Original credit for the idea and background still belongs to
avocado_love. I would love to know what you've thought about this story, and if you think that anything should have happened differently. "What if..." is one of my favorite questions when it comes to stories, and I usually can go into far too much detail about why I chose A instead of B
(
Read more... )
"Firebenders seem extremely likely to use funeral pyres, Airbenders probably had sky burials, Water Tribe has the ocean right there, and Earth Kingdom would be the society to have people actually buried." I completely agree with you - this is my personal headcanon. ;) I mean, the show did put in a lot of effort in showing the four nations as culturally distinct, and I think that that would carry over into their death rituals.
I know what you mean about an Iroh-less Zuko. Iroh does so much to shape Zuko and offer him support (his only existing family member to do so), and I think that his uncle's death would hit Zuko really, really hard.
I certainly hope that you write more of anything after this, especially fluff! ;) I look forward to reading more from you!
Reply
The show did a great job adding in little touches of the culture that fit with existing societies. When little-Zuko and Azula are at Azulon's funeral/Ozai's coronation, they're dressed in white. If there aren't enough hints about airbender culture, they have Gyatso. Check how many of the Dalai Lamas aren't named Gyatso for the hint there.
The show never talks about the transition after Zuko was banished, but I've always thought that Ozai would want the boy gone very quickly. My personal interpretation is that Iroh volunteered himself sneakily enough that Ozai couldn't say that Zuko had to do it alone, and Iroh had a ship and a crew leaving the harbor before Ozai knew what was going on.
I'm very bad at writing extended fluff for Zuko, but I have a few really cute scenes in the next project I'm working on. I'm not allowed to watch movies. They give me ideas, and sometimes the ideas take over chunks of my brain. I'm using V for Vendetta as my source material, Sokka and the Blue Spirit (Zuko, to no reader's great surprise) overthrow Ozai's government to put (a not really reformed, but way better than Ozai) Azula on the throne. Prince Zuko is dead, but Blue and Mai probably have the cutest courtship that ever started with somebody bleeding. (He moved. Obviously it's his fault, never mind that she was throwing the knives)
Reply
I really liked the white mourning clothing as well. It was a nice detail. :)
Ooh... I do love stories that address political shenanigans too! Interesting... :3
Reply
Politics are fun. I've had to convince a few friends, but they're fascinating and they give you lots of chances to maneuver characters. I'm not using all of the V for Vendetta material, but a few little aspects are going to come through. There was a sickness, Zhao is Creepy Creedy, and the entire reason I let the story happen was Zuko being Zuko. I still don't know exactly how I got here, but I decided that Zuko might be the only person crazy enough to break out of prison and sneak back in every night.
It's also an excuse to let Sokka and Zuko (with assistance from Jet) fix the country. (Jet is a funny story, but Sokka and Jet quickly despise each other and leave Zuko as the voice of reason.) Mai is also the most pragmatic potential girlfriend for the masked-hero type ever.
Reply
"Zuko might be the only person crazy enough to break out of prison and sneak back in every night." YES! THIS! Also, this: "Mai is also the most pragmatic potential girlfriend for the masked-hero type ever." XD Definitely!
Reply
There's blood the first time the first time Zuko and Mai talk. It's entirely his fault, because he moved the wrong way when she threw knives at him.
Jet meets Zuko the first night that Zuko breaks out of prison. Jet (again) looks at the scar and goes "soulmates!!!" and pulls the guy home to talk him into joining the Freedom Fighters (based in the Fire Nation capital for convenience). Jet's the one that gives Zuko the mask, and that starts calling him Blue.
Reply
(And hey, would you happen to remember what the title/author/periodical of that paper was? It sounds super neat and I'd like to read it!)
"There's blood the first time the first time Zuko and Mai talk. It's entirely his fault, because he moved the wrong way when she threw knives at him." XD Almost everything ends up being Zuko's fault in the end...
Ooh... an interesting origin story for this version of the Blue Spirit! Super cool! Will this be set in the same "era" as in canon, or will it be a modern alternate universe? (I'm hoping for the former, actually. ;) )
Reply
And success on the source. I dug through all my back-files for undergrad:
1. Phillips, Janet and Peter Phillips. “History from below: women’s underwear and the rise of women’s sport.” Journal of Popular Culture 27 (2): 129-148. 1993.
It's pretty fantastic.
It's canon-era. The unholy alliance of Zuko, Jet, Azula, and Zhao (I don't know what's the weirdest part) was about to depose Ozai (Zuko doesn't like Zhao, at all, but needed access to the Fire Lord) when the Avatar showed up and ruined the entire plan. (The plan was "Zuko kills the Fire Lord." Simple and effective, they made sure Azula had a great alibi, she takes over, they get rid of Zhao, done.)
Reply
Excellent! Thank you for the reference! I still have access to the university library system until a little bit after I graduate this spring, and I'm going to make the most of it until then. ;)
I'm really, really interested to see how all of this will play out... :3
Reply
I'm going to be very, very sad when I lose my university library privileges. I'll still get science journals to do my job, but I like researching history when it comes to writing out papers. Writing pages and pages of science just feels like you should be more succinct.
Reply
Yeah, science is all about being concise and such. :P One of the reasons I love history is because the world is like one giant story with a billion little subplots that begin and end and repeat themselves, and you're continually finding more stories to fill in the blanks. I find history really easy to learn and memorize for that reason. You just have to learn the story. ;)
Reply
I'm the crazy person that did the history of science major... then went on to do more science. There's also a lot of cool interpersonal interaction and I like the job (and I can't write if I didn't do other things with my life, I get ideas from doing things), but I'm starting to think that a PhD in history of science would have been way more fun.
Reply
I'm trying not to think about that gray murky area of "after graduation". D: I've been starting to save all of the really interesting articles that are in PDF format online to my harddrive and such...
A PHD in the history of science and technology would be super cool. If you were to do this hypothetical degree, what would you write your thesis on?
Reply
Ooooh, good question. There are so many things I want to write about, but I think I would do a history of evolutionary psychology. I think the field is generally made out of a whole lot of just-so stories and bad reasoning, and will never forgive it for this strange article I need to find again-- women like pink more than men because they used to hunt for berries. They had two sample groups (native-born Brits and Chinese immigrants to Britain), and completely ignored that Chinese men liked red (which is a lucky color in China). I really want to know when we decided that personality traits/habits/problem-solving could be traced back into animals.
Are any fields especially interesting to you? I just might be writing a paper over the Christmas break for a journal competition. I need a history of medicine topic and might be able to do my evolutionary psych history.
Reply
That would be quite fascinating! The history of ideas, if that is even a field, is just fascinating. :3 Also, have you ever listened to the podcast "Stuff Mom Never Told You"? (Also, "Stuff You Missed in History Class" and "Stuff You Should Know", all run by the same website.) I think that you would enjoy them. :)
At the moment, I'm writing my thesis on American Civil War Medicine - mostly about WHY it has such a poor reputation when statistically the doctors weren't that bad for their era. I try to debunk myths and talk about innovations, trying to show the system of logic behind what modern science calls "barbaric" - mostly things like anesthesia use and amputations and such. Also, the prevalence (or lack thereof) of sanitary practices. Really, 19th century medicine is very interesting. If you need inspiration, I would recommend "The Ghost Map: the story of London’s most terrifying epidemic - and how it changed science, cities, and the modern world" by Steven Johnson. The author does an excellent job of explaining the miasma theory versus the one guy who really first realized that cholera had to be waterborne.
Reply
I think the "what on earth am I doing with my LIFE" crisis is ending up a typical thing for kids to do. I'm finally starting to feel put together again (I nearly had a meltdown this semester), and before I got into med school I had lots and lots of paranoid "OMG I'm never going to make it and it's too late to apply for grad school and I have to go DO something." This could be because I'm a high-strung pragmatist.
"Stuff You should know but don't" is always a popular topic. I've been involved with quiz bowl for years and years, and quite a bit of that involves lots of in-jokes about history and obscure trivia.
"American Civil War medicine," and... yeah, talk about things I like. You can bounce ideas off me anytime. (nodnod) I don't know quite a bit about the era (my classes that did 19th century med focused on psychiatry or on the alternative movements, not standard medicine), but I know the very rough picture.
The story about the guy that discovered why hygiene matters is terrible. It's another example of doctors through time and why they were arrogant assholes. I can't remember his name, but this one guy in charge of a (Hungarian?) clinic looked around at two clinics. The poor childbirth clinic staffed by nurses was immensely less dangerous than the one with doctors and better equipments. That was because the doctors and students would go straight from working on cadavers to delivering babies. He made them wash their hands in between, the mortality rate plummeted, and life was happy...until the doctors whined incessantly that they couldn't be washing their hands all the time and women started dying a lot more in their clinic.
Reply
Leave a comment