LifeCharacter said:
kurupt87 said:
Fictional worlds are reality with extra bits added. These extra bits change what the authors want them to change and nothing else. The changes to reality that they made in the creation of The Witcher (or any magic fantasy) setting could keep an entire Social Sciences department at a University busy for years trying to theorise the impacts that they'd have on society.
A big change to society in a fictional setting needs to be kept quite simple, like the example I gave of RJ's WoT. The world needs to be pretty much the same as ours so that we can understand its characters. Because if it isn't, the characters are going to be wildly different to us with indecipherable motivations. Interesting as an intellectual escape, but not for a good monster slaying romp through the countryside.
That's sort of the issue though, authors are perfectly willing to change the very nature of the world we live in by introducing powerful magic, science, and entirely different planes of existence, but constantly maintain societal norms at basically the exact same level as what is typically regarded as "medieval." The changes aren't simple by any means, and their effects on the world wouldn't be either, but all the time the effects are limited to "and now there's monsters" and "some people use magic now" rather than actually exploring what might happen when there are supersoldier programs and women happen to be the best wielders of magical superpowers.
The changes they make like bringing in magic would have far reaching consequences. Like, I have no idea how much would be affected. You just have to live with what the author wants it to affect, and their reason for why whatever it is that has changed is changed in the way it is. Or is not.
They do a pretty decent job of explaining away why magic wielders don't rule everything in
The Witcher. Magic wielders are sterile in almost all cases, so you can't guarantee who has the trait. The spark manifests early and is extremely dangerous, to the point that in most cases the magic wielder either kills themself or bakes their own noodle and becomes the mad village witch. They have to be lucky enough to bump into an existing magic wielder who wants to take them under their wing, or have family/village that aren't afraid of them, are rich enough and love them so much that they'd travel to get them to one (I only even know of one) of the magic academies in the world.
And then, if they perfect their art and survive long enough to become a force to be reckoned with, they will be something like the Lodge of Sorceress'. A group of the world's most powerful magic wielders who the King's and rulers of all nations fear to trifle with.
The thing is that I fail to see how greater gender equality, or even the gender with greater access to magical superweapons being in power, would somehow create such a radical break from our world that the audience simply couldn't comprehend it. In fact, shouldn't that make them slightly more comprehensible considering we're supposedly living in a time of unprecedented gender equality? Why are social norms that would more closely resemble the sort of society we're supposed to have today somehow less understandable than a society that is intentionally meant to be different than ours by harking back to medieval times?
You missed my point. It's the magic that would change the world, not the gender shift.
To go back to my example of RJ's WoT universe, he kept it simple.
1. There is magic in the world.
2. The magic that men wield is different to the magic women wield.
3. Men destroyed the world using their magic and go mad using it.
That is a simple enough explanation for why the society in that universe is a matriarchy rather than a patriarchy. It is the big thing that he changed about his society, it is the hook. The interesting thing, the difference. And the only real difference, everything else is perfectly relatable.
How those simple things would actually change the world is, I am sure you know, going to be monumentally complicated.
For fantasy it boils down to this thing that I said to Gethsemani:
In a primitive society, where daily life is a struggle, where education is an option for the rich; there needs to be a reason why men would not subjugate women using their physical strength when it is just so damn easy.
This difference in size between men and women is important. If you're a woman you know that men are physically intimidating. If you're a man you may not, not giving it the attention it is due.
I am 6'6" and 16st. Women like that, big manly guy. Men are nervous around me, they are not used to feeling physically inferior just due to size. The women are.