasty retreat, if necessary).

Dayum!  These poetesses rocked!  The panel consisted of six readers, and the program only listed two, so I apologize for not knowing who the guy who was channeling a lady poetess is.  They all "dressed" for the occasion.  I definitely need to acquire some hats before the next con.  Ellen Klages, Laurel Winter, the guy, Elise Mattheson, Rebecca Marjesdatter, and Terry Garey. I liked Terry's car poem ::bwg::

Ellen was the last to arrive, amber beer in hand, and they made her go first for her tardiness.  Her intro explained that the previous night she had been shooting pool with Elise M, they were discussing slash, and drinking beer.  "Woot!" said I, perhaps inappropriately, but come on! What's not to love there?  Ellen went on to explain that Elise had challenged her to write her first slash ever.  A poem for today's panel, with a pairing provided by Elise.  The pairing consisted of:

A piece of string

Richard Feynman

O.M.G.!!!!!!!!!eleventy111111111!!  /fangirl-geek squee.  Seriously?  Could this be a better challenge?  The fact that Ellen accepted it meant that I was about to be treated to something wonderful.  My abundant optimism was not misplaced.

I laughed, I roared, I wept (only from laughing so hard), I attempted not to fall out of my chair.  I swear to all the gods, that if the entire rest of the panel had SUCKED, I would have still thought the experience a WIN of the greatest magnitude possible.  I could barely breathe while Ellen shared her poem with us.  Breathing might have made me miss something fabulous.  "you're a Dick."  "you don't understand me." OMG!

Laurel Winter later shared her "horror" poem of eggs in the refrigerator, awaiting their final judgement.  That was eye-opening.  I felt silly being practically the only person to admit to having eggs for breakfast that morning.  Then Laurel admitted that she too had eaten eggs that day.

Each of the six took turns reading poems, and it seemed that they chose their poems based on what had been read prior.  So, I found it very cool and extremely entertaining.  And. I want a hat.

Afterward, I rushed the "stage" and asked Ellen if there was any way to get a copy of her fabulous slash poem.  She showed me her hand-written notes in her notebook. 'this is the only place it exists.'  

'I understand that, but I LOVE YOU SO MUCH RIGHT NOW!  Please, can I convince you to publish this somewhere?'
I won't say Ellen blushed at that, but she did kind of pink up around the ears, and she gave me her business card (OMG - they're so adorable - these tiny pieces of cardstock, about a quarter of a standard business card, with whimsical pics on one side and her info in tee-ninesy font on the other - they're all different!)  She said that if I'd email her and remind her that I wanted the poem, she'd let me know where it finally got published.  She had sort of thought she could get it published in Analog.  Which is of course a fantastic idea, and figures, seeing as how I let my subscription lapse recently.  But still.  I encouraged that endeavor.  Analog should be thrilled to have this submission.  If not Analog, she'll post it to her blog.  I cannot wait.  I kid you not, this poem is to die for.

I spent the rest of the weekend telling people how fantastic the Lady Poetesses panel was.  At one point, I spoke to Hope.  Hope is apparently well-known, and I can see why.  I attended a panel which she also attended. Her comments were pertinent, interesting and inciteful.  So I'm blathering on to Hope about the poetry.  She says she's not really into poetry.  But.  "Are you familiar with Laurel Winter?"  
"I don't know - I'm not sure I recognize the name." 
"Oh, she has this fantastic horror piece about eggs."
"OMG! She's one of the Lady Poetesses!"

Later on, I ran into Ms. Winter.  I recounted this conversation (it was my only excuse for striking up a conversation).  Says she, "Oh! I know Hope!"  Seriously.  How cool is that? (Also, Hope is one cool lady. I'm looking forward to running into her again).

In conclusion, always listen to your flist.  Always attend panels labeled "Lady Poetesses from Hell." And *I am a geek of ginormous proportions when it comes to String Theory.*

ETA:  If anybody is listening, the Poetesses need a bigger room.

fullygoldy: Yellow Roses (Polycon)

Arrgh!  Allergies are kicking my butt, and I've got so much to say about WisCon!  Coming soon:

Saturday Panels - Lady Poetesses from Hell and Sexism: A Spotter's Guide deserve require their own posts. 

Saturday Parties - there was homebrew!  And it wasn't from Small Beer Press, go figure.

Reactions of a closet introvert/Overall perceptions - attending this on my own was a pretty big stretch for me.  By and large, everyone I spoke to was thoughtful, intelligent, sincere and friendly.  And lots of them could bring the sarcasm along with the funny.  This is a damn cool group.

Sunday Night - I don't think I can do the guests of honor justice, so I'm going to look for a transcript of their speech.  
Then there are the Sunday parties, and the fancy dress (tiaras!), and the people I met, including one person I could not keep my eyes off, so I walked over and started talking to her on the lamest, flimsiest excuse for an opener ever. ::sigh:: At least she humored me and hung around until our beers were gone.

WisCon, OMG!

Saturday, May 26th, 2007 06:27 pm
fullygoldy: Yellow Roses (Books)
Okay, having a pretty good time so far.  Upon entering the hotel, the first person I saw was [profile] obafugakumof the wildly pink and purple hair, wearing a safety green vest, because she's heading up con safety this year with her dh, [profile] drakenfly.  When I went upstairs to register, I saw N, who promptly hugged me and asked me to sniff his cologne and offer up an opinion.

Checked into The Gathering, and finally found [profile] nayad.  It took me awhile because her newest adorable haircut made her much harder to recognize right away.

Went to the first timers' dinner, but the group was so large we split into three groups - they went to Noodles, Saaz, and Frida's, all attainable on foot and all located on State St. I ended up with the Frida's group because I overheard the fearless leader describing it as having the best margaritas evar!  (natch)  I sat next to J from DC, and she's a total fantasy fan, and really has a great sense of humor.  We sat across from a group of 4 friends that came out from NYC. (I didn't order a margarita, I got a mango sunrise instead and it was fantastic).

Returned for the Opening Ceremonies, which had a hilarious rendition of the "Rainbow Connection" remixed to "someday we'll find it, the Rainbow Convention, the old weird, the new weird and me"  (the chorus changed each verse, I liked this one best).  Sat with J, one of the other members of our dinner party, [personal profile] sasha_feather, who is also local, and Sasha's friend, E.

Went to our first panel (with [personal profile] sasha_feather) and while it didn't go in the direction I was expecting, it was interesting, thought provoking and lively.  Later on, I spent an hour with K, further discussing the topic.  K walked me out to my car and gave me a hug goodbye.

Today, the Lady Poetesses from Hell was SO TOTALLY WORTH IT!! More on that later.  I gotta go eat, and change and head back for the parties!

AFK

Friday, May 25th, 2007 02:48 pm
fullygoldy: One True Ray (K) (OTR)

If anyone cares, I'll be AFK for most of the weekend - attending WisCon 31 (my first time).

Hopefully on Monday, I'll be able to report that the weekend went well.

WisCon 31 Pondering

Saturday, May 19th, 2007 08:32 am
fullygoldy: Yellow Roses (Books)
The schedule has been posted, and I have been studying it to see what I might like to attend.  It's pretty impressive and intimidating.  I mean, there are over 200 events listed, and there will be 1000 participants - its a far cry from our little ol' MAPC.

These are the things I'm considering attending:

Friday )




Help me, oh wise and benevolent friends list.  At this time I've got no idea how to choose between these (I've put in bold the stuff I'm leaning toward).  I'm not comfortable with leaving a workshop way early to pop in on another mid-stream, so I've really got to start narrowing down the list.

Oh, and I'm totally passing up Saturday's "Please Explain Slash To Me" because I think by now, I no longer need an explanation ::g::

Wiscon Bound

Sunday, April 22nd, 2007 09:57 am
fullygoldy: Sam Carter glaring (Fierce Sam)
Okay, I committed to Wiscon!  It's the last weekend of May, and it's here in town, so I really don't have an excuse not to go, right?  

So maybe I will see some people I know, or at least some people I've interacted with on LJ.  I have no idea what to expect, but I've looked at a bunch of pictures from past years, and everybody looks like they're having fun, and nobody looks terribly intimidating.  I've been thinking I should try something like this for years now, and I guess I've decided it's time.  Maybe 20 years of living with an extrovert has finally rubbed off on me.

Now it's time to eat some brunch and do some last-minute work for a meeting tomorrow.  Monday night, I'll be in LaCrosse again - hopefully ensconced in a big tub full of bubbles :)

Wiscon anyone? Bueller?

Wednesday, April 11th, 2007 08:46 pm
fullygoldy: Yellow Roses (Books)
I'm sure there are some people on my flist who attend Wiscon regularly (I'm thinking of two someones in particular), but I've never been.  It sounds pretty cool, so i'm wondering if I should hurry up and register.  Besides, if I go to a real con, maybe I can figure out how to do a better job for the polycon.  

Anybody want to go with?  Cause I'm kinda shy about going by myself to big gatherings of strangers.