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Friday 21 August 2015

The Americanism of D&D and the Gonzo Aesthetic

It isn't a new subject, in fact I've brought it up a few times in the past, but a recent essay that is really quite good addresses the issue of how D&D, in terms of its setting and ambiance, is fundamentally an American invention (written by a gamer who started to understand D&D better after visiting America for the first time in 30 years of being a gamer).  The default "world" of D&D is full of americanisms.  It isn't really, in that default state, "European fantasy"; it is rather very much 'American Fantasy'.  It is only Europe as hollywood imagined it.

There's another important point: D&D in its origins is Gonzo.  It was in fact invented around the same time that this very particularly American version of magical realism came to exist as a literary form of its own.
Fear and Loathing in Las Vegas, the seminal Gonzo novel, was published in 1971. D&D came into being in '74, after a process of many years of protodevelopment.  Whether or not Gygax, Arneson and co. had ever read Hunter S. Thompson, the vibe of Gonzo was everywhere at that time, and had created big effects on the general culture (while today, Gonzo has become so normalized in American popular culture that we pretty much no longer distinguish it except for in its most blatantly exaggerated forms).

One big part of why D&D is so American is because it is so Gonzo.  The weirdness of Gonzo is a thoroughly American weirdness, very different from the weirdness of, say, Alejandro Jodorowsky and what the latter did to comics and scifi aesthetics in Europe and Latin America.

What this means, however, is that it is relatively easy to Deamericanize D&D, by shifting out of the gonzo aesthetic (plus by adding a bit more historical and cultural rigor).

In the linked essay, the author suggests that maybe D&D is better when it's not trying to be more "historical" (rather than American pseudohistorical).  Obviously, I disagree.  Dark Albion lets you recreate D&D in a new and exciting way.  The shifting out of Gonzo and into a grittier and more factual kind of historical reality let's you explore all kinds of worlds in D&D that the Americanized version does not.  Consider, for example, the very big significance of Social Class in the Dark Albion setting, and it's almost apparently meaninglessness in most (Americanized) D&D settings.  That total sense of ignorance of Class is a very American feature in general (dating back long before gonzo, of course); and putting class consciousness back into the game changes the dynamics of setting completely.

I think what all this does mean is that within the confines of the OSR boundary markers alone, we have only just barely begun to scratch the surface of what you can really do with D&D.  So much of the game so far has been looking at it from a strictly American lens.  Far from just assuming that will be the best way to do it, I think now we can really start to explore how the game becomes new and exciting in totally unexpected ways when you have designers creating worlds that shift out of that cultural context and are informed by different ones than the game's creators could have envisioned.

RPGPundit

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7 comments:

  1. Replies
    1. Well, Canada already has its own D&D world. The most successful one ever:b the Forgotten Realms. Which again, you'll note, differs from what came before in part by a serious reduction in the levels of Gonzo.

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  2. Of course, language is a barrier here. Foir instance, the French rpg publishers have a huge (in relative terms. The French market isn't that big) production and there is definitely something different, a 'French touch', in what they do.

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  3. I prefer D&D as a historical foreign film with subtitles, rather than as a shlocky '70s horror movie filmed in Wisconsin somewhere.

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  4. "the author suggests that maybe D&D is better when it's not trying to be more "historical" (rather than American pseudohistorical). Obviously, I disagree. Dark Albion lets you recreate D&D in a new and exciting way."

    Having just ordered Dark Albion in print, I hope that what I really meant was, "D&D, in its default forms (which for me is Mentzer D&D, maybe a bit of AD&D1e/2e) straight from the rulebook, is better when it's not trying to be historical. But the engine of D&D is great when applied to all kinds of genres." Or something like that.

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