Posting with an Intersectional Lens

I think August was aptly nicknamed ‘Women in WoW’ month by a few bloggers. There was a HUGE flurry of posts on the topic, and most of them exploring the topic in ways I had not seen previously (and I’ve been reading WoW blogs for a good 3 years now.) Many bloggers and readers are understandably feeling a bit saturated on the topic. Some women have avoided joining in the conversation and honestly there is no problem with that – a blog is a very personal thing, and ‘on going discussions’ do not require every woman to stand up and state her stance, as it were.

That said this is an intersectional blog. As I continue to write, I find that Elemental topics become slightly less interesting to me. This is partly because I’m on a raiding break right now – I login to the beta to make creepy gifs and keep tabs on the latest shaman and lore developments, but I’m not actively playing or trying to organise guides about Elemental Shaman anymore. When I started blogging back in april, I started blogging because I wanted to combine the topics of ‘Elemental’ and ‘Intersectionality’. I was an active raider, and I was learning to examine the game mechanics more critically. The active elemental blogging community was a LOT smaller at the time – now there are more of us than any other Shaman spec, so I don’t feel the need to cover PVE quite so much.

Secondly I discussions of ‘social justice’ and how it relates to gaming and virtual spaces more and more fascinating, and not just in the classic feminist sense. I tend to be better at writing with a certain amount of passion. Just because everyone else is saturated, it doesn’t necessarily mean I will be any time soon. I will try not to repeat myself too often, but this stuff is what my blog and twitter is about. I like to keep my writing balanced, and that is partly for my own self-care.

Which brings me to a topic I haven’t touched on properly: Mental Illness.

It’s a big deal. It’s possibly more personal to me than any other topic, due to the way it impacts on my personal life. It’s wide ranging, deeply stigmatised and dismissed. It’s hard to write about at all, let alone openly. I want to write in a well informed, calm manner about this topic, but at a certain level it will always be personal and have the potential to hurt deeply in a way that other topics might not. This is why I haven’t gotten up the brass ovaries ((Thank you to Hatch for that one ;) )) to write about it yet.

So yes, while the topic may die down in the Blogosphere, I am likely to keep discussing every and any -ism for as long as I blog. If that’s a problem for you, then I’m not the blogger for you. Alternatively you can subscribe to my Shaman Only Feed for shaman related stuff without the intersectional bit.

Hmm. This is somewhat of a ramble, one of those where I’m not trying to make a particular point, I just want to express.

Now excuse me, I’m going back to poke my EU Beta Client with a sharp stick. I wish Blizz were better with getting the EU client working properly after they update the build.

(Also I updated my sidebar a little, and my blogroll. It will now automatically update from my greader and reflect what I actually try to read now. You can blame Larisa for getting me off my arse to actually pay attention to my blogroll, and as it’s already a pain maintaining my greader, I figured there was no point in doing double the work.)

I don’t see your problem: Sexism, World of Warcraft and Geekery

N.B: This article has received some small edits since original publication, in order to add examples contributed via email or comment. I have also done a few edits to clarify certain points and correct typos etc. Many thanks to everyone who has commented. This article also appeared here and at Geek Feminism. I have also done a round up of some relevant reading and responses which I highly recommend.

When I log in to WoW, I don’t get discriminated against because I am a woman. My opinions are valued by my fellow officers and guild members (and a wider community of people on my realm.) This blog is my voice, and I have power over the comments. I am surrounded by intelligent, clever, eloquent people in the communities I have chosen to interact with. I have been educated by their words, by their examples. If I want I can exist in an online bubble and chose to believe that this way of thinking is mainstream.

And then I poke my head out of my friendly little bubble, and the magnitude of crap out there makes me wibble and want to hide away again. It’s not FUN calling out your friends on ableist/sexist/racist bullshit, especially when they held your hands through multiple dramas at University, and still persist in wanting to hang out with you after you’ve spent a morning-after dry-heaving into a toilet.

It’s not just about a statue (or bunny ears, or skimpy armor)

Not long ago there was some minor kerfuffle over the lack of a female character in the ‘Victory’ statue. This is the statue in the centre of Dalaran that commemtorates the ‘victory’ over Arthas. A lot of people (not just men) dismissed this as being over-sensitive and a bit pointless, and the story didn’t even really make it into the blogosphere. Even I didn’t bother with it.

What makes me upset about relatively small things like this is not the individual small problem, but the overall picture. Even the bitch jokes and dialogue, although they seem isolated, make up a much bigger picture that is produced by a development team that is predominatly white and male. Many women in the geek industries will adopt the mainstream geek culture in order to fit in – just as in mainstream society we accept that showing cellulite is inappropriate, and that women should wear bras because otherwise men might be distracted by nipples.

So let us have a look at context

Please bear in mind that this is not a complete list, and I certainly don’t expect everyone to agree with everything on the list. Some of the examples given deserve a more completely analysis than I am able to give here, and it is very easy to disagree with or dismiss most of these problematic things on an individual basis. The specifics aren’t the point, and the intent of Blizzard is not the point, it is the trends produced by the male privilege that I am calling out here, not the game itself.

So, we have the various skimpy outfits. The quite frankly random cleavage that happens to a lot of generic dungeon sets (that gear set that covers EVERYTHING but the women’s eyes and their cleavage, for example?) A lot of women in the game do enjoy dressing up in outfits that reveal the curves of their female toon. Others just want their plate armor to cover their soft organs. We have the Queen of the Red Dragons dressed in the typical bikini outfight – surely a more regal outfit could be found for her? (A part of me feels that dragons wouldn’t clothe themselves at all in human form, but male dragons don’t show any inclination towards nekkidness.)

Moving on from skimpy outfits, we head to the language applied to anything that is sexy or shows flesh – slut-shaming, body hate. There is a difference between criticising the ubiquity of the in-game and fan art that has plate bikini and is catering to the male gaze, and directing hateful language towards the female body, or a woman who chooses to wear a short skirt. Unfortunately the two tend to go hand in hand.

Three female character models from World of Warcraft

While we’re on skimpy armour, lets take a look at Ysera, Alextrazsa and Sylvanas. Now, I have no problems with characters sharing models – it happens a lot in WoW. Even though (as pointed out by Dee of Azeroth Me many of the unique male characters are topless, there isn’t the same sexualisation of those characters going on. I love all three models from the shoulder up. One model (Sylvanas maybe) with the skimpy bikini top would have been fine. I can even reconcile Alextrazsa as supposedly the ‘embodiment of fertility’, but did they really need to have the same faces and armour? Maybe Alextrasza and Ysera share a wardrobe, but very few other dragons show such an interest in standing around naked.

Also Sylvanas needs to have a little extra rot going on. What with the undead thing.

Next we have the two major female characters being excised from the Lich King defeat story. Sylvanas and Jaina are there all the way through WCIII, Vanilla, TBC and Lower Spire, and yet when it comes to the Lich King fight they are mysteriously absent. There is no absolution for their interactions with Arthas, in this expansion.

Then those two major female characters are the embodiment of classic ‘female leader’ tropes, with Sylvanas being patently ‘up to no good’ and Jaina succumbing to female ‘weakness’ at every turn. Actually, take a look at this fabulous breakdown of female characters in WoW, with percentages and character archetypes. I’m not drawing any conclusions from it yet, but it makes for an interesting read and break down. One thing I do draw from it is the ‘Maiden/Lover’, ‘Mother’, and ‘Hag/Shrew’ breakdowns, which I think require some deeper analysis than I am able to give here.

ADDITION: It was noted by a commenter that the female leaders seem to be associated with rebellions and subversiveness rather than ‘rightful’ leadership. Something worth exploring further.

And Tyrande? Yes she can sit quietly in Darnassus and glare meaningfully over at at Fandrel. She doesn’t need to do anything. (Note that I haven’t explored Tyrande’s role in Cataclysm yet, but for a lot of the books her storyline is defined and couched within the way it impacts upon the two men in her life.)

Then we have the ‘habit’ of Jaina-hate, calling her a whore or a slut because she dared to have relationships with more than one man. This is not of Blizzard’s making, but it is a perfect example of sexist attitudes prevalent within the player base (and certainly not limited to men.) She needs a storyline makeover that doesn’t involve her ‘relationships’ with men. This attitude towards Jaina is prevalent in many, many WoW Communities, even in female-friendly spaces.

Then Maiev Shadowsong who, by the end, only had purpose to exist because of a man, a story thread explicitly acknowledge in the Illidan fight. Not to mention that most female ‘bosses’ will play second fiddle to a leading male character. Of 2 female ‘end bosses’, Vashj still plays second fiddle to Illidan and Onyxia (besides being dead) is arguabley outranked by Nefarion. For each expansion, the ultimate end-game entities have been male – Kel’thuzud, Illidan/Archimonde, and Lich King. Cataclysm won’t change this, but I am looking forward to a future expansion featuring Azshara (although common sense tells me that this is likely to be an expansion involving Sargeras.)

No female soldier in the victory statue. Despite there being male and female guard npcs all over the game, they are absent from this representation of victory. Not just the statue, the fact of being shouted down for having the temerity to talk about it. While, again, this feels very minor and unimportant, when viewed in a wider context it is upsetting.

And come to that, enter groups of NPCs with no female model at all – ogres, kobolds, furbolgs, Gronn. Although there could be a comment made for the idea that these are races which simply lack the sexual dimorphism of the playable races, or lack a true gender binary/human style reproductive system. Dragons would be an example of this, although they have very gendered human forms, there is always Chromie/Chromuru. Wolfshead cites this as an example of sexism against men as the ‘villains’, which would hold more weight if we had more women as ‘heros’ in the first place. But no, all the females, good and bad, play second fiddle to male protagonists. Only minor, insignificant NPCs get to pass the Bechdel test in WoW (I am unsure if this applies to any of the books though.)

I mean seriously, the Bechdel test? It is fucking scary how few games and movies pass this.

1. It has to have at least two women in it
2. Who talk to each other
3. About something besides a man

Numerous ‘jokes’ in the beta that play off gendered insults and stereotypes, and one joke that is either about consensual bondage/goblin greed or about rape, depending on whether you hear ‘he’ or ‘she’. I’m not saying that some of the current jokes are any better, but there are ways do innuendo jokes without buying into the more degrading aspects of being compared a female dog, or a golddigger. Not only that, but it is male designers putting these jokes in the mouths of female player characters – not the same thing as the word being reclaimed and used by women at all.

A lot of the female jokes in general will play off gender and sexuality, while male jokes will be just that – jokes with no gender related component. The female human jokes even gently poke fun at gender stereotypes (rather than merely perpetuating them) with “So me and my friends swap clothes all the time, we’re all the same size!”

The new horde leader calling Sylvanas a ‘Bitch‘. While it can be ‘explained away’ by Blizzard wanting to represent Garrosh as the sort of person who says that, the fact is that they are legitimising the use of the language. On the scale of insults towards women it is relatively low (and also cue commentators telling me they’re female and they’re okay with it) but it is a largely unnecessary step, and it comes out of the mouth of a character that the audience is apparently supposed to sympathise with.

A questline in the Goblin starter zone where the player character has to murder their cheating ex-boyfriend/girlfriend, and rip out their still-beating hearts. Again, the sexism of this is debatable (the male/female npcs involved in this are called Candy and Chip En Dale) but it’s not sitting pretty with the entire picture.

The fact that, of all the Warrior spell and talent icons, Chas points out to us that the only recognisably female Icon is for a talent called Rude Interruption. Hmm what about the other classes? Only looking at the Cataclysm tree for these talents, and not at the spell icons.

So the ‘female icons’ for our talents, and most of them are healing/nurture related, with Hunters and Warriors at the exception to that, while 4 other classes have no female representation at all in their talent trees. As with all my other examples, this is a small thing and easily ignored in isolation (because really, icons?) When taken in context with larger trends it is disheartening. (And please don’t tell me I’m overreacting – I write a lot, it’s what I do.) I will say that Blizzard has put a lot of gender neutral icons, and I sincerely doubt this was intentional on the part of the artists, but the majority of humanoid icons are very masculine.

It’s Playboy Bunny Ears being distributed as part of Noblegarden, a holiday otherwise associated with Easter, and an achievement that requires you to put the ears on female characters of level 18 of each racea clear reference to the general ‘age of consent’ in many parts of the western world. The ears themselves are pretty innocuous. As a sex-positive person I do not hold that all pornography is degrading to women, but I find the Playboy brand extremely problematic and unwelcome in the WoW universe, especially coming with the ‘level 18′ reference. I’m not offended by the achievement so much as worried by it.

It’s the character models all adhering to the traditional hourglass figure, even though the actual body type range is fairly broad, and yet not even modelling the boob animations with any kind of support. Playing my favourite dwarf characters always make me wince when they run – even in plate the boobs wobble around unconstrained! There is a positive angle to this, in that Blizzard changed the models of the women in game in response to the complaints of female players. As someone who adored the old female troll model, this makes me sad, but it is positive that Blizzard responded to the female voices rather than dismissing them.

And it’s all the shit that many women have to experience in game, from the player base, from internalised sexism, from other women.

“Why does everyone automatically assume I know tailoring and cooking?” is female human joke phrase repeated by a lot of female players – except that it instead refers to playing a healer, or using feminine wiles to get things from guild mates, or needing protection and help from male friends.

So, -isms and Geekery, Pewter?

Oh yes, I was talking about it in a wider context. For reasons of space I haven’t gone into detail of why something is or isn’t sexist in the list above, I’ve merely attempted to highlight an awful lot of things which add up to some problematic view points. I don’t think Azeroth as a world is anti-feminist at all, but a lot of what the designers put in game clearly come from a particular, privileged position. Even raising your voice to speak out about such things brings in silencing accusations of “Reverse Sexism” and ‘being overly politically correct’ (and even blaming the sexism on the female player for presenting themselves as female within game. What about, yanno, blaming the man for being sexist towards her?)

Wanting to change these things, wanting to talk about them, doesn’t mean sanitising the World of Warcraft. Far from it – it means enrichment, and moving beyond the tired old privileged tropes of male-gaze orientated fantasy, and a discouragement of the sort of bigoted language that has free rein in many guilds. It is not sanitising to want two major female law characters to talk to each other about something other than a man, or to want a female boss to be the focus of an expansion, or to speak out against rape culture (I really recommend reading the comments of Wolfshead’s article as well, as there is some excellent discussion/points made by Ken and Ysharros. This blog post is not a critique/answer to Wolfshead, but he does represent very mainstream opinions.)

As a geek feminist I commonly have my views dismissed because I’m directly commenting on issues that currently concern main-stream feminist (like gender representation in government, gender mutilation, contraception and body rights.) This is not a blog about mainstream feminism, about why menstrual products are taxed as luxury products or how I feel about wearing make up at work. The value of the more global battlefields do not mean that the smaller geek/culture discussions are not worth having. Games, Art, TV, they all reflect values and attitudes that we have in the real world. Science Fiction and Fantasy have long been a place for writers to speculate on topics of gender, power and sex, and Games merely continue that tradition as they enter our lives very early on in the western world. Geek things matter to me, and I’m invested in them. I chose to watch and read all kinds of things, but consumption of media doesn’t grant immunity to critique (or we’d never have game reviews.)

The idea that as geek females we should simply put up and shut up, we should be quiet, and that we are to blame because we want to participate, is extremely damaging and sexist in it’s own right. All too often male bloggers and posters on forums will pull out a female gamer friend who agrees with their point of view and use that to support a privileged point of view. As a gamer I have fallen into the trap of painting myself as ‘not like those other girl gamers who flirt and cause drama’, and that sort of internalised sexism is as much a hindrance to equality and progressiveness as anything else.

On Heteronormativity, Race and Gender Binaries

And all of the above comes from a straight, white, educated woman. There are many further discussions to be hand on intersectional topics. If women, who aren’t a ‘small minority’ have trouble enough with being told that being ‘not quite equal’ is good enough, then topics of race and sexuality (which are talked about even less than feminism) are the elephant in the room. This isn’t about men, or hating them, it’s about what is not visible already. It’s bigger and more complicated than trying to boil gender bias down to ‘boys v girls’.

[Cataclysm] Bitch? I am disappoint, Blizzard (now with added Goblin)

Updated with commentary on the Goblin /silly and /flirt emotes

The NDA being lifted has unleashed (c wat i did thar) a new wave of information on the slobbering masses eager for a peak at our next fix of content. One of the things that caught my eye was recordings of the worgen/flirt and /silly emotes.

You can listen to the videos over here at wow.com

The male ones make me laugh, and I like that they have a ‘transformed’ voice that is obviously for worgen form. I imagine, after LDW and Sindragosa, they are a little wary of making a female voice sound anything BUT sexy/inviting. Some of the names Sindragosa gets called, partially due to her voice, makes me wince. Blood Queen Lana’thel doesn’t get nearly as much criticism for her voice. Is it just because the acting for Sindragosa is ‘bad’? Personally I think it’s because her voice reaches higher octaves, for me the similarity with my mum’s angry voice (and also my own) is a very easy comparison to make.

And thus, even for me, it is easy to brush off as ‘histrionic’. I certainly dismissed my mother enough when she used ‘that’ voice, and I reckon my partner occasionally stops listening when my own voice reaches a certain note.

Out of curiousity I went hunting for more female boss voices. The voices that aren’t trying to be sexy tend to have an artificial deepness to them (not that a lot of the male voices don’t have artificial effects to them either, I mean these are all creatures many times the size of your average human.)

So, what’s wrong with the female Worgen /flirts ?

Well, I’m not going to say there is anything wrong with them persay. A woman being sexual is not a problem for me (and the six nipples comment DID make me giggle.) The bacon joke made me laugh, although it did seem to carry on a tad long. And I LIKE the English voice. What with being British myself. I hope all the Gilnean voice emotes are with English accents, although the female voice accent sounds a bit odd.

The following emotes are the ones I have a problem with:

“Being bitchy is in my blood, don’t pretend you don’t like it.”

Did we really need to use the word bitch here? The word has a whole load of uses that are really not okay. (Edit: This discusses ‘bitch’ where the other article discusses the C-word. I find this joke problematic because it is not just referring to a female dog=bitch *obvious* but because to be funny it has to refer to the misogynistic use of the word that calls an assertive woman a bitch. ‘Bitchy’ also refers to being catty or mean, but it is a very gendered way to say it.)

“I just want someone to pat me on the head and tell me I’m a good girl.”

I’m in two minds about this one in particular, because on the one hand it is again – the female ‘bitch’ that needs taming/really wants to be submissive trope. On the other hand sexuality is such a complicated thing and it is not my place to get all prudish about what another woman likes in bed.

“You can take me home, I’m house broke”

Another ‘submissive’ emote? ‘Broke’? A bit of me just feels a bit disappointed that a woman has to refer to herself as ‘broken’ in /flirt. I don’t have a problem with the aggressive sexuality in these lines, just that the male voice doesn’t have an equivelant ‘submissive’ line.

These are minor niggles – as I said there is a whole can of sexuality worms wriggling around in my objections to those two /flirts. As this is Beta/Alpha, we are unlikely to see all of these make in to the live servers (just as the Draenei and blood elf ones were cleaned up in order to help Blizzard keep their Teen rating.) The /silly emotes aren’t problematic to me – bone jokes are a-okay with me!

The male flirts make me laugh because they sound like the ridiculously over the top, joke chat up lines AND they’re in an English accent.

Misogyny and Misandry in WoW

WoW is a product of prevalent, mainstream white geek culture. And by prevalent I mean male. I’m not going to get angry and yell that Blizzard is woman-hating and needs to employ more womenz. I love this game, I love the fun of the world and the details I am still discovering, but occasionally little things like this pull me out of the game. Instead of fun, I feel disappointment. This is nothing new to a female geek. This happens a lot, and I don’t have an illusions that one day we’ll all be race/able/sexist free (because really denying differences is just as bad as only catering to the privilieged.)

At the same time just because we can’t beat it, that is no reason to stop calling out the times we feel under represented or ignored. I am utterly sick of people who think that being offended at being called an -ist trumps any offence they may genuinely have caused.

If you want some further reading, take a look at this Dissertation by Christopher Ritter:

Why the Humans are White: Fantasy, Modernity, and the Rhetorics of Racism in World of Warcraft

It isn’t on gender issues, but it IS interesting reading and his analysis of the races of wow turns up some interesting observations e.g.

I’m just saying that the Horde females (except the BEs) are purposely designed to fail our society’s mainstream definitions of beauty and femininity, and that we’re supposed to notice it. (Conversely, how many of the male characters’ /silly jokes refer to their attractiveness, or to their appearance at all?)

- (C. Ritter, from Comments on Topography)

EDIT: And now with added Goblin

I should have kept my mouth shut. I should have waited until the Goblin /silly/flirt previews came out. A lot of the individual jokes I adore, the very sexual ones included, but there are a couple (and the entire picture) that just have me making a sadface.

Jokes I did not like

“You told me to tie her up, and do whatever I wanted to her. So I took her stereo.” – Male Goblin /silly

As ‘benign’ as this joke ends, it is a RAPE JOKE. Not okay blizzard. DO NOT WANT.

EDIT: Other people tell me that it sounds like ‘She told’ and I sincerely hope this is the case – I’d rather think I’ve misheard than that Blizz actually thought this was okay to publish – in which case I apologise! I have no problem with the joke as it started ‘She told me…’.

I also did not enjoy the female goblin /flirt as a whole. One of the ‘golddigger’ style jokes would have been okay (e.g. the first one riffing on a Beyonce song, and I understand the female goblin dance is ‘Single Ladies’). On the other hand we also have the male goblin saying ‘oh just give me the money’, which I did not notice on first listen. Goblins=equal opportunity golddiggers (and silver and copper) after all. I need to listen to it some more, and figure out whether this is something that is ‘debasing’ female characters in the game. Or whether I’m objecting because of the close nature of money and sex in the flirts.

But. yeah. Just going to quote one comment from wow.com that illustrates my worry.

“AHAHAHAHAHAHAHAHA female Goblins will be the local horde hooker..I can already see it. Sitting in Org…Tauren District to be exact…and these Goblins workin on making money…lol. this game is hilarious.”

Normally I wouldn’t worry about a random guy on the internet, but I can see this is how the jokes will end up being ‘read’ by a lot of the player base. And yes, they’ll read that the female Goblin is selling herself, while the male goblin is just money obsessed. This just leads to so many…argh. Is my objection slut shaming on my part, or objectification on Blizzards part?

Jokes I did like

The female goblin ‘bondage’ joke. There is how you joke about a sexual preference without debasing the woman.

“I don’t like being tied down. Oh. You mean literally? Oh no, TOTALLY in to that.”

“Lets get together and compare figures”

I made the mistake of commenting at wow.com with my objections and have already been told to get off my high horse and had my comments voted down. I should have guessed that would happen. There is nothing wrong with sexual jokes, but objecting to something I find somewhat questionable is somehow worse than a joke about rape. Yay!

And yes – most/many of these jokes will vanish in the actual release, but I suspect we will see the ‘sweet profit’ and ‘compare figures’ ones stay in, as will the Single Ladies reference.