To
Elsa Sjunneson-Henry: Marginalizations and Mary Sues
by Thomas Harris
The white,
straight, cis, and male mentality of prized
literature is toxic, and it is diffused by all who cannot experience
intersectional disparities. I am going to speak broadly, but I know that
cultural, visual, and nonvisual disparities are never the same, even in their
own categories.
I am gay, and I come from not so
well-off socio-economic origins. I have mental health issues and constantly
depart from a past that has dealt with domestic violence.
I just listed off who I am in these
ways for a number of reasons. For one, I can tell you that I know that their privileges are not gonna be the
standards of any of our voices, even their
own. I believe that they bluff compassion on all fronts. The purpose of
working and sharing in this way has got to be compassion and equity. If it is not, it is not worth pursuing. It is
evil.
Secondly, no matter what
untraditional label in society that I obtain in my life, I cannot represent or
say that I know you. And I want to know more about you! I want you to write
tales in wholesome and emotional pursuit. In a indifferent and practical world,
you have got to write about your differences. When people think they are the
same, their words cannot be cultural.
Third of all, they do not care about
me. They want success, harmony, and money when I am destined to not know any.
They do not care about you. They want to conceptualize the times on clocks and
the predetermination of corpses. So who are you? This is why you should tell
me.
“Mary Sues” channel personal
controversies and original creativity through the same
lens, and they can often protect authors from either
admitting or altering their emotions and art as one. It is not always a matter
of your contributions being justified or your innocence getting extracted out
of pages, but I imagine that it seems like it.
Actually, I
think that I know this is true because I am about to self-publish my own book,
full of poetry. It is all about my Mary Sue, and wherein, I am prepared to take
both pride in my vulnerabilities and feelings or to simply call them off as a
part of a character. Which option I take will depend on who is reading this.
But either way, this might be the most liberating thing I have done in my life.
To me, it
is not hard to imagine that authors cite Mary Sues in order to excuse activism
or interpersonal motifs in their books. I think that gender but especially
disabilities latently annoy a part of the general public; if Elsa uses her
rights in the speculative fiction community, some will persecute her for using
the same concept, not taking risks, or not fighting the peace therein when this
layout of criticism shows precisely what she wants in her own, real life - to
simply reconcile.
Then, there may be people in her periphery who envy that
attempt at solace, so they could try to spoil her more raw excellence in writing
stories with her present, to imitate her rhetoric, or to misplace what she
means, where she does not get what she deserves after all.
Ultimately, I think that the marginalization of speculative
fiction, in regards to writers that have experienced social disadvantages and
who want to find happiness, is greater than the expectations of the genres
without it. I believe that Mary Sues create barriers that protect such writers
but also stop powerful discourse depending on what an authors would want from
their penmanship.
Thomas,
ReplyDeleteYou've shared a lot of personal things in this post, which is both very brave and very generous. Thank you.
You also make an excellent point about Mary Sues being both tools, barriers, and means for certain parties to blanket-reject certain voices and experiences. Labels are powerful things and (to echo your opening comments) empowered with their own potential for toxicity.
Best,
TT