Brain dump for writer, comics and video game blogger, and all around, you know, person.

 

bearboneswriting-deactivated201 asked
I'm curious about your definition of feminism. I don't ask to validate any sort of personal agenda, I genuinely wonder. You write strong women - not just kicking-of-men's-asses women, but tough chicks I want to BE. So what IS feminism to you?

warrenellis:

Changing and hopefully evolving, constantly and always. 

Any answer I give will piss somebody off, because we’re living in that time on the internet. I don’t have time for a complete sociopolitical-philosophical response, and I don’t think I can boil it down to a simple statement beyond the following:

Supporting women, in goals including, but not limited to, surviving men and doing whatever the hell they want without fear.

It’s not enough, and it is an incomplete statement, but it’s a start.

And I write the women I know and have known. I’ve always preferred the company of women, and women have always been the strongest people in my world.

robertsammelin:
“Horror Babylon.
Mock 70′s horror movie poster. Ink & Photoshop.
Print available here.
”

robertsammelin:

Horror Babylon.
Mock 70′s horror movie poster. Ink & Photoshop.

Print available here.

postcardsfromspace:

mutantwanda:

women’s shelters specifically for mutant women because regular women’s shelters will turn away mutants. black mutant student organizations. bumper stickers that say “jesus was a mutant.” kids stenciling t-shirts with “magneto was right,” “jean grey died for your sins,” “mutie freak,” queer mutants making jokes about being superior homos. the creation of mutant cultural events and rites of passage such as naming parties for kids just coming into mutant identities, particularly those who have been kicked out of human families. kids going by mutant names on tumblr and arguing about the difference in experience between visible and invisible mutations. mutant punk rock. mutant zines. 

@another-elle

Allegorical refresh.

(Source: breha)