sigmoid.social is one of the many independent Mastodon servers you can use to participate in the fediverse.
A social space for people researching, working with, or just interested in AI!

Server stats:

588
active users

#engenderedwriting

0 posts0 participants0 posts today

Excuse a drunk post. 12oz of Tioga-Sequoia (Fresno) dark beer and I'm tipsy! (Very tasty, however.) Lightweight, definitely. How does anyone like this feeling of not being able to determine what's horizontal with gravity pulling you at unpredictable times? Well, I'm drinking lots of water now, and working to remember the feeling for writing into my stories. Blech!
#research !

Question: Is beer a male or a female gendered preference? #EngenderedWriting

For a lot of information, read the #AltText.

#BoostingIsSharing

@jeanmauel
I would like to be the first to welcome you to the writing community here. There is no algorithm like on X/Twitter and other services to generate a timeline of posts (called toots) on Mastodon. To do this you follow people that interest you, which you did for me so you've got this. We also follow keyword hashtags like #WritingCommunity and include those hashtags in our posts when they apply.

Including the following hashtags and the accounts allow you to be found by like-minded people. If you don't include them, you won't be noticed. Much. You do have a recognizable name…

There are also hashtag writer challenge games, where like-minded authors reply and discuss author-y things. It is both a good way to procrastinate (as if we need that), but also an opportunity to think about current characters and techniques and read what other authors think about the subject. Here are some incomplete lists to get you started.

These identify your community.

#Writer #Author #WritersOfMastodon #bookstodon #Writing

#SF #scifi #ScienceFiction #Fantasy #Mystery #Romance #Thriller #horror

Games:

#PennedPossibilities
#WritersCoffeeClub
#ScibesAndMakers
#WordWeavers
#TimeTravelAuthors
#EngenderedWriting
#Writever
#Writephant

There's more, but if you check these out, you'll quickly be surrounded by the like-minded. Also, since I follow a multitude of authors, but also artists and creative people, you are welcome to raid my follow list on my profile page for other accounts to follow.

Last, please take a moment to fill in your profile page. I do admit your name and banner picture is a great intro, but it's a good place to note what you love to talk about, what you would rather talk about, and it may not just be about writing and publishing. Today is good time to do that. (I guess RS is a little pushy.) Again, you are welcome to look at my profile page (and others) for ideas.

If you provide links anywhere on Mastodon, but definitely when building your profile page, include the full http version of the link. If you do, it becomes clickable.

Of note in regard to profiles, you can pin things like a longer introduction post or an essay you wish to share, so it is the first post visitors see. It's one of the features and actions hidden in the three dots menu (…) at the end of a post.

Again, welcome. Feel free to ask questions. If you use community hashtags, others might answer also.

This post is to announce to all those who knew about my web-novel Mars Needed Women, who may have boosted or linked to it, that I have deleted the posts from Mastodon. I am heavily into revising it for publication.To prevent 404ing, I've left only the jacket blurb post of March 1st. As best I can remember, that's the only link I gave out. I hope so. I'm tagging hashtags to which I posted links to the novel this one time to prevent confusion. You are welcome to PM me.

#pennedpossibilities #engenderedWriting #writerscoffeeclub #wordweavers #scribesandmakers #writever #writephant

TL;DR

The story was published daily in March 2024 as part of a #Writever challenge, and I completed all 31 chapters one a day using all 31 Women's Rights prompts, managing to complete the last chapter and post it only 20 minutes into April 1st.

The story was definitely beta, with a plot hole and janky science and a few character boo-boos, but I like the result. I have since greatly revised the story and added plenty of material. Writing content daily to fit it into a toot-length that worked out to 750-800 words max forced compromises.

I plan to publish the novel in book form. As such, I have deleted the original free-to-read version. When I've sold or published the novel, I'll be sure to inform all my followers.

If you were part way through the story, PM me.

For you that read it, and for those who favorited chapters, Thank you.

#BoostingIsSharing

#writer#author#sf
Replied in thread

@ltrapp
Welcome to the writing community. @strangeseawolf answered your direct question, but I'd like to answer your indirect one. On Mastodon we ALSO follow keyword hashtags like #WritingCommunity and include those hashtags in our posts when they apply. These hashtag and the accounts we follow take the place of an algorithm elsewhere, so if you don't include them you won't be noticed (much). There are also hashtag writer challenge games, where likeminded authors reply and discuss author-y things. Here are some incomplete lists to get you started.

#Writer #Author #WritersOfMastodon #bookstodon #Writing

#SF #scifi #ScienceFiction #Fantasy #Mystery #Romance #Thriller #horror

"Games:"

#PennedPossibilities
#WritersCoffeeClub
#ScibesAndMakers
#WordWeavers
#TimeTravelAuthors
#EngenderedWriting
#Writever
#Writephant

There's more, but if you check these out, you'll quickly be surrounded by the like-minded. Also, since I follow a multitude of authors, but also artists and creative people, you are welcome to raid my follow list on my profile page for other accounts to follow.

Last, take a moment to fill in your profile page. Today is good. Again, you are welcome to look at mine (and others) for ideas. If you provide links, include the full http version. If you do, they become clickable. An interesting profile and your posts are how people decide to follow you.

Continued thread

#ScribesAndMakers 2503.19 2/2 — At what age did you start creating?

I'm being meta in this post, talking about what I thought answering this question originally. As a gender fiction writer, the response to this question fascinated me! Let me in advance apologize for going all Sherlock Holmes on you folk. Gender roles and preferences are schooled into us until they're subliminal. Authors pervert the programming to write believable characters that are both different from them and of different genders or preferences. Our writing contains subtexts and hidden confessions that come out in our essays, maybe even our fiction, that we may or may not be aware of, or, granted, may not care about.

Still...

Many of us authors in this community use pen names, as do I, or an ungendered alias online, as do I, going so far as to use a pretty picture avatar, as do I, to obfuscate our identity, or to assert a political identity instead. My avatar highlights my comedic side.

Yet...

Yet, many of the answers to this question indirectly maybe inadvertently announced a gender identity (not necessarily a birth gender; that's understood). I crafted my rather typical answer to this question to answer truthfully but equivocally as to hints about my gender and gender identity.

I can remember ... playing imaginary games with my toys, making them walk, making them roll, making them fly, and sometimes tea was involved. The figurines talked and we gabbed and gossiped and discussed important life events! The vehicles made what I thought very authentic noises!! There were adventures galore!!!

Both girl words and boy words, and words that say the same thing in an ungendered fashion. Gossip and tea but also figurines, not dolls.

That said, reading the responses I realized I had incorrectly guessed the gender of many authors. Word choice counts, and it counts at many levels. May I suggest you read some of the responses again?

PS: Ask me about some of this gender role and identity stuff on Talk To Me Day, if you want. #EngenderedWriting

[Author retains copyright (c)2025 R.S.]

#BoostingIsSharing and #CommentingIsCool

#gender #fiction #writer #author
#writing #writingcommunity #writersOfMastodon #writers
#RSdiscussion

On 3/30 feminist SFF writer @sfwrtr will be our first featured creator from the community. RS created #EngenderedWriting and this month worked on #MarsNeededWomen. Please do not ask RS to reveal their gender, but they are happy to answer gender related questions and appreciate questions about grammar-B writing style, rhetoric, and elocution. More info in pinned profile posts or search #SAMInfo. If you ask a question, please tag RS in and add the hashtags #ScribesAndMakers and #TTMD

On 3/30 feminist SFF writer @sfwrtr will be our first featured creator from the community. RS created #EngenderedWriting and this month worked on #MarsNeededWomen. Please do not ask RS to reveal their gender, but they are happy to answer gender related questions and appreciate questions about grammar-B writing style, rhetoric, and elocution. More info in pinned profile posts or search #SAMInfo. If you ask a question, please tag RS in and add the hashtags #ScribesAndMakers and #TTMD

@loismcmasterb Welcome. While you are likely to be too busy for prompts and daily challenges, there are some hashtags you might follow on your journey through Mastodon if this is your beginning here:

#writingCommunity #writersOfMastodon #bookstodon #writer #writing #author #fiction #SF #sciencefiction

#Feditips is a good search.

There's a sense of community around these challenges: #PennedPossibilities, #WritersCoffeeClub, #WordWeavers, #ScribesAndMakers, #TimeTravelAuthors, and my now completed #EngenderedWriting.

Since you mentioned filters, filtering out (hashtag) uspol and politics is pretty effective.

I've followed a lot of writers and artists. Most are toward the beginning of my Follows list. Feel free to raid my Follows and Followers lists to your hearts content.

Again, welcome.

#ScribesAndMakers 2503.01 2/2— What are your goals for the month?

Added a new goal: An SF micro-novel written from #writever daily prompts named with a title tag: #RSMarsNeededWomen. In the French version of the prompt, the month "March" is Mars and the theme is women's rights. For some strange reason the two combined in my head into an idea for space opera. Viva la #engenderedWriting! Consider following me as I gin up a gender fiction story from... nothing, going gonzo pantser on this. I've written 2 micro-chapters of 31. I'll need some cheering on, whilst I also try to finish the main novel. Click the title tag above for the story, or the link below for this month's daily writing prompts.

English: framapiaf.org/@k_tastrof/11408

Français: mamot.fr/@alombard/11408599117

[Author retains copyright (c)2025 R.S.]

#BoostingIsSharing and #CommentingIsCool

#gender #fiction #writer #author #photographer #chef
#writing #writingcommunity #writersOfMastodon #writers
#RSdiscussion

FramapiafKt StwrD (@k_tastrof@framapiaf.org)Attaché : 1 image In March, as the fight for gender equality continues, let’s write it. 1 day 1 word 1 story science fiction🚀 fantastic👻 or fantasy 🗡 Ideally in one thread and with the #writever hashtag

#ScribesAndMakers 2502.27. Have you ever written to a writer/creator to tell them you liked their work? Did they respond?

Yes. But not someone trad published, though I should have. With better websites and better communication channels than a paper letter, I will in the future. There are some very talented fan fiction authors out there and, yes, I've commented on their stories, some of which if rewritten in an original universe are better than a lot of things I've read in paperback published by the big houses. One excellent gender fiction SF novel about gender transformation, written by an author who goes by StarScribe, I nominated for the Otherwise (James Tiptree Jr.) Award. Alas, fan fiction is not often taken seriously, thought that specific story and other fantasy by that author ought be. And yes, the author responded.

en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Otherwis

[Author retains copyright (c)2025 R.S.]

#BoostingIsSharing and #CommentingIsCool

#gender #fiction #writer #author #photographer #chef
#writing #writingcommunity #writersOfMastodon #writers
#RSdiscussion
#fanfiction #fanfic #otherwiseaward #engenderedWriting

en.wikipedia.orgOtherwise Award - Wikipedia
Replied in thread

#EngenderedWriting 99 — If humans were exclusively matrilineal, would marriage evolve in your stories?

Probably. People still have a strong urge to "couple up" (even if there's more than two of them), so some kind of marriage-like "thing" would very likely evolve. It would look so different as to be only barely recognizable, though, bc a whole different set of values would attach. Like, it wouldn't have the seething obsession with making sure the baby belongs to the mom, for obvious reasons.

#EngenderedWriting 98: Is marriage inevitable? Is it an exclusive symptom of patriarchy? Do any of your stories touch on the subject?

*Pair bonding* is inevitable, and I expect every society will find a need to have legally/socially recognized relationships, which is basically what marriage is. So I'd say some form of marriage is inevitable, or the next best thing.

What form that takes, of course, will be highly varied depending on many different factors. Many of the things we associate with marriage -- gendered roles, one partner have more social/legal respect, etc, are not at all inevitable.

In Planting Life in a Dying City, I explored one form marriage might take in a society where patriarchy (and gender) didn't exist.

Replied in thread

#EngenderedWriting 98: Is marriage inevitable? Is it an exclusive symptom of patriarchy? Do any of your stories touch on the subject?

Marriage exists in this world, including common-law marriage, plural marriage, open marriage, and short-term contract marriages, but lots of people don't get married at all. They've almost entirely defeated capitalism--bc it was the only way to survive the environmental crisis--which weakens but does not kill patriarchy. They're still working on that.

Replied in thread

#EngenderedWriting 96: If humans always had had a fertile season would our modernity be different or would it be the same old time religion and patriarchy?

If humans were only horny for a couple of weeks a year, the world would be *completely* different.90% of all the seduction and romance in art would be gone. Rape culture would all but disappear. I don't even think we could imagine how different that world would be.

Replied in thread

@NaraMoore

Sometimes I am a little sad that my poetry draws more attention and praise [than my fiction].

You and Conan Doyle. He made money on Sherlock Holmes. You're in good company. Keep seeing if you can work it. Readers are fickle. We have to write for ourselves, which is what I tell myself when the spiciness of what I'm writing keeps causing me to cease up.

Btw, It was actually 650 words, but now it is 1.900 words. How much is it going to twist the reader's gender expectations in a knot when the girlfriend doesn't act jealous but sees it as experience that will only make her boyfriend more fun? (Oops. That's spoilers.) #engenderedWriting

Replied in thread

#EngenderedWriting 95: Humans are suddenly fertile once a year for a week. How does this change gender roles? Society?

It would increase sex the other 51 weeks. That one "time of the year" would be when ppl with uteri can choose whether to possibly get pregnant. People fear sex way less bc they can be confident nobody's going to die in childbirth if they avoid that week. Sexism might decrease bc half the population doesn't get pregnant nearly as easily.
#Writing #Writers #AmWriting #AmWritingSF

#EngenderedWriting 92 — How would it change society if women were and had always been physically stronger than men? CW: Patriarchy dissected.

It's a fun idea, and I know authors who are making it work. Still, my opinion, if strength is the only factor I am not sure it would have resulted in a society substantially different than our own. I'll analyze it for you authors so you can rewrite history.

It takes more than strength to make two people evenly matched. (I've been researching prizefighting.) Arm reach is the difference between your punch being blocked and being able to hit with few injuries. Speed and stamina matter. Weight and inertia matter. Think wrestling. All are more important than quantitative strength. This is why there are weight classes in most combative sports.

Unfortunately, women have a smaller stature on average. Weapons are an equalizer here, especially if women can wield heavier weapons than their male opponents. In a fantasy context, magic could be an equalizer. The male tendency toward aggression in aggregate could tip the scales if overwhelming force is applied.

The Indo-Europeans might have invented the concept of controlling women's sexuality to ensure a man could guarantee the paternity of a child and thus make passing property only down the male line arguably reasonable. This usurps matriarchy. This is the true definition of patriarchy. Theories are that Indo-Europeans attacked pre-existing matrilineal societies. There is archeological evidence of prior societies that seem to have been lead by women. Their demise might be the genocides hinted at in the Bible. Who would win (or would have won) if women were significantly stronger?

Women do have their advantages. Arguably speed due to less inertia, especially with added strength. Not natively aggressive in general, they might be better able to pick the winnable fights while angry men might be thinking emotionally. Flexibility. A greater biological investment in offspring might make women less likely to look at fighting as a game, the way men to this day are prone to do (not all of them, of course). For men, fighting can be fun. The danger is a gamble, but we understand the psychology of gambling, too.

For women a fight that includes protecting genetic family from child killers is never a game. Remember that paternity is imperative to a patriarch, more than life itself. A woman, especially one who's stronger than a man her size, might fixate on the death of an attacker and become ruthless. Protecting one's child changes the concept of mercy and surrender. Are either even reasonable?

We aren't those precursor matrilineal people anymore, so it's hard to characterize what could have happened were women stronger. I didn't address women's language skills or diplomacy as these aren't strength dependent, and did not prevent the obliteration of matrilineal societies by the Indo-Europeans. What I've listed are things I'd consider if I were to rewrite history with only one change: Women being stronger.

[Author retains copyright (c)2025 R.S.]

#BoostingIsSharing and #CommentingIsCool

#gender #fiction #writer #author
#writing #writingcommunity #writersOfMastodon #writers
#RSdiscussion
#fighting #prizefighting #indo-european #strength #women #matrilineal #matriarchy #patriarchy

#EngenderedWriting 91 — Overnight all biological females (regardless of orientation or preference) become on-par as strong as males. How would this change one of your stories?

I'll admit this would be an interesting premise, especially with how much most societies have double-downed on the biological differences between the sexes with boy-culture that teaches men to flaunt their strength and act aggressive, and girl-culture that teaches women to believe they're meek and must be dependent. Largely, I suspect things will only change at the periphery, with cultural programming and male stature (arm and leg length) maintaining the status quo for most. The interesting story would be feature the few that want to change things, the few who might not be so easily cowed. The story would depend on the psychology of the woman MC and her desire to change the world by breaking the rules, or making new ones for women.

I have a story where this is essentially the case for about 2/3rds of the population, as long as nobody is trying to hurt someone. The MC is from the other unequalized third of the population, and she's being trained as a prizefighter. Against both genders. It's strength against cunning, combined with avoiding getting hit, fighting for the championship. In other words, it's about the psychology of strength.

[Author retains copyright (c)2025 R.S.]

#BoostingIsSharing and #CommentingIsCool

#gender #fiction #writer #author
#mystery #thriller #romance #sf #sff #sciencefiction
#writing #writingcommunity #writersOfMastodon #writers
#RSdiscussion
#RSstory #RSReluctanceStory