edenfalling: stylized black-and-white line art of a sunset over water (Default)
[personal profile] edenfalling
Today's randomly chosen theme is: inside a whale

This brings to mind three things: the story of Jonah (which I very vaguely remember from when I was a small child), Monstruo from Disney's Pinocchio (which utterly terrified me when I saw it in theaters as a small child), and Rudyard Kipling's "How the Whale Got His Throat" from Just So Stories (which I first read as a small child -- are you seeing a theme here? -- and is now one of my go-to stories to read aloud to kids).

The thing about Kipling is that he's a British imperialist with all the attendant failings, but damn the man could write. The Just So Stories are also specifically designed to be read aloud, with hand gestures -- they're implicitly written in, though not in an annoying way -- and they are a joy to work with. They're also really easy to adapt into being less sexist by just swapping some of the animals over to female, which I tend to do. So when I read the whale story, the 'Stute Fish is always female, I make the Bi-Colored Python Rock Snake female when I do "How the Elephant Got His Trunk," and so on.

(This is, of course, why when I wrote a Kipling pastiche of my own, the main character is an adult woman taking the role of the more usual semi-magical wise non-European man.)

On another tangent, have you ever seen an underside view of a sperm whale's mouth? Their lower jaws are like toothpicks. Very spiky toothpicks, to be sure, but still. There is no width to them at all; their only purpose is to pin prey in place. Of course that doesn't make for nearly as viscerally terrifying/useful a visual image as a whale with a properly wide maw, so nobody ever draws them that way in whale-swallows-stuff stories. *wry*
(will be screened)
(will be screened if not validated)
If you don't have an account you can create one now.
HTML doesn't work in the subject.
More info about formatting

If you are unable to use this captcha for any reason, please contact us by email at support@dreamwidth.org

Profile

edenfalling: stylized black-and-white line art of a sunset over water (Default)
Elizabeth Culmer

July 2025

S M T W T F S
  1 2345
6789 101112
1314 1516171819
20212223242526
2728293031  

Tags

Expand Cut Tags

No cut tags