Honestly, and I say this as a man, I think our future is destined for an all-female world. Men are bad for this planet on so many levels. I wouldn't have a problem if men eventually went the way of the dinosaur--the tech exists to populate the world by test tube, and we're close to making gender selection a reality. An all-female future? I'm down with it. #whatweoncefelt
@strideo:
Nicola Griffin
Synopsis: In Ammonite, the 1994 James Tiptree Jr. Award winner, the attempts to colonize the planet Jeep have uncovered a selective virus that kills all men and all but a few women. The remaining women undergo changes that enable them to communicate with one another and the planet itself, and give to birth to healthy, genetically diverse children. Marguerite Angelica Taishan is an anthropologist who realizes this phenomena and makes the decision to give herself up to the planet to uncover its mysteries. -
Amazon.com #whatweoncefelt
Ok I got a question... or a thought or whatever...
What about the romantic, emotional aspect associated with reproduction? Is it gone? Is it missed? Is it now associated with a pill?
Maybe pairs of women, or groups, bond and decide to have a baby, and reproduction and romanticism split forever?
Of course that doesn't apply to lesbian women who now are the source of these romantic feelings associated with reproduction. But how can the act of swallowing a pill be emotionally intense and intricate as a couple?
@Dresan: At least in this world, the emotional aspects definitely still remain, but the process itself is as emotion-filled as ordering something off of Amazon.
In the play you see a couple having heated discussions about whether to download. (Without giving anything else away, you should know that every Keeper gets one and only one download.) Either way, I would characterize the couple in question as "married" (ignoring present-day debates on the connotation of the term). So, the act is not intense but the decision is. #whatweoncefelt
Much like Y the Last Man, I ask: if the males all just instantly died off...would the females miss them? Personal level, general level, I have no idea. I'm talking in the "what if we could genetically engineer so we don't need the opposite sex"
once again, the anime series "Vandread" is my go-to source on this; girl I know has the whole box set. #whatweoncefelt
What?? The Wanderground was utopian??? I totally read that book wrong! I guess the final chapter was all about their connection to 'Mother/Earth' or some such female spirit that connected them all. But I did feel like they were still at war with the men, and the threat of Man was imminent. (I couldn't figure out if the Gentles were meant to be read as good or bad, so I just read them as good)
Being the author of the last book ever published would still be awesome, even if no one was to read it! I think the playwright was perhaps being clever there - it certainly creates a stronger sense of humour in the work.
Idiocracy is my benchmark for dystopian comedy still. #whatweoncefelt
I saw this show about 2 weeks ago... I would definitely give it more than 1/5 (although, of course, I'm not a professional reviewer), it is funny in parts but it is dialogue-heavy in case you are not into that sort of thing. But for $20 a ticket it is definitely worthwhile.
There were some interesting perspectives not only on the class conflict and the end of the printed word, but also on our attention spans and the "dumbing-down" of our culture as a result of how we process information in the digital age. Some great double-casting as well, particularly Marsha Stephanie Blake as the creepy/robotic Tradepack border guard and a Keeper trying to download a baby of her own. #whatweoncefelt
I went to see this opening night and thought it was awsome. I cant imagine how it only got 1 out of 5 stars. Go see it if you can, the tickets are cheap and its well worth it.
I'm no professional review-person, but when I lived in NYC I found the panned plays were as entertaining as the critics' darlings; even more so than movies. #whatweoncefelt
@NerD: Blattella: Only if you skip most of the second half of the book. It's a female dominated - but with checks and balances for the males - society. #whatweoncefelt
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(As tvtropes would say.)
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Nicola Griffin
Synopsis: In Ammonite, the 1994 James Tiptree Jr. Award winner, the attempts to colonize the planet Jeep have uncovered a selective virus that kills all men and all but a few women. The remaining women undergo changes that enable them to communicate with one another and the planet itself, and give to birth to healthy, genetically diverse children. Marguerite Angelica Taishan is an anthropologist who realizes this phenomena and makes the decision to give herself up to the planet to uncover its mysteries. -
Amazon.com #whatweoncefelt
11/12/09
What about the romantic, emotional aspect associated with reproduction? Is it gone? Is it missed? Is it now associated with a pill?
Maybe pairs of women, or groups, bond and decide to have a baby, and reproduction and romanticism split forever?
Of course that doesn't apply to lesbian women who now are the source of these romantic feelings associated with reproduction. But how can the act of swallowing a pill be emotionally intense and intricate as a couple?
Yep I'm confused. Any thoughts on this? #whatweoncefelt
11/12/09
In the play you see a couple having heated discussions about whether to download. (Without giving anything else away, you should know that every Keeper gets one and only one download.) Either way, I would characterize the couple in question as "married" (ignoring present-day debates on the connotation of the term). So, the act is not intense but the decision is. #whatweoncefelt
11/11/09
once again, the anime series "Vandread" is my go-to source on this; girl I know has the whole box set. #whatweoncefelt
11/12/09
. . . especially when their cars are broken down on the side of the road and they need someone to change their tire. #whatweoncefelt
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Being the author of the last book ever published would still be awesome, even if no one was to read it! I think the playwright was perhaps being clever there - it certainly creates a stronger sense of humour in the work.
Idiocracy is my benchmark for dystopian comedy still. #whatweoncefelt
11/11/09
There were some interesting perspectives not only on the class conflict and the end of the printed word, but also on our attention spans and the "dumbing-down" of our culture as a result of how we process information in the digital age. Some great double-casting as well, particularly Marsha Stephanie Blake as the creepy/robotic Tradepack border guard and a Keeper trying to download a baby of her own. #whatweoncefelt
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(Pay no attention to the space hippy, he's just bored, sleep deprived, and slap happy)
:) #whatweoncefelt
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Crap you discovered my secret. I wait for the reviews and when the critics say it should bomb, I figure I'll like it #whatweoncefelt
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[www.amazon.com]
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That and "The Gate to Women's Country" are told similarly. I think you can forgive the blanket statement.
Even the second half focuses on one man, and he's more of a Mcguffin than a character. #whatweoncefelt