james_davis_nicoll (
james_davis_nicoll) wrote2009-01-07 10:23 am
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Speaking of the Comyn
If you could overthrow one fictional set of aristocrats and nobles whose creator clearly thinks are the bee's knees, which lot would you pick?
I'm more inclined to be harshest towards the SFnal aristocracies, since they have actual history to have learned from.
I'm more inclined to be harshest towards the SFnal aristocracies, since they have actual history to have learned from.
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Korval/Liaden are also ambiguous, since there's all that loving detail, but really the Houses are pricks, and Korval's reaction to exile is "Finally! see ya!" Of course *Korval* has noblesse oblige out of their pores and the authors do love them, but they actually work.
The Highborn of the Kencyrath would be tempting, though difficult. The poor Kendar.
Vor or haut? But Vor are changing and may not be bee's knees, and the haut almost certainly aren't.
Something Pournellian?
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Figuring out a legal system capable of taming Bullfrog's Syndicate would be an exercise and a quarter.
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Followed by the 'gimme' pick of the Jedi Knights.
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(Anonymous) 2009-01-07 06:03 pm (UTC)(link)(I have almost concluded that in my next Star Wars campaign, every level of Jedi a character takes will include a -1 INT score...)
Tony Zbaraschuk
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There is a valid question to be asked why there are princesses and dukes running around governing a supposed republic. Or, more correctly, there would be such questions to be asked if the Star Wars universe were assumed to make any coherent sense, but it obviously doesn't.
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Inversion
Item one: the Minds of the Culture, depending on how seriously you take the claims of democracy.
Item two: the Exalted. More problematic...
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But actually, I'm a bit more moderate then that. I would just be happy to have a UN peacekeeping force descend on Westeros, deport the ruling nobles for trial in the Hague, and set up enclaves to stop the incipent religious war. Then we can start importing food and technical assistance to get the population through that winter that I can't believe they would survive in the best case.
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Maybe there's a Cycle of Fire relationship between the humans and the ice-zombies? Which dominates depends on the climate but one always has the seeds for the others return.
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I didn't read sf again for quite a while after that one.
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If we're allowed to branch out into real life, my pick would be the Confederacy. I had to stop reading Civil War era historical fiction, because I hated the Southern aristocrats so much that I would be reduced to gibbering rage until I got to the part where Sherman burned their houses down.
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The Vor in Bujold's Vorkosigan series remind me of the Prussian Junker aristocracy in 19th-century Germany. Left to themselves they'll happily sleepwalk their serfs into the interstellar equivalent of World War I, so here's hoping their 1848 turns out better than ours did.
The Numenoreans in Tolkien's Middle Earth run a feudal system not unlike that of the Normans in medieval England. They seem pretty secure though; I think the best we can hope for here (as in the case of England) is that eventually intermarriage and the passage of time will erase the racial distinctions on which the feudal hierarchy is built.
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