Archive for the 'Shanghaied' Category

Sky Ninja on the Attack

Posted in Accessories, Asian, Shanghaied, Writing on August 21st, 2008

I’d been putting this off until I had a more polished presentation to bring to the table, but the popularity of Victorientalism lately has given me cause to move ahead, good planning be damned.

Put simply, sky ninja are the natural enemies of that overpopulated scourge of the air, the sky pirate. It was only natural that ninja would evolve skyward just as pirates did.

The name sky ninja actually came about as a joke referring to Captain Jack Rose’s unhealthy attachment to the exotic but dangerous and far-flung colonies of the Mysterious East where he accompanied his parents for a several years of his misspent youth. He spent a few years there in the company of a pair of Imperial agents, eventually losing track of them when they disappeared to oppose the schemes of the Empress Dowager Cixi, and thereafter Jack insisted on bringing an Oriental flair to all things, whether it was really helpful or not.

In addition to the pieces he bought or assembled himself, he has commissioned a few pieces that he feels capture the spirit in which he was “trained”. He enjoys the use of weapons from throughout Asia, including Nipponese shuriken (a pair of which he commissioned from Alexandra of the White Peacock Trading Company shortly after they met) and an Indian talwar sword which was passed on to him from his father. He’s not necessarily much good with all these exotic weapons, mind you, but he tries.

Sky ninja is not so much an actual job (I’d imagine actual steampunk ninja would be more land-based unless they were engaged in specific warfare against their sky pirate enemies) as an expression of interest in Asia as filtered through the Victorian-colonial mentality.

It is important, when looking at Asia through steam-colored glasses, that we use the Western/British mentality toward Asians in the same way we do their mentality toward women and the lower classes: something to play with, parody, and subvert, but not something to seriously adopt. The stereotype of the exotic geisha or the silent warrior monk may be interesting to flesh out or turn inside out, but especially in writing, it’s essential to remember that cardboard cutouts are never interesting characters and stereotypical cutouts are less so.

(If you’re interested in making sure you don’t write stereotypes for your Asian characters, you may wish to read this discussion on LJ for a privilege check and a thread on the many interesting possibilities for non-Eurocentric stories.)

And remember, if you don’t see sky ninja stalking you from above, that just means they’re doing their job.

Shanghaied

Posted in Shanghaied on March 2nd, 2008

Shanghaied is the working title of one of my two ongoing steampunk/dieselpunk projects. It’s primarily the story of one Allen Ravenscoft, an associate of Edward VII, and his personal assistant Elizabeth Bell as they travel through Asia in service of the crown. It’s an adventure story (or quite likely, several stories) with a few fantastic elements and some alternate history in addition to as much steampunk tech as I can shoe-horn in. I’d like to think it’s in the vein of Indiana Jones insofar as a few mythic elements live side-by-side with science.

I’ve done a fair amount of  research on the time period in Asia, especially in China, and I’ll be sharing a lot of that with you as I build on it. In addition, this project has caused me to think at length about Asian steampunk clothing designs. A lot of my costume design efforts thus far have been in this realm. With any luck, I’ll be sharing this as well.

Hopefully my research will prove interesting and useful to a number of people besides myself.