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branchandroot: butterfly on a desk with a world in a bottle (butterfly glass desk)
[personal profile] branchandroot
Once upon a time, there was a fanwriter who looked around and thought that steampunk costuming looked like a lot of fun. She'd had some passing contact with the genre through literature, and while some of it made her twitch with unexamined imperialist assumptions, a heartening majority of it seemed to be performing useful social critique alongside the cool gadgets and giant squid adventures.


It still seemed awfully... limited, though. It was all extremely anglo-centric, which, it seemed to her, just re-inscribed the imperialist thing. And if history was already being altered to make room for the development of air-ships and land-ships and bullet trains, and sometimes robots and ray guns, decades or even centuries before their time, why should it only be altered in Europe?

The writer was an anime and manga fan, so she started thinking what it might take to produce steampunk sorts of technology in Japan. Among other things, it occurred to her that if Tokugawa Japan had significant technology, they'd probably have been able to tell Commodore Perry where to get off when he arrived. Which, when she thought about it, could be a really good lever to reduce Japanese imperialism. This gave rise to the thought that, actually, if steampunk technology was global, imperialism all over might have looked very different; in fact, it might be possible to divert most 16th C and later imperialism entirely this way. There would be wars, and lots of them, but if the technology and materials inequality was less then there might be far less, or at least altered, conquest and occupation.

Steampunk has a lot of literature that offers dire warnings about where humanity is headed, but it also has a strong current of optimism in it. Making scientific advances global, if diverse, and in the process reducing imperialist and colonialist events seemed like a good, steampunk sort of project.

It would also open up possibilities for experimenting with steampunk style in a far wider variety of cultures and aesthetics without, and this was very important, without simply reifying the deeply racist orientalism of Victorian Britain. That has, sadly, been a trend in some corners of steampunk, and there's simply no excuse for it. China would be a good place to start, the writer thought, China developed half of everything first anyway. And the Caliphate during the Middle Ages, too. And perhaps something could be arranged in Mesoamerica...

And so the Global Steam project was born.

Caveats: I am only one person, and not a scholar of history in particular. There is a whole lot that I didn't get to! This is intended merely as a starter, and if other people wish to add to it or revise it further, please feel free to use as much or as little of my project as you like.

I have world-built with as broad strokes and small tweaks as I could, attempting to leave the characters of the nations and cultures in question untouched. This is, in may ways, a found-art collage, using the theories of historians of the areas in question. But there are places where I had to make assumptions, as for example the notion that renewed study of Islamic Golden Age texts, involving as they do law and philosophy of the Caliphate, would lead to a revival of the Caliphate in northern Africa. It is entirely possible I have, somewhere, stepped on a land-mine debate topic without fully understanding the implications. If this is so, I welcome having it pointed out, and I will do my best to remedy my understanding.

That doesn't guarantee I'll change my mind. Anyone who simply disagrees with my particular choice of historical diversion points, please see above re doing your own version.

As always, I trust that good writers, artists, and costumers will thoughtfully research any era or culture they want to work with and will not descend to mere appropriation with a fistful of gears pasted on. Or, at least, will not use me as an excuse if they do.


***

[I have decided on format: this will become a website. It needs to have different sections for the history, for the particular technology, for the costuming. I don't think it will need to be a WP installation, though. It won't be that big.

Surely it won't be that big...]

Date: 2010-06-03 09:24 pm (UTC)
pineapplechild: HELLO!, says the giant squid, wait why are you running away (Default)
From: [personal profile] pineapplechild
oh, i look forward to seeing this.

Date: 2010-06-03 09:33 pm (UTC)
pineapplechild: HELLO!, says the giant squid, wait why are you running away (Default)
From: [personal profile] pineapplechild
also: i'm perfectly willing to lend my artistic talents to this endeavor if you so desire. listening to you talk about all this costuming is making my fingers itch, and i've already knocked out a couple sketches.

Date: 2010-06-03 10:31 pm (UTC)
pineapplechild: HELLO!, says the giant squid, wait why are you running away (Default)
From: [personal profile] pineapplechild
Yeah, I'll get some of these cleaned up a bit, and show them to you. I'm not superfamilar with some of the clothing, and I'd appreciate your insight-- all my references are coming from the internets.

Date: 2010-06-03 09:49 pm (UTC)
annotated_em: close shot of a purple crocus (Default)
From: [personal profile] annotated_em
I don't think it will need to be a WP installation, though. It won't be that big.

Surely it won't be that big...


...yeah, those sound like famous last words to me.

Date: 2010-06-03 09:52 pm (UTC)
ursamajor: people on the beach watching the ocean (Default)
From: [personal profile] ursamajor
Ooh, I love the idea! Am now wondering what Filipino steampunk might look like ...

Date: 2010-06-03 11:54 pm (UTC)
dragonscrawl: (Default)
From: [personal profile] dragonscrawl
I did not know how much I was looking forward to something like this until I read this.

Date: 2010-06-04 03:47 am (UTC)
theodosia21: sunflower against a blue sky (Default)
From: [personal profile] theodosia21
This sounds *fascinating*. I love alternate history, especially when it's optimistic. ^_^ I'm going to follow this project with great interest!

Date: 2010-06-04 02:36 pm (UTC)
adalger: Earthrise as seen from the moon, captured on camera by the crew of Apollo 16 (Default)
From: [personal profile] adalger
Ooh! Great Big Giant Open Source Universe? :)

I love alternate history stories, and I think it would be a really awesome idea to have a "Universe coordinator" building the world and gobs of authors adding stories to it.

Date: 2010-06-04 05:20 pm (UTC)
chronolith: (Default)
From: [personal profile] chronolith
If someone makes a Haida steampunk sketch I will so love them forever. I am sadly completely at a loss with sketching or actually costuming.

I could probably work on some history though. I have a big book of Cherokee history and sacred formulas to read through that I got with my latest lecture from an elder (I am apparently too Haida and not Cherokee enough, well, okay?) So I can try to help some with the Americas.

I promise not to be too harsh on the Sioux.

Date: 2010-06-04 05:45 pm (UTC)
chronolith: (Default)
From: [personal profile] chronolith
I'll probably start in the North and work my way down. Though maybe some time dabbling with Cherokee since those are the two areas I feel the most comfortable with.

There will, um, need to be a certain degree of magic to get somethings to work right and maintain traditional belief structures. (Oil, for example, is somewhat problematic for certain regions.)

Man, all I can say is the first Athabascan to think up gunpowder is going to get all the pretties. Not having to sneak up and stab the bear? SWEET!

Date: 2010-06-04 06:34 pm (UTC)
adalger: Earthrise as seen from the moon, captured on camera by the crew of Apollo 16 (Default)
From: [personal profile] adalger
Mayan crossbows? Those would be almost as useful as muskets were to the Spanish. Possibly more, if you count the stealth advantage in conjunction with "home field."

Date: 2010-06-05 08:06 pm (UTC)
From: [personal profile] ex_wicker969
I'd be all over Coast Salish and Inca both - I know more about Coast Salish but I've always wanted to do an in-depth exploration of Inca culture. I don't draw though.

Summer project! *flailyhands* I'm loving your framework posts so much!

Date: 2010-07-02 02:13 pm (UTC)
jaebility: (random // art deco)
From: [personal profile] jaebility
This is quite possibly the coolest thing ever! I followed some links regarding race and the portrayal of different cultures in fiction and discovered your Global Steam project. Do you mind if I subscribe to your journal?

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