Lois’s answer to “Have you ever considered writing a Five Worlds piece from the viewpoint of the gods?” > Likes and Comments

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message 1: by Softness (new)

Softness Awww, Caz Caz <3


message 2: by David (new)

David Allenson This is one of the things that I loved about the Assassins of Thasalon. The Bastard partially manifests for a few seconds and that almost strains the minds of everyone present. Several faint.
This is the problem I have with the way the majority of 'gods' are written in fantasy. If they aren't Cthulhu/King in Yellow level beings just call them something other than gods.


message 3: by Mike (new)

Mike Voss This makes perfect sense and makes a nice counterpoint to the usual depiction of gods in fantasy tropes. I don't think you need to dispense with the term 'god' to describe lesser beings who are still "god-like" to humans, though. Anything with some quantity of that ineffableness might qualify as a god, relatively speaking.


message 4: by Lois (new)

Lois Bujold @ MV --

Well, there's the term "demi-god", but that more usually refers to half-breeds, though sometimes jumped-up humans. "Culture hero" is another myth-studies term for the more human side. Prometheus would be an example of the latter, I think, with the posthumous Roman emperors an attempt to conscript the concept for political propaganda.

L.


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