steampunk

Jun. 24th, 2009 04:31 pm
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[personal profile] rmd
interesting article over at racialicious about people of color and steampunk. reading this, i realized that i have pretty much always assumed that steampunk was somehow reliant on a conceptual alternate history where victorian england is rivaled by the craftsmen of the technologically advanced dirigible industry in china or the artists of the congo who guide trees into shapes as they grow, their work lit by the glow of their tube amplifiers when they play music while harvesting the trees and turning them into rubber and wood custom pc enclosures. or, you know, something like that. i've always assumed some sort of post-colonial or colonial-moot underlying social structure, assuming it went hand in hand with gender equality - both are imao required.

Date: 2009-06-24 11:52 pm (UTC)
From: [identity profile] loopback.livejournal.com
And that's where I see the danger coming in.

Civil War (or WW2) re-enactors have to be aware of the actual history, and have some understanding of what's going on in that time period. You have to dive in and get things correct & historically accurate (to the best of your ability, of course) because that's part & parcel of that particular scene.

The risk I see with things like steampunk is that they take all the signifiers of social prejudices, and have virtually no conception of what they're carrying forward. As much as I genuinely do dislike trotting out the nazi example, it's the cleanest (in terms of clarity of example) I can think of, which is the Nazi Bar in ... I think South Korea? They didn't necessarily have the historical context for it, but because it looked cool, they went with the fashions.

There are whole class/sex/race based assumptions in a lot of the clothing from that era, and my contention is that people aren't think particularly closely about tying themselves to a specific class mindset, and I think that's a very real problem.

With historical re-enactment you can call bullshit on someone choosing to go with the emblems of a particularly grievous choice of unit, and get on their case about it. in the case of steampunkfashionistas, you get immediately told, "it's just shiny!" and asked to move along.

Which, ok, fine. But I'm going to keep having my opinion that there's something there, and that the "Average Steampunker" (who tends, at least in my neck of the woods, to be a reasonably affluent white person) just doesn't see the privilege for the trees.

Date: 2009-06-25 12:07 am (UTC)
From: [identity profile] judith-s.livejournal.com
That is interesting -- tying to a class mindset -- and not something I had thought about.

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