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FIREFLY UNIVERSE
Would Zoe be a good mother?
Friday, June 25, 2010 9:16 AM
BYTEMITE
Friday, June 25, 2010 9:43 AM
PLATONIST
Friday, June 25, 2010 9:50 AM
WHOZIT
Friday, June 25, 2010 9:58 AM
Sunday, June 27, 2010 2:07 PM
KATESFRIEND
Sunday, June 27, 2010 2:28 PM
Sunday, June 27, 2010 4:54 PM
Sunday, June 27, 2010 8:19 PM
RIVERDANCER
Quote:Originally posted by Bytemite: "I'm not so afraid of losing something that I won't try to have it." That's not a good reason to have a kid.
Quote:Originally posted by Bytemite: It's a good argument, except, how did even the good and/or legal jobs Mal and crew got involved in end up? (like the Cow Job to Jiang Yin)
Quote:Originally posted by PLATONIST: So is it the same over protectiveness which got her husband skewered?
Sunday, June 27, 2010 9:44 PM
AGENTROUKA
Sunday, June 27, 2010 11:12 PM
SYDNEYDEBS
Sunday, June 27, 2010 11:55 PM
Quote:Originally posted by sydneydebs: I don't see Zoe as a mother at all, she's a fighter and a warrior not a mother.
Monday, June 28, 2010 2:58 AM
TWO
The Joss Whedon script for Serenity, where Wash lives, is Serenity-190pages.pdf at www.mediafire.com/folder/1uwh75oa407q8/Firefly
Quote:Originally posted by Bytemite: Luck had a mean streak for Serenity. Even if they went legit, someone would want to try to shoot them and take the goods. Wash seems to think he knows some places planetside that would be safer. It doesn't look like Wash hopped on Serenity right out of getting flight certified, he's been around the verse, he could know somewhere that would have worked for him and Zoe. Also, it's very possible that with Wash's piloting skills, even if they didn't necessarily go planetside, they could have found a berth on like a luxury cruiser or something. This is basically what Wash's dream is in Better Days.
Select to view spoiler:
Monday, June 28, 2010 4:46 AM
Quote:Might not be, but it is excellent foreshadowing. The story structure of that scene, to me, was always more about Wash than a potential child. She couldn't be so afraid of losing her husband that she wouldn't try for marriage. (and, in the way of such things, babies.) Maybe I'm reading too much into it, with all that literature study infecting my brain, but every time I watch that scene I get a flash of what's being foreshadowed, and I marvel at the cleverness of the misdirection surrounding that shadow.
Quote:Uh. That... wasn't a legal job. It was explicitly smuggling. The words most commonly associated with that job were "smuggler" "smuggled stock" "black-market (beagles)" and "disreputable men" to name just a few.
Quote:That's just cruel. Cruel and malicious. If Zoe was a real person, she would kick your ass for saying that. If she could have over-protected her way between Wash and that lance, damn right she would have, and you should know that if you paid the slightest bit of attention.
Monday, June 28, 2010 5:55 AM
Monday, June 28, 2010 7:05 AM
Quote:Wash’s former jobs didn’t seem all that dangerous or violent; he must have known a different life was out there.
Monday, June 28, 2010 7:16 AM
Quote:Originally posted by Platonist: Two, I'm more than sure that's Zoe. ...in Float Out. It’s a narrative twist.
Monday, June 28, 2010 7:25 AM
Quote:Originally posted by AgentRouka: Byte, you flatter me immensely for remembering my opinion!
Quote:I think Zoe could be a great mother - if she changed some things. She has a big capacity to love, a lot of patience and can adjust her tone well to suit the needs of the individual person (see River in Janestown). But only when she's not getting bitter and emo about the war, closing herself off and shying away from making choices.
Quote:That moment in HoG shows her at her worst. I see a woman wanting a child for the wrong reasons, unready to make the necessary committments and unable to respect her husbands valid opinion on the matter, so that would have been a brutal disaster.
Quote:Seeing her trying to stand up to Mal, question his choices and be comforted by Wash in the beginning of the movie gave me some hope, though. After the movie, she could either get worse and cling to Mal more than ever, or finally find herself and make a life of her own with actual room for the things she wants. I'm, of course, hoping for the latter because Zoe is too awesome to languish in a backward-facing life.
Monday, June 28, 2010 7:44 AM
Monday, June 28, 2010 8:11 AM
Monday, June 28, 2010 8:56 AM
Quote:Originally posted by Bytemite: Ooh! Wait. What if any potential Zoe baby was created... With Blue Sun help? Ties to the main storyline, boo yah! Heh, probably if they were going to Diabolus Ex Machina the whole shebang, they would've just had Blue Sun bring back Wash somehow, so I'm not sure how realistic it is. But that has some potential, yeah? I have trouble imagining Wash cheat on Zoe, but he IS a flyboy I guess, they do have a reputation for womanizing at every port.
Monday, June 28, 2010 9:56 AM
Monday, June 28, 2010 10:55 AM
Quote:Originally posted by Platonist: Minor spoilers for Float Out Minor spoilers for Float Out Minor spoilers for Float Out Two, I'm getting the distinct impression that you didn't like Float Out. I thought the ending was a beautiful surprise and a way for the character to have not only have closure, but a possible future, living on in the memories of family and friends. Do you view it as the end of Wash’s character and no potential for a return, except in stories told in his past life? Just curious.
Friday, December 2, 2011 7:04 AM
BROWNCOATMIDWESTERNER
Friday, December 2, 2011 9:38 AM
WISHIMAY
Friday, December 2, 2011 4:59 PM
Quote:If you wait to have kids until you are ready, you'll have a few surprises.
Monday, December 5, 2011 7:07 AM
Monday, December 5, 2011 8:07 AM
Quote:Procreation is a basic drive inherent in people
Quote:Where else would she raise a child?
Quote:I think settling down and doing near-nothing would be worse than death for Zoe, and probably a few others on the crew.
Quote:"Once you're in Serenity, you never leave. You learn to live there."
Monday, December 5, 2011 11:48 AM
Monday, December 5, 2011 4:33 PM
Quote:Maybe there are individual people who are exceptions, but Zoe wouldn't be one, by her comments which define this discussion.
Quote:I have to wonder if your opposing view is coloring your take on whether she should have children at all, let alone where and under what conditions.
Quote:Out Of Gas seems to suggest that at least Mal is fine with living out his days doing what he is doing, and going his own way. And going down with the ship if that is what is what it takes.
Quote:There is a powerful will to stay there after all of that, and whimsy isn't going to cause her to leave.
Quote:I am not sure what else would.
Quote:friends outside of Mal and the crew of Serenity, and her personality isn't exactly warm and fuzzy, suggesting that she doesn't make new casual friends easily.
Quote:The quote about learning to live in Serenty isn't about it being desirable to do so, it is about overcoming and accepting what changes the nature of one's life permanently, such as the horrors of war, and adapting to it, and making it work afterward, and making the best of the new normal.
Monday, December 5, 2011 8:10 PM
RIONAEIRE
Beir bua agus beannacht
Monday, December 5, 2011 8:14 PM
Tuesday, December 6, 2011 7:39 AM
Tuesday, December 6, 2011 8:21 AM
Quote:But calling my comments hetero-centric in a negative connotation aroused my suspicion that your evaluation of Zoe's situation could be clouded by your own choices, not what we know about Zoe Washburne. I don't much care what your choices are, as long as you aren't trying to visit my intentions, either.
Quote:Someone can choose to abstain from sexuality, despite the drive to procreate.
Quote:Zoe Washburne hasn't had children, but obviously made a comment about it being on her mind. The biological "clock" is a euphemism for the drive she is feeling the effects of.
Tuesday, December 6, 2011 8:46 AM
Quote:Originally posted by Bytemite: Fair enough, but to not procreate is not death, and also to say it is a drive for everyone IS generalizing, and untrue. There are plenty of nonsexuals out there (they use the term asexual, but I dislike it for the reasons you give), I'm one of them.
Quote:You shouldn't speculate about the motives of people you don't know. I'm fine with her having children and people having children. I don't particularly like kids, nor like stories about kids, but it's none of my business whether other people decide to procreate or not. I have no say, particularly in Zoe's case. It's been all but decided, I can deal with that storyline and event.
Quote:There isn't just one way to live this life, though there are more dangerous, tragic, and unfortunate ways to live this life. I'd hope the crew of Serenity don't have to live that, though this is a Joss Whedon story we're talking about.
Quote:My issue with Zoe is about whether she's objective and emotionally whole enough to assess the dangers of her own life. When she has that conversation with Wash in Heart of Gold, she's not. I concede it might have been the heat of the moment, she was having an argument and not being entirely rational at the moment. She shows a better sense of objective reality and responsibility later, in the comic books and movie.
Quote:Quote:Out Of Gas seems to suggest that at least Mal is fine with living out his days doing what he is doing, and going his own way. And going down with the ship if that is what is what it takes. It is NOT necessarily his PREFERRED option. I'd really have to recommend you read the supplemental material if you haven't. It'd be interesting what you might make of it.
Quote:Quote:There is a powerful will to stay there after all of that, and whimsy isn't going to cause her to leave. I don't believe the safety of her child is whimsy. Quote:I am not sure what else would. It's always seemed to me that reason Zoe sticks around is because Mal's life is such a mess. She stays at the end of the movie because they're still patching up the ship, and themselves, emotionally. But if Simon and Kaylee and River and Mal all start to move on, then what's to stop Zoe as well? She has her own life and mind separate from being Mal's soldier.
Quote:Quote:friends outside of Mal and the crew of Serenity, and her personality isn't exactly warm and fuzzy, suggesting that she doesn't make new casual friends easily. None of these necessarily prevent her from trying to be a single mother. Also, you ought to see her interaction with Wash's old friends.
Quote:Quote:The quote about learning to live in Serenty isn't about it being desirable to do so, it is about overcoming and accepting what changes the nature of one's life permanently, such as the horrors of war, and adapting to it, and making it work afterward, and making the best of the new normal. I don't think it's about making the best of anything. Simon expresses astonishment at Mal for believing that being shot at, Kaylee injured, nearly being boarded by Feds and having to do a desperate run around to sell some salvage for some change that'll barely keep them running is a GOOD DAY. I'm not really sure it's that healthy. It's actually kind of fatalistic and self-defeating.
Tuesday, December 6, 2011 9:18 AM
Quote:Actually, in a macro sense... organisms that don't procreate... DO die. I spoke on biological drives already, lets move on to the next point.
Quote:Being tied down to a house and a work place "in the world" rather than out in the black, has it's own issues, and even non-monetary costs.
Quote:which one can argue is a form of familial love, is a better life than some live by more traditional means.
Quote:I think she is more in tune with assessing danger, and knowing what is possible through dangerous situations than most.
Quote:I disagree with, and that is the pin-point of where I was wondering if you are ascribing your own thoughts as those of Zoe Washburne.
Quote:Zoe realized that there is more to it than circumstance, and that circumstances occur no matter where you are, or what you are doing. If you wait for circumstances to be just right, life will pass you by while you wait.
Quote:She knows the fear of death, and is in touch with mortality. She knows about circumstance, and survival. What she has gotten past, is FEAR of those things.
Quote:Of course going down with the ship is ABSOLUTELY not Plan A.
Quote:But it sure seemed like making sure that the shuttles weren't over-loaded, and that the others had the best chances of survival was on his mind... and that leaving serenity, possibly permanently as she was on the drift... was not something he felt the need to do, and that he had no where else he'd rather go, even to save his own life.
Quote:That doesn't lead me to believe that he is just pining as he prepares for a quiet stationary retirement somewhere.
Quote:No, safety of a child is not whimsy... but a child might not be any more safe on a world somewhere, without a support structure of friends that are as close as family. I am not so sure that departing from her Serenity family for the sake of a child to be raised planet-side, but otherwise alone, is a favorable trade-off. Maybe slightly safer in circumstance... but not necessarily in experience.
Quote:Most single mothers that I have ever seen, are most sensitive about being completely without a net of family and friends, and having to support a child by working a job away from that child, and leaving the child with someone else. I don't know why Zoe would leave that support structure that she already has on Serenity. But it isn't impossible.
Quote:That life-changing experience IS the Serenity that you never ever leave. You learn to live there, accept that experience, and move-on in that new normal and make the best of survival afterward. The best of survival afterward, is the ship Serenity, and keeping her flying, analogous to their own survival.
Quote:A veteran cannot de-personalize death, and has a distinctly different take on survival than someone who hasn't been through that crucible.
Tuesday, December 6, 2011 10:06 AM
Quote:Originally posted by Bytemite: Quote:Actually, in a macro sense... organisms that don't procreate... DO die. I spoke on biological drives already, lets move on to the next point. Yeah. They also eventually die if they DO procreate. The concepts are not correlated, unrelated, one has little to no impact on the other. Macro scale. I'm willing to move on if you are.
Quote:Life, living matter and, as such, matter that shows certain attributes that include responsiveness, growth, metabolism, energy transformation, and reproduction.
Quote:Quote:Being tied down to a house and a work place "in the world" rather than out in the black, has it's own issues, and even non-monetary costs. True. On the other hand, there's also much safer options for spaceships lifestyles than a fifty year old Firefly that's been taken apart and put back together half a dozen times, and there's also safer jobs than what they do. Though, I admit having fugitives aboard does limit their options a little.
Quote:Quote:I think she is more in tune with assessing danger, and knowing what is possible through dangerous situations than most. I think she's more likely to dismiss dangerous situations as "not dangerous." It's fairly common among veterans. Imagine Simon (or Wash's) reaction to a situation versus Zoe's reaction to a situation. One of the two is more desensitized to violence and danger.
Quote:Quote:I disagree with, and that is the pin-point of where I was wondering if you are ascribing your own thoughts as those of Zoe Washburne. Hey. What did I say about motives? We were going to leave that behind. What I am has NOTHING TO DO with the conversation we're having.
Quote:Quote:She knows the fear of death, and is in touch with mortality. She knows about circumstance, and survival. What she has gotten past, is FEAR of those things. Um. Not Good? Consider this for a second. She is going to be a mother. The continuing life of her child is going to be foremost on her mind. What does "not being afraid of death" imply? Her dying? The child dying? That's really, REALLY bad. That's why when she was having that conversation with Wash, she was not showing sound judgment or reasoning. She gets better later, and post movie, she might be emotionally ready. We'll have to see how it goes and what she does. Though I've seen some post movie stuff that brings up other concerns for me as well - she seems to consciously be trying to be safer, but on the other hand, she has some troubling expectations for her kid.
Quote:Quote:But it sure seemed like making sure that the shuttles weren't over-loaded, and that the others had the best chances of survival was on his mind... and that leaving serenity, possibly permanently as she was on the drift... was not something he felt the need to do, and that he had no where else he'd rather go, even to save his own life. He didn't have another option. There was nothing around they could go to before life support ran out. They were in the middle of nowhere in space. He figured they were all dead, he just wasn't saying it (except to Inara).
Quote: The question is, would the risk be worth it in Zoe's eyes? Keep in mind, she just lost her husband, she might be rethinking the safety of Serenity herself.
Quote:Quote:That life-changing experience IS the Serenity that you never ever leave. You learn to live there, accept that experience, and move-on in that new normal and make the best of survival afterward. The best of survival afterward, is the ship Serenity, and keeping her flying, analogous to their own survival. But this, I don't[agree with]. There's a reason Joss chose to name Serenity after the battlefield. That does not suggest to me that Serenity the ship is Mal or Zoe's escape from Serenity the battlefield. They're stuck in a violent lifestyle after the war. They're still IN the war, really. Mal says "war's over, we're all just folk now," and I don't really believe him. That's how I interpret that line.
Quote:Quote:A veteran cannot de-personalize death, and has a distinctly different take on survival than someone who hasn't been through that crucible. True. But there are good and bad ways that a person can deal with it. Mal and Zoe aren't even TRYING to deal with it. They're trying to bury it and run away from it, and it comes back to bite them in their life choices and the dangers of their work. The danger of their work isn't nonexistent, but it's acceptable to them because of how they changed - which is unhealthy. It's courting death.
Tuesday, December 6, 2011 11:28 AM
Quote: Life, living matter and, as such, matter that shows certain attributes that include responsiveness, growth, metabolism, energy transformation, and reproduction. Life is about more than one generation, inherently. Without a macro drive for reproduction, everything living is bound for quick extinction.
Quote:It just seems like some of the characters are in the life that suits them, and I would include Zoe and Mal. It would take a lot for them to depart from that life
Quote:I think she knows exactly what danger she is capable of handling, where there might be traps, and what situations are un-tenable. You don't survive a war by being a bad judge of strategy and tactics, or sizing up situations carelessly.
Quote:Knowing death, and fearing it analogous to respecting it and actively, tactically avoid it, which she does expertly, is one thing.
Quote:I think that clear-headedness in the face of danger makes her a more effective protector, not a more reckless person, nor a more panicky person.
Quote:The shuttles were going further than Serenity
Quote:she's still there. That would have been a window for her to leave.
Quote:But rest assured, Mal and Zoe are happier to keep flying than they were during the week they spent starving on the battle-field.
Quote:And what he is doing is not fighting a war, and that is something 'new' that Inara had not seen onboard ship. They don't escape that part of their past, but that doesn't mean they continue to live like active duty soldiers.
Quote:What is "trying to deal with it?" Why would they still be talking about what is past? Can it help put food on the table, or cargo in the hold? They court death because death is there, and they might be better equipped than most to keep slipping past whomever is carrying their particular bullet, because of their experience, and their ability to face what happens, and not cower from it in fear.
Tuesday, December 6, 2011 2:03 PM
Tuesday, December 6, 2011 2:16 PM
Tuesday, December 6, 2011 2:54 PM
Tuesday, December 6, 2011 8:23 PM
EBFIDDLER
Tuesday, December 6, 2011 9:31 PM
Wednesday, December 7, 2011 4:43 AM
Wednesday, December 7, 2011 5:48 AM
Quote:I was interested in joining this discussion, about twenty posts or so earlier, before it got quite so contentious!
Quote:I think Zoe would make a good mother.
Quote:It's not inherently more dangerous than raising a child on any spaceship, and we know Zoe herself was born (and most likely raised) "vesselside."
Quote:Why would she think raising a child on a spaceship to be unacceptable?
Quote:But as Inara pointed out (also in Train Job), not all their work is illegal. It's just that the bulk of their routine shipments were not detailed on the show, but mentioned in passing only. ...Mal's argument that no planet is safe, and at least on Serenity they can defend and help each other, would carry some weight with Zoe.
Wednesday, December 7, 2011 5:49 AM
Quote:A categorical syllogism consists of three parts: the major premise, the minor premise and the conclusion. Each part is a categorical proposition, and each categorical proposition contains two categorical terms.[4] In Aristotle, each of the premises is in the form "All A are B," "Some A are B", "No A are B" or "Some A are not B", where "A" is one term and "B" is another. "All A are B," and "No A are B" are termed universal propositions; "Some A are B" and "Some A are not B" are termed particular propositions. More modern logicians allow some variation. Each of the premises has one term in common with the conclusion: in a major premise, this is the major term (i.e., the predicate of the conclusion); in a minor premise, it is the minor term (the subject) of the conclusion. For example: Major premise: All men are mortal. Minor premise: All Greeks are men. Conclusion: All Greeks are mortal.
Wednesday, December 7, 2011 6:11 AM
Quote:My question has always been who watches the baby while Zoe's out working? Do they hire Super Nanny, if something happens to Zoe (she's in a dangerous line of work) are there designated members of the crew who adopt the baby? Will Zoe continue to watch Mal’s back at the expense of leaving her child parentless?
Wednesday, December 7, 2011 6:23 AM
Wednesday, December 7, 2011 6:49 AM
Quote:Well, my days of not caring about other people's opinions of me is certainly coming to a middle.
Quote:Even if you don't have a child, your CELLS DIVIDE. If they didn't you would die very quickly.
Quote:Procreation is a strictly cooperative, hetero (as in different genders) sexual (as in half-DNA re-combinant reproduction) biological function, and it IS a biological drive. That isn't an opinion, that is science, and just flat truth. Without a biological drive to reproduce ingrained in people as a rule, (which Pax diminishes and eliminates, evidently) humans DIE OUT, as a civilization and as a species. Maybe there are individual people who are exceptions, but Zoe wouldn't be one, by her comments which define this discussion. Humans are not asexual self-replicating organisms, and same-sex pairings biologically can't reproduce... so having, as in CREATING a CHILD is distinctly "heterocentric."
Quote:Just because you feel a certain way, does not negate the obvious, demonstrable, provable in biology and sociology, and readily apparent drive to procreate in Humans, as well as any other species.
Wednesday, December 7, 2011 7:21 AM
Wednesday, December 7, 2011 8:02 AM
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