Showing posts with label miscellany. Show all posts
Showing posts with label miscellany. Show all posts

Sunday, September 20, 2015

Undermining Certainties

In the beginning everything was a mystery. You started off with a broad sense of what you could be and what you could do but the specifics of the experience were new. Your character, in those early days, seemed to know little better than you. Learning the secrets necessary to stay alive was hard and came at the cost of many ignominious deaths and much failure, but eventually the knowledge came and with it power. Inadequate strategies were abandoned and secrets to success discovered.

This was the structure of early D&D: the Dungeon Master was an initiated repository of secret wisdom and the players seekers after that wisdom. The DM’s book was off-limits to players, for whom surreptitiously reading the mysterious knowledge secured therein was tantamount to cheating. The process by which the knowledge could be transferred from the initiated to the uninitiated was a series of ordeals. The master was not required to tailor the ordeals to the specific capacities of the aspirant, part of the testing involved determining what manner of ordeal could be endured. It was only by undertaking carefully judged ascending gradations of challenge that the character and their player could rise through the ranks, gaining new abilities to help endure the ordeals and new ways of using them and, almost as importantly, gaining the knowledge of how to go about things in such a manner as to minimise unnecessary death. There were tricks of situational awareness and cautious thoroughness in negotiating the dangerous environments the DM presented, as well as lists of vulnerabilities and immunities and powers that had to be learned by rote, list upon list of weapons, armour, spells, characters, places, monsters and treasures. All of these were mysteries at the beginning. You didn’t know them, your character didn’t know them, only the DM had access to the privileged information.

A useful concept for discussing these ideas is that of the epistemic regime. The epistemic regime of a work of fiction describes what is known by the different actors in the story and by the author and reader. Much of the tension, drama and humour in narratives derives from the unequal distribution of various facts: she doesn’t know he’s the killer, the author and the reader know it’s a bad idea but the character blunders on regardless. Irony relies on this unequal distribution too, there is an audience that derives a secret meaning from an ironic statement and an audience that does not, the knowledgeable audience and the author of the statement collude in the transfer of this secret knowledge in plain sight.

Epistemic regimes are of special importance to fantasy and science fiction because there is generally a whole lot more the author is aware of that the reader does not know and a subsequent necessity for a greater-than-usual amount of exposition. It is because of this wildly unequal epistemic regime that so much fantasy relies upon reader surrogate characters from outside the magic world; Harry Potter, Dorothy, John Carter, Alice; or reader surrogates from a provincial backwater; Bilbo Baggins, Rand al’Thor, Taran the Assistant Pig-Keeper, Pug/Milamber, Duny/Ged, Shea Ohmsford, Garion [Insert High Fantasy yokel-destined-for-greatness here]. Their ignorance or outsider status requires that mentors explain everything for them or that the author’s exposition be justified by the mutually ignorant position of reader and protagonist. The other, less-important-for-my-hypothesis reason for humble origins is a dramatic one, it is more dramatically satisfying for underdogs to come out on top.

There is something of a distinction that can be made between the ascending character arcs of post-Tolkien High Fantasy and the Picaresque nature of much pulp fantasy. In the works of Jack Vance, Fritz Lieber or Robert E. Howard, the protagonists tend to be worldly and exposition is a less weighty component of the writing, even to the extent that, as is explicitly the case in M. John Harrison’s work, world-building is impromptu and ad hoc – only that which is necessary to pave the way for more adventure need be invented. Even the author need not know much more about the world than is revealed to the reader, and while some kind of character arc is often presented and new information revealed as the narrative progresses, there is definitely a tendency for the protagonist to not be a neophyte in need of initiation into the mysteries of the invented world, nor need the reader be undergoing such an initiation by proxy. Characteristically, such a world does not tolerate great upheaval, the changes wrought by the actions of a Picaro are generally not world-shaking. There is a fatalistic sense in the genre that the world will continues regardless of the actions of individuals, while in High Fantasy, the fate of the world is typically decided by the actions of individuals, their success changes the world for the better and saves the world from some kind of terrible threat.

These slightly distinct subgenres represent the two major sources drawn upon to develop D&D, and while there is a definite preference displayed by Gygax for pulp fantasy, the epistemic DNA of High Fantasy is very strong in D&D.  A satisfying and engaging character arc is one of the major rewards for bold and clever play, and as characters get more capable the dramatic stakes of their exploits are also raised. This state of affairs deliberately emulates the style of High Fantasy and does it well. In a player’s first campaign, they are given an experience that emulates that of the reader of High Fantasy, the particular ways in which the campaign world functions are revealed, and the geography, people and events unfold before their eyes.
---
Hide and seek is a game of practical epistemology. The different players start each round of the game with a different set of facts, and the seeker’s role is to remedy their ignorance through the application of a set of epistemological procedures designed to reveal facts about the whereabouts of the hiders: looking under things, looking behind things and trying to elicit giggling with a humorous performance of these procedures. The hiding players attempt to conceal the fact of their whereabouts by sneaking off very quietly during the count, selecting especially good and, if possible, novel hiding places and stifling giggling.

There is an environmental component to the game, a good place for hide and seek has a lot of hiding places. The tension of the game is increased by a prolonging the process of formulating and testing various hypotheses about the possible whereabouts of the hiders. Eventually, with enough rounds of play, the environment becomes exhausted as a source of novelty because the players have discovered all of the potential hiding places.  No longer is there any need for the formulation of new hypotheses about the whereabouts of hiders. All that is needed is to systematically check all of the known hiding places.

Vanilla D&D actually has a similar epistemic regime to hide and seek. The PC begins play as the seeker, made deliberately ignorant by a DM who knows all the hiding places. However, as long as there is no deviation from the standard playbook, after enough time the players will know by rote which strategy offers the best advantage against trolls, skeletons, ghouls, rot grubs, rakshasas, yellow mold, medusae and mummies. They will know what to do to best avoid running afoul of traps and surprise attacks, they will know most of the spells available and how to use them and what magic items they should be on the lookout for. This acquisition of lore is subverted and exploited by a few notorious elements of the game like gas spores and rot grubs – punishments for being too secure in your knowledge of in-game facts or confidence in useful interrogative procedures. These, in turn, spawn ever more sophisticated epistemic regimes where suspicion of malicious motives necessitate special countermeasures.

Bastardry


Whenever knowledge is gained, ignorance is lost –  naïveté evaporates under fire. Not only do the players gain the epistemological skills to better interrogate the game environment for useful information as they play, they also gain information about the generic game-world itself. Over years, every veteran player will also have had a chance to run games, or at least read through all of the once-forbidden lore so, unless a very strict separation of player and character knowledge is adhered to to avoid metagaming, a certain amount of worldliness is going to creep into the character’s interactions with the predictable enemies and scenarios they encounter.

Thus, then, the OSR. The OSR is largely composed of people who have seen everything and are rigorous and cunning in their interrogation of the game environment. This makes their characters disproportionately deadly and their play-style effective, especially if there is a predictability in their environment and the challenges they face – they have seen all the hiding places. This creates a need for the establishment of different play environments and different secrets as a means of recreating something like the epistemic regime of the older versions of the game. Because in addition to the worldliness of the veteran, there is in the nature of the OSR gamer certain amount of nostalgia for a time when everything was mysterious and new. It is impossible to recreate the experience of the first encounter with a rust monster using a rust monster. That door is shut now. There are other ways of recapturing the excitement of the experience but it requires the implementation of strategies of estrangement and a certain degree of invention.

I think there are many reasons why the source-texts of much OSR material tends to be Pulp Fantasy rather than High Fantasy. There is a degree to which the exhaustive creation of comprehensively detailed worlds only makes sense if there is going to be a large audience to make it worthwhile and ensure its continuity over time. There may be a suspicion of the artificiality of grand sweeping story-arcs and a legitimate dubiousness about their unworkability as imposed from above by in-game canon (e.g. 2E-era Dragonlance, Forgotten Realms and Greyhawk). There is also the fact that picaresque Murderhobo-ism that is an emergent property of D&D’s reward system seems to run counter to the prevailingly axial morality of the High Fantasy genre but accords closely with the urbane fatalism characteristic of Pulp Fantasy. I think the most compelling reason for the preference is the inescapable fact of players Knowing the Score.

 A related genre with much overlap is the Weird. The Weird has about it something of an iconoclastic punk sensibility, even in its earliest manifestations there is a quality to it that is rooted in the erosion of certainties, in an ethical spectrum that runs from fatalism through pessimism to the outer reaches of nihilism. The prevailing epistemic regime here, particularly in Lovecraftian tales, is not merely ignorance for the protagonist but a sense that the gaining of knowledge is often inimical to sanity. The author is very much concerned with using strategies of estrangement to undermine the certainties of the reader.

“The true weird tale has something more than secret murder, bloody bones, or a sheeted form clanking chains according to rule. A certain atmosphere of breathless and unexplainable dread of outer, unknown forces must be present; and there must be a hint, expressed with a seriousness and portentousness becoming its subject, of that most terrible conception of the human brain--a malign and particular suspension or defeat of those fixed laws of Nature which are our only safeguard against the assaults of chaos and the daemons of unplumbed space.” HPL


This is, for me, the natural territory of the best of the OSR: a kind of iconoclastic undermining of whatever assumptions existed before (though maybe without quite so much portentousness), because there is compelling reason to serve up predictability. Hence Raggi-esque Negadungeons and Deep Carbon Observatory. There comes always into my mind the ridiculous image of the OSR gamer as a kind of reckless libertine glutted with sensation, walking blindfolded into unknown perils. I think that I am guilty here of a certain amount of reductive essentialism for effect but I know that there is a canny market for evocative novelty. The process of players having to negotiate new theories about the way the world is run and engage in rigorous interrogations of the structure of fictional things is potentially a source of much enjoyment for GM and player alike. It is especially the case if you’ve invented all the stuff yourself and the players are unravelling exposition as a means of ensuring their character’s survival. Nothing will ever be the same as the original experience but it might just be better.

Saturday, December 14, 2013

Miscellany and Iambic Doggerel

So it has been a year since James Maliszewski's last post at Grognardia and the OSR is still a thing. Still no Dwimmermount, though. I read a lot of forgettable nonsense at Grognardia over the years but he was nothing if not consistent. In the interim I've largely stopped reading all the blogs as they generally shit me to tears*. Zak has perceptive things to say, of course, and I love Scrap and Patrick dearly for burrowing fearlessly into the living heart of the mystery. There is also a small knot of crazies including Logan and Arnold and Jack Mack and the gloomtrain kid and Pearce Shea that will be important in years to come. There is a trigger-happy quality to some of the newer stuff (esp. Logan's body-horror stuff) that makes me think the most influential texts of the OSR might just be Carcosa and LotFP. I am guilty in this regard also, I think Weird means surreal juxtapositions with no concern for politeness.  Original Weird was somewhat inspired by the erosion of the prevailing paradigm by the discoveries of deep time and space and the deep subconscious (makes me think the genre should be called Deep).

So, yeah, flirting with taboos - there is potential artistic material to be mined from a setting in which the awful prejudices of historical people are represented and exaggerated**. I'm particularly fond of dystopian nastiness and have a peculiar distaste for Flintstones settings where contemporary values prevail and whatever handwavium the setting runs on is responsible for the production of a contemporary standard of living.
___________________________________________________

So I sicken of the way I've been writing my setting material and yearn for an easier way. I therefore attempted to exorcise the mawkish verbosity and faux gravitas that infects everything I write by writing a dungeon in blank verse. This didn't work. I've never actually written any subterranean stuff for the setting since I made peremptory stabs several years ago. In my mind, the underground is the Middenmurk proper and needs to be magnificently weird and horrible and possessed of a Northern Renaissance quality of flamboyant chimerical madness tempered with claustrophobia and disassociative feelings and it's too much and I daren't venture in. Patrick's Veins of the Earth setting captures the level of weird difference-from-the-expected I want to achieve while being, of course, different in its specifics.

Miltonian similes represent dangerous tangents to the inexperienced pentametrist. You are going off in one direction when you take the opportunity to describe something by saying what it's like then you plunge merrily into that comparison. Sometimes you forget where you are and start up another simile inside the simile, which is fucked. Aside from that I've clumsily allowed the structure to dictate the flow and struggled to not use single syllable words at the start of lines because the initial iamb demands an unstressed syllable and polysyllabic words in English tend to stress the initial syllable unless it is a prefix in which case it isn't stressed most of the time but sometimes is. I haven't actually written anything deliberately iambic before but have carried around bits of Paradise Lost in my head for decades so should have done better. Blame Patrick for the impetus. I'll do Anglo-Saxon alliterative couplets next.



The Sump of Gremory

And lo! Of how in ancient North did stand
Beneath a tinker-beaten pewter sky
The fellest manse of man's untimely fall
I here will tell to those who hearken near
On moor where malice makes her lonely home
Abandoned to the centuries and rot
A piled keep of dismal disregard
Umbrageous and repugnant borehole fane
Looms dark in dread defiance of His law
Above a shaft of seven hundred feet
That into deeply dolven dark did pierce
From which do noxious vapours issue forth
That carry the asphaltick reek of pitch
As like the odious breath of titan worm
That in its fretful slumber is disturbed
By dreams of plund'rous interlopers bold
Descending they the longest ladders down
Into those shadow-haunted Upper Hells
Where black in gilded gulches wallow foul
Th'accursed Elder Dragon's fearsome brood
That gloat and dream their phantasies of greed
And stoke in furnace-bellies the fires of hate
That when the oldest prophecies bear fruit
Shall all the waking world to cinders burn

So thither then do trudge the lowly few
Such bastard sons of those ignoble knights
Whose harness goes to rust in dusty vaults
Who quail to face the paynim's crooked sword
Such bastard daughters fled from whoredom's yoke
Who'd fain stick poniard into noble loins
And brave the heartless northern demon night
As bear the weight of drunken tyrant lust
To bear more bastards destined for the chain
Of servitude and labour until death
To fill the coffers of unworthy kings
These few and dastard folk in hardihood
In dire desperation snared and bound
Whose legacy unjust abandonment
From ruinous Empire is - Untimely flung
Unto the world's daemoniacal maw
Where hopelessness might hide the final hope
That from the Clootie-Man might gold be won
And wrastled from his avaricious grasp
Might all the hundred grails sacred be
That touched the lips of all the hundred Christs
And all the sacred pikes that speared them dead
And verdigris-encrusted crowns of kings
Who long have lain beneath the patient sod
Since giants overthrew their vaunting pride
Who rode against the titans of the dawn
And made the skies resound with heedless war

They gird their dauntless loins these feckless brave
They take up pitted hunting-knife and adze
And don their pilfered siege-caps 'gainst the stones
That faceless fiends who haunt the lonely ways
Oft hurl to dash out such unwary brains
As might not think to watch o'erhanging crags
They trudge the northward furrows gone to weed
And ravens follow them who kestrels are
Who bear a taloned will inside their breasts
And though in tattered fustian and hide
Do bear themselves like lion-mantled braves
That in archaic epochs did contend
With gorgon-whelps and fearsome anvil-kine
And vanquished with the thighbone of an ox
Entire armies clad in brazen scales
The slaughter-hungry fierce onrushing hordes
Like waves against unyielding rocks did crash
To dash themselves to ruin 'gainst such strength
As only in the dreams of man survives

To Empire's tattered brink they northward go
To hamlets made of wicker and of dung
And memories of the words of ancient law
That undefeated legions did enforce
And banners bright declaim and harpers sing
So tender were the rituals then and fierce
The shepherds of all souls to souls' reward
Did then enact that now all men forget
They caught the piercing beauty of the sun
To weave such webs of words that praised a truth
That held imperial majesty most high
And banished into darkness heathen things
But all are lost in echoes and the night
That follows after zenith - Now in dank
And furtive squalor do these pilgrims preach
Another revelation to the low
That nevermore would armies of the south
Give succor to those dwellers of the pale
Instead a slow retreat from northern climes
Would leave them lying naked in the storm
Had not a hundred omens come that told
Of doom unleashed from yonder darkest throne
Of prodigies that walk beneath the sky
That never should have woken in their tombs
Crops lost to blight and hexing-hags at play
And bargains made at crossroads with the damned
And only bitter will and sinew strong
And iron sharp and brightly burning brand
Borne into chasms 'gainst the hateful dead
Might win the precious plunder- Gleaming gold
And talismans of heathen sorcery
The keys to mighty kingdoms yet unfounded
Sequestered in the labyrinthine dark
Await the time their secrets are revealed

Then go they forth across the dismal fells
Through shattered principalities of stone
And tumbled wrack of bastion and fort
And harrowed by the desolation vast
Do stumble on through numbest grey fatigue
Arriving at the last to dreary ruin
Where yawns the portal odious and dark
That seven hundred thousand souls consumed
Who swindled to their deaths by charlatan lies
Must swell the ranks of legions of the damned
And count the gold and centuries of dark
In endless thraldom to His endless reign

________________________________________
*But not your blog, the other blogs.

**Why not have pseudo-historical settings with derogatory racial caricatures and slavery and noxious gender politics? The prevailing orthodoxy that equates artistic investigation of problematic issues as problematic in itself deserves to be ignored and/or ridiculed.

Two posts in a week? I've cut down on coffee so am less insanely anxious and depressed and slightly more productive.

To both of the people who read this far, thank you kindly, it means a lot to me.