-Sean "Day[9]" Plott, Computer Jock (speaking of two gamers fighting over the internet, not on this matter)
Penny Arcade nerds. |
So apparently there are some angry feminists out there who want some computer nerds dead, nothing to see here. Well, maybe not. Shakesville (a feminist blog) focused its attention to Penny Arcade (a nerd comic place) about issues revolving rape, rape culture, dicks, dick-wolfs, and everything in between. Normally, this would just be another day on the Internet; however, this time the attention span of the Internet got a little longer.
Starting all the way back in August of 2010, Penny Arcade produced a comic illustrating quest completion and what that means to those who are left behind (The Sixth Slave). In the strip, the hero rescues five slaves, as his quests demands, and then leaves the sixth slave behind to be tortured by phallic canines. Within one day, Shakesville commences pointing the moral finger of the internet at Penny Arcade, accusing the writers as being insensitive and propagators of rape culture. Thus begins, the angry feminists versus angry gamers feud.
I am not going to go into a long description about what happened in between then and now because, frankly, it's a lot. I will certainly voice my all knowing/important opinion as well as that of a hardcore, even angrier, feminist (my all knowing/important girlfriend).
My Reaction (a gamer's perspective):

All in all, the problem is the culture that is wrapped around the Internet, mainly, the bloggosphere. This whole issue could have been reasonably solved if instead of raising a pen, Shakesville raised awareness. A simple message explaining and educating about rape culture instead of attacking Penny Arcade would have been more effective in getting the desired results. Unfortunately, this is the Internet. Everyone has an opinion and apparently everyone else needs to know about. Everyone wants to be a super-hero but its much easier when you are safe behind a monitor. Everyone has egos as big as their following of keyboard warriors.
My Girlfriend's Reaction (a feminist's perspective):

When we allege to speak up for a victim who is not ourself, we steal his or her voice in an attempt to make a more compelling argument. Co-opting someone else's experience does not make us more right or our point more clear. And really, that comic is not offensive solely because their might be a sexual assault survivor somewhere in the interwebs reading it, although that may be simplest way to try to gain sympathy. It's offensive because it perpetuates a culture that excuses violence against women because our society undervalues us, which is reflected constantly in many more spaces and venues than a video game blog. I'm all about subverting the dominant paradigm, but I know that yelling at some video game nerds is not going to get me anywhere, and I'm sure many other feminists learned that important lesson.
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The way the world works. |
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