I Want Fries With That! Bingo Fest
Sep. 1st, 2020 01:18 am![[personal profile]](https://www.dreamwidth.org/img/silk/identity/user.png)
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Welcome to the I Want Fries With That! Bingo fest. Everyone is invited to play. All fandoms and original content are suitable. All formats and sizes are too. See our Bingo and Achievement page for more ideas. This fest runs from September 1-30. I have made a set of public cards below, or you can make your own with the Bingo Card Generator.
This fest focuses on the Fries test for disability in fiction. To pass the test, a work must meet the following qualifications:
* Does a work have more than one disabled character?
* Do the disabled characters have their own narrative purpose other than the education and profit of a nondisabled character?
* Is the character’s disability not eradicated either by curing or killing?
Additions from Nicola Griffith:
* Novels in which crips talk to each other?
* Novels in which we talk to each other about something other than wanting to be cured, or how to get cured, or why we want to die because we can’t be cured?
While it is not required that works pass the Fries test in order to count as bingo fills, this fest is intended to increase the amount of entertainment that represents people with disabilities in the same range of complexity as everyone else. Contemporary fiction tends to underrepresent or misrepresent disability. This is a problem we can fix, by the simple expedient of flinging new material into the gap until it fills up. Do you know creative folks with a disability? Invite them to participate!
The new prompts for this fest are based on individual parts of the Fries test or related concepts that aim in the same general direction.
Also active in this fest are the previous lists of Handicaps and People with Disabilities in the Bingo Card Generator.
You may wish to use additional lists such as Characterbuilding Considerations, Desperate Situations, Emotions, Ethnic Groups, Gentle Fiction, Negative Coping Techniques, Plot Tropes, Positive Coping Techniques, Themes, and Types of Family.
PUBLIC CARD FRIES TEST
PUBLIC CARD HANDICAPS
PUBLIC CARD PEOPLE WITH DISABILITIES
PUBLIC CARD COMBINATION
This fest focuses on the Fries test for disability in fiction. To pass the test, a work must meet the following qualifications:
* Does a work have more than one disabled character?
* Do the disabled characters have their own narrative purpose other than the education and profit of a nondisabled character?
* Is the character’s disability not eradicated either by curing or killing?
Additions from Nicola Griffith:
* Novels in which crips talk to each other?
* Novels in which we talk to each other about something other than wanting to be cured, or how to get cured, or why we want to die because we can’t be cured?
While it is not required that works pass the Fries test in order to count as bingo fills, this fest is intended to increase the amount of entertainment that represents people with disabilities in the same range of complexity as everyone else. Contemporary fiction tends to underrepresent or misrepresent disability. This is a problem we can fix, by the simple expedient of flinging new material into the gap until it fills up. Do you know creative folks with a disability? Invite them to participate!
The new prompts for this fest are based on individual parts of the Fries test or related concepts that aim in the same general direction.
Also active in this fest are the previous lists of Handicaps and People with Disabilities in the Bingo Card Generator.
You may wish to use additional lists such as Characterbuilding Considerations, Desperate Situations, Emotions, Ethnic Groups, Gentle Fiction, Negative Coping Techniques, Plot Tropes, Positive Coping Techniques, Themes, and Types of Family.
PUBLIC CARD FRIES TEST
disabled characters talk to each other | romance with disability | adult(s) with disability | nothing about us without us | main character(s) with disability |
Here's a truck made of amps & a guitar that shoots fire | disabled survivors of doomsday | agency and power | disability pride flag | leader(s) with disability |
live happy disabled characters | Wear it like armor and it can never be used against you | WILD CARD | disability not erased by killing or curing | disability etiquette |
adaptive sports | good jobs for disabled people | disability activism | What would be fun for you today? | sex with disability |
The best revenge is living well | respect and courtesy | adventurous adaptive equipment | architecture beyond wheelchairs | weaponized adaptive equipment |
PUBLIC CARD HANDICAPS
Amnesia | Color Blindness | Fetal Alcohol Syndrome | Arthritis | Dyslexia |
Stuttering | Vision Impairment | Anxiety | Phobia | Aphasia |
Epilepsy | Obsessive-Compulsive Disorder | WILD CARD | Depression | Mutism |
Impaired Motor Control | Dementia | Post-traumatic Stress Syndrome | Amputation | Anosmia |
Dyscalculia | Hyperactivity | Schizophrenia | Balance Disorder | Heart Disease |
PUBLIC CARD PEOPLE WITH DISABILITIES
Deaf Culture | Im in Ur History Emphasizin Ur Cripples | Handicaps in the Future | Seeing from a Different Perspective | Erasure of Handicapped People |
Canonical Disability | Stop Treating Me Like a Child | Compensating for Each Other's Weaknesses | Adaptive Equipment | Disadvantage to Advantage |
Sign Language | Handicapped Heroes | WILD CARD | Refusal to Make Accommodations | Creative Solutions to Limits |
Abilitybending | Involuntary Healing | Out of Spoons (Energy Limitations) | Service Animals | Accessibility FAIL |
Formidable Handicapped Villain | But You Don't Look Sick? (Invisible Handicaps) | All-Disabled Heroic Team | Family Support Makes a Difference | Born Like This |
PUBLIC CARD COMBINATION
legal protections for disability | Spinal Defect or Injury | How do you want to do this? | Canonical Disability | Multiple Sclerosis |
Bipolar Disorder | Disability Pride | Sensory Processing Disorder | disabled employee(s) | Impaired Motor Control |
Chronic Fatigue | adaptive inventions | WILD CARD | Mobility Impairment | Temporarily Enabled |
all disabled characters have names | Paralysis | That Episode Should Have Crippled Them | All-Disabled Heroic Team | disabled character with own narrative purpose |
multiple disabled characters | Refusal to Make Accommodations | adventurous adaptive equipment | Down Syndrome | Special Olympics / Handicapped Sports |
no subject
Date: 2020-09-01 08:52 am (UTC)Would meta work for this fest as well? I'm in the process of working out a piece of meta I've been wanting to write about why a particular character I love can/should be interpreted as autistic. Would that be all right, provided I could find a (probably suitably vague enough) prompt to apply it to?
Thoughts
Date: 2020-09-01 09:17 am (UTC)That, and encourage more complex and positive portrayals. Basically just stop retelling the same handful of mostly shitty stories. 0_o
>> Would meta work for this fest as well? I'm in the process of working out a piece of meta I've been wanting to write about why a particular character I love can/should be interpreted as autistic. <<
Meta works!
>> Would that be all right, provided I could find a (probably suitably vague enough) prompt to apply it to?<<
If you look in the Handicaps list you'll find Autism or Asperger's Syndrome. The spectrum is covered. You can also use a Wild Card space for any prompt you didn't get, or for something not listed that is relevant.
Re: Thoughts
Date: 2020-09-01 12:56 pm (UTC)no subject
Date: 2020-09-01 11:01 am (UTC)And I'm sorry, but I don't get this reference: "Here's a truck made of amps & a guitar that shoots fire." I think that's from Mad Max: Fury Road, but I don't know what it has to do with disability. (No, I never saw the movie. I saw a billion memes about it instead.)
Thoughts
Date: 2020-09-01 04:56 pm (UTC)Whatever you want to write is okay. People could even use some of these prompts for topics other than disability if they want.
>> And I'm sorry, but I don't get this reference: "Here's a truck made of amps & a guitar that shoots fire." I think that's from Mad Max: Fury Road, but I don't know what it has to do with disability. (No, I never saw the movie. I saw a billion memes about it instead.) <<
Correct!
One reason I love that movie is that almost all the characters are disabled, and it doesn't stop them from anything. The only one canonically "perfect in every way" was born dead. Anyhow, one of them is blind, and in the big battle scene, he rides out on a truck made of amps playing a guitar that shoots fire. It's outrageous and awesome. So I imagined this meta conversation:
Blind Character: "I wanna go to war!"
Standard Canons: "You can't go do war, you idiot, you're blind."
Fury Road: "Here's a truck made of amps & a guitar that shoots fire. Have fun storming the castle!"