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The Lojban Kalevala Project
- To: John Cowan <cowan@snark.thyrsus.com>
- Subject: The Lojban Kalevala Project
- From: "Mark E. Shoulson" <cbmvax!uunet!ctr.columbia.edu!shoulson>
- Reply-To: "Mark E. Shoulson" <cbmvax!uunet!ctr.columbia.edu!shoulson>
- Sender: Lojban list <cbmvax!uunet!pucc.princeton.edu!LOJBAN>
To: iad%COGSCI.ED.AC.UK@CUVMB.CC.COLUMBIA.EDU
In-reply-to: Ivan A Derzhanski's message of Wed, 19 Aug 1992 09:36:48 BST
Subject: The Lojban Kalevala Project
>Date: Wed, 19 Aug 1992 09:36:48 BST
>From: Ivan A Derzhanski <iad%COGSCI.ED.AC.UK@CUVMB.CC.COLUMBIA.EDU>
>> Date: Wed, 19 Aug 1992 18:20:18 +1000
>> From: nsn@AU.OZ.MU.EE.MULLIAN
>>
>> the unsympathetic outsider would find our scampering for any hint
>> of cultural imagery self-conscious and flimsy,
>True. Whoever wants to write a story with Chinese, (Hindu) Indians,
>or Arabs among the characters had better be _very_ familiar with the
>corresponding cultures. I wouldn't venture anything of the sort, and
>therefore make the following
> _Counterproposal_. Don't specify any national identity or cultural
>background for the characters. Make them representatives of an
>abstract, undetermined, or fictitious nation. In this case they might
>be Lojbanis by birth, for example.
>Otherwise you risk to end up with a story that no Arab (say) would
>find plausible.
Yeah. Remember, guys, these are the *background* characters. It'd be fine
to give them some flavor and all, but don't think they're the only ones
around, nor the key ones (except perhaps in some rare "Cook's Tale" or
something).
>> Do we go for equal ratios of men and women?
>I say yes. (Don't make them husbands and wives, though.)
Yes, but it doesn't make a whole lot of difference, really. Bear in mind
that this is *lojban* we're dealing with; you needn't know anyone's sex
unless it becomes important. I could see the waiter's sex never mentioned
until five stories down the line when somehow it makes a difference. It'd
be nice to keep it equal, so bear that in mind if it becomes necessary to
specifiy someone's gender.
>> Do we have any minorities
>> or "deviations" in the personas, or keep them mainstream?
>Assume, for the purpose of the game, that everyone's skin is the same
>colour.
Huh? Why? Your own characters, that's something else. Remember, these
characters are *not* the ones doing most of the story-telling. The ones
doing that are the patrons whom you bring in. They may have their own
idiosyncrasies, culture, bias, whatever. In fact, I imagine the chief
method of finding out people's sex/color/accent/whatever might be seeing
things from the point of view of a patron who happens to be particularly
concerned about such things
>Ivan
~mark