• Architeuthis@awful.systems
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      18 days ago

      In case anybody skips the article, it’s a six year old cybernetically force grown to the body of a horny 13 to 14 year old.

      The rare sentence that makes me want to take a shower for having written it.

    • swlabr@awful.systems
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      18 days ago

      Normal person: you should not be attracted to the mind or body of anyone under the age of consent, nor should you invent thought experiments to find loopholes.

      Yud: i live to groom

  • Soyweiser@awful.systems
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    18 days ago

    Not to be fair to yud, but so much fiction (written by men) sexualizes ~14 year old girls and it gets really weird when you start to notice it. This includes beloved science fiction like Snow Crash for example. Im starting to get why so many of us misinterpreted Lolita, and why a lot of women/girls are a bit annoyed with the sexism at times.

    • AllNewTypeFace@leminal.space
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      18 days ago

      There are probably a lot of geeks who have bitter memories of being ostracised misfits in high school while all the jocks and popular kids were partying and presumably having all the sex, for whom the idea of teenage sex is like catnip. Hence the voyeuristic underage sex in geek-adjacent literature, the “actually, the term is ephebophilia” fedora bros and far worse things. (By some accounts, after Amazon engineers gentrified Seattle, the teenage prostitution rate there went up, due to cashed-up nerds “making up for lost time”.)

    • Architeuthis@awful.systems
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      18 days ago

      Dolores in Lolita was like twelve though, at least in the book.

      edit: also I don’t think Yud recommending The Softcore Adventures Of A Six-year-old In A Thirteen-year-old’s Body as a Very Normal Book to his considerable audience fits this particular discourse.

      • DragonTypeWyvern@midwest.social
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        18 days ago

        Not the point? The point is that it was common enough for men in literature to creep on children that the obvious criticism was missed.

        • Architeuthis@awful.systems
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          18 days ago

          Nabokov’s Lolita really shouldn’t be pigeonholed as merely that, but I guess the movies are another story.

          • Soyweiser@awful.systems
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            17 days ago

            It certainly shouldn’t, but i was talking about the men who misinterpret the book a bit into some sort of love story, and not a creepy unreliable narrator who is trying to convince you he is really the victim here.

            E: And don’t get me wrong, I don’t think ‘young person discovers their sexuality and comes to grips with it’ is something that should be banned from books or something, it is just annoying to me that so many books have the ~14 year old girls, written by a man, girl gets heavily sexualized by older men (or worse goes for much older man, bonus points if the guy is actually a writer (this is uncommon of course as that is quite specific)), pattern. It feels a bit like creepy wish fulfillment. At my book club we had a period where we noticed that every book we read for a while had the sexualized ~14 year old problem.

  • sinedpick@awful.systems
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    19 days ago

    “safe for work” means something very different when your work is basically smell-testing your own flatulence at the behest of Peter Thiel.

  • swlabr@awful.systems
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    18 days ago

    Haven’t read the article yet but I can only assume the book is “Lolita X” where they find the cryonically frozen body of humbert humbert and they bring him to space