Any fighter who
does not accept blows only brings dishonor to him/herself, not the kingdom. The kingdom can choose to recognize a dishonorable fighter by becoming increasingly restrictive about that particular fighter's participation or choose not to elevate the fighter to any fighting rank. It also helps to have someone invest the time to instruct or re-educate a fighter if he/she is not accepting blows.
What about
"campaigning" for any award or honor in the SCA? I've been writing letters of recommendation in the Society for nearly 15 years, and the one thing I've managed to successfully resist (at least, to this point) is drafting a letter for someone who was out to "earn" an award. Service is what it is. If people cannot derive satisfaction from doing service for the joy of the service itself, I can't get all worked up to recommend them for anything. There are too many people out there in the Society making the process work as a labor of love fro me to waste a lot of time trying to prop us somone's deficient sense of self with awards they feel they've "earned." Idealistic, you say? Unrealistic, you protest? Downright dumb, you chorus? Well, maybe. But I know that, had I received the white belt and chain when I was in the grips of "white belt fever," it would mean a lot less to me today. Getting past the "need for a reward" was a necessary part of the process that led to its bestowal. But, I hear you say out there, without drive, how can one hope to succeed as a squire? As a protege? It took a while, but I eventually had to realize that the drive was a pursuit of personal excellence (one which, incidentally, continues to this day) which embraced items like a belt and chain or medallion not as end goals, but as points of departure for further striving. One of my biggest sorrows as a peer is others of my orders who have taken the attitude that achievement of a peerage means the race is run, and they can quit. If I were King of the Forest, I'd purge these folks in (to use a local euphemism) a Dixie Instant.
A more difficult case is that of a person whose well-meaning friends spend an inordinate amount of time putting in personal pitches for why Lord Hotstuff or Lady Bigshot is really overdue for the proper recognition. These are generally sincerely-felt convictions being expressed, and (at least in Meridies) these folks are generally not recruited by the target lord or lady in question, but their overenthusiasm can occasionally damage the strongest case.
I suppose it depends
on whether you mean campaigning for yourself, or campaigning for another person. If you mean the latter, to a certain extent that is what goes on now in circles, and in other discussions of potential cadidates' abilities. Part of the responsi–bilities of a peer is to seek out and encourage qualified candidates for their order, and to bring them to that attention of the Crown. In particular, if a peer has a student (apprentice, protege, squire, etc.), it is part of that peer's responsibility to 'further the career' of that person, which may include 'campaigning' for their advancement to the peerage (both in the SCA and in historical precedent). As long as this is done in an appropriate fashion (i.e. no arm-twisting or back-room deals) it is not a problem.
On the other hand, if you are referring to campaigning for one's self, that gets a little trickier. To a certain extent, every time an artisan enters an arts competition or exhibit (or makes a gift for the Crown, or whatever), every time a fighter goes to a war or tournament that they don't really want to go to because of who will get to see them fight, they are, in a sense, 'campaigning' for themselves. You notice that I didn't include a Pelican example in that sentence. That is because the Pelican is different from the other two in the following way (among others).
If you are a fighter, it is considered a fine and honorable (and even expected) thing to aspire to the Knighthood.
If you are an artisan, it is considered a fine and honorable thing to aspire to the Laurel (or at least to that level of workmanship).
If you aspire to the pelican (at least openly), it is considered…death to your chances of ever attaining it.
I have no objection to people making themselves and their work more visible (to me or anyone else), so long as they don't become obnoxious about waving it in my face. On the other hand, I am not quite ready for people to greet me at the door of an event with a flower and say, "Hi! Remember to vote for me in the Laurel circle tomorrow!"
Many behaviors involved in "campaign–ing" are things we're proud for peers to do. It's just that when a person is suddenly forcing it, and acting rather than being, it's a sign of insincerity and hypocrisy. The worst thing of all is that it can't be proven to be campaigning unless the peerage is bestowed and then the activity stops. That's what is called "too late."
Sometimes people who started off campaigning on the advice of their friends or knights or managers discover new friends and interests, and they do continue to travel and work and hobnob with a wide range of people after they become peers. This is good and commendable. They find that the unnatural (to them) behavior they're advised to undertake is really pretty fun and worth continuing.
In my opinion it is
perfectly acceptable for a person to desire to be a peer. I think that striving to attain a higher level of self-achievement is and can be a positive good thing. If a person has a quick temper and realizes that to become a knight he shouldn't have a quick temper, and therefore he changes his attitude and doesn't fly off the handle any more, this is a good thing.
From my first day in the Society I decided I wanted to be a knight. But for the first two years I only went to local events, got drunk a lot and never went to bardic competitions. Then I realized that if I really wanted to become a knight I would have to branch out, meet new people, learn new things. So I started traveling, going to every major out-of-town event (12th nights and crown and coronet tournies). I got new costumes and went to bardic competitions. I changed my name. In effect I became a real SCA person, not just some Crimson Company cliché.
After about two years of this behavior I was granted my dream. I was made a Knight of the Realm. Now was what I did campaigning? I suddenly started going to out-of-town events. I suddenly had nice new clothes; I started winning tournaments and my underlying motivation for it all was that I wanted to be a knight. I did however come to love everything I was doing, and I'm still doing it. If what I did was campaigning then I guess it would be hypocritical for me to say campaigning is bad. I understand your point about whining and wearing uncomfortable costumes, but to me, in general, since I did it, campaigning for peerage is not always a bad thing.
Mistress Eowyn asks
whether awards encourage people to keep doing a good job or to work for more awards. I ask whether it matters. Who can speak of another's motivation? If good work is being done, and if it is enriching the experience for other people, why should it matter whether it is done for sheer love or for recognition?
When I asked Orlando Cavalcanti if I could be his squire (hey, I didn't know that's not how it was done…I was young, and A.S. XII was a long time ago), I had not the first intention of ever picking up the sword. I was attracted to the concept of personal service, and wanted to see how the medieval models we had to draw upon would be contemporized. Orlando understood this, and took me as a squire anyway. I avoided the sword for almost six months. Even after I started fighting, I had no real notion of becoming a knight—it just wasn't on the agenda. Over time (years 5-7 as a squire), I developed a case of "white belt fever," and had the commensurate ups and downs associated with that malady. Gradually, I reverted to squire-as-service relationship, and, just shy of my tenth anniversary as a squire, was made a knight in Meridies.
That subtext has informed my relationships with all five of my squires. Of the five, two fight regularly, one irregularly, and two others, not at all. All of the relationships are characterized by this exploration of personal service and chivalric conduct. I have remained willing to train any and all on the field as fighters to the best of my ability, but in the meantime, the current level of commitment in each specific case suffices. While all five men are my friends, I had slightly different motivations for taking each of them as a squire. In some instances, the opportunity to exchange education was the attraction. In others, there was the desire to reward a willingness to serve, and some really wanted to swing the stick.
It has been put to me that this less-than-rigorous set of guidelines might inveigh against one of my squires in the event that they should be brought before the circle for discussion. I must honestly answer that I don't know if that would be so. All I know is that this unique set of relationships seems to work for all parties involved, and I'm glad we've had the latitude to pursue them as we see fit.
As I'm not even remotely
martial I probably shouldn't stick in my oar, but being an inveterate busybody, I thought I'd make a few (rude) comments.
In nearly 20 years of observing such things, so often what I've witnessed is somebody called Sir-------- taking a squire and acquiring the body servant that the SCA doesn't otherwise provide; the squire acquiring someone on the "old boys network" who can promote them (IF they behave); the relationship acquiring an aura that excludes anyone so unfortunate as to not be part of the club; and the Society acquire a couple of bozos who are so tied up in their knight/squire relationship that they are useless for anything else (squires WILL do the dishes…if their knight orders them to). [Knights WILL do the dishes…if their King tells them to…and they like that King.]
Am I missing something? Being overharsh? Not susceptible to normal male bonding?
Ah well.
I have seen all
manner of Knight-Squire relationships (as well as other Peer-Student pairings) in the various places that I have lived. These have ranged from a casual acquaintance in which the two occasionally attend the same fighter practice, to relationships in which the squire becomes a virtual slave to the knight, and everything in between. Is there a single 'right' way these relationships should work? No, not in general; it is a relationship to be defined by the two people involved, and even though I might not like seeing a squire treated like a man-servant (or worse) by his knight, it is something that is between the two of them—as long as both of them understand and agree to the terms of the arrangement!! I have seen far too many eager young fighters join up and squire to a knight right away because someone tells them that that's what they need to do to become a fighter, even though they may not know much of anything about either the knight in question, or about what that knight expects of a squire. Then they discover that the knight treats them like dirt, or that they are incompatible for some other reason, but they feel that they can't get out of the relationship (usually because the knight made them swear some sort of fealty). They spend at least the early years of their SCA lives miserable, or more often, they just quit. There is no excuse for this — both parties, particularly the student, should clearly understand and agree to the nature of the relationship before they enter into it! And Knights aren't the only Peers I've seen do this…
Interestingly, few of
the comments on knight/squire relation–ships are coming from knights or squires so far. The original story (issue #1) which was purposefully vague involved someone overhearing squires at Pennsic talk Cinderella-like of not being able to go and fight because they had to polish armor and take care of camp. This was foreign to the experience of the witness, who came from the Outlands where squires tend to be close friends of their mentors, rather than their servants, and where knights tend to try to make sure their squires get as much fighting in as possible.
In my own household, I have assisted in the "training" (although it never seemed like that) of one student who became a master of arms (Master Bulkar der Ostermachen, now deceased), a young squire who had to move away, a squire who became a knight (Sir Lavan Longwalker) and a current squire whose behavior and activities are a source of pride to us. That's not many for the amount of time Master Gunwaldt has been a peer, but we're not in a hurry and we both put a great deal of energy into teaching in general.
Anyway, Gunwaldt has always held that the way to represent the medieval model of service in exchange for training and room and board is for him to pay the squire's site fees, to transport him with us without charging for gas (if he chose to travel with us to an event), to pay for his membership, or to gift him with costumes, feast gear, or other accoutrements of everyday life. In this way the squire is working in exchange for "payment," and not just in hopes of being rewarded with a peerage, which Gunwaldt can't give him anyway. The service the squire gives Gunwaldt should be rewarded by Gunwaldt. A knighthood comes from the kingdom, and should be recognition of something other than service to an individual or a household. The "training" is a given; it's cheap; nothing's being taught the squire which we wouldn't be willing to teach others.
We haven't found many others who feel this way about the relationship.
I am not a fighter,
and hence not squired to any knight, but I am apprenticed to Mistress Gwyneth Espicier (in the art of music performance) and I have two cents to throw in on the peer-associate relationship…. The peer-associate relationship is built on friendship and is stronger than friendship. My relationships with my friends differ based on the personalities involved, and Mistress Gwyneth's relationships with her apprentices are likewise varied….
I will note that the amount of respect due a peer differs greatly from kingdom to kingdom (Mistress Matilda of Taye has a distressing story about her first event after she moved from Calontir to Atlantia, and about how some gentles there actually apologized for talking with her without leave, ignorant as they had been of her peerage). That may have a great effect on peers and associates.
Someone formerly of the Outlands just came to Grand Outlandish from An Tir, her current home, and I picked her up from the airport. "What's the big difference?" I asked. "They're much more formal there." "Like what?" and she couldn't really describe it. Is there anyone out there who can?
Two fairly new gentlemen of our close acquaintance said to me and Master (a.k.a. Jarl) Gunwaldt after they'd been in a year "You don't seem like peers." I laughed and said "Oh no—what do you mean?" (Fear of "dress better," "sit up straighter" struck me.) They said we were really friendly and normal. I didn't understand that, because at that time they were already better acquainted with a duke, a duchess and the king and queen than they were with us.
Are peers like cafeteria food? "Cafeteria food is bad" is a "truism" spoken even when the cafeteria food is fantastic. Are peers snooty whether they are or not? Is each individual peer considered unapproachable unless proven otherwise?
My personal speculation is that it's easier to find fault with a group of folks if you find a way to depersonalize them, and the depersonalization of peers makes it easier for things to be "their fault" when things go wrong. Of course, the imperious, high-and-mighty attitudes of a small handful of peers only feeds the illusion that there is an inaccessible group of demigods who tread the giddy heights in the SCA. Inaccessible peers is two parts SCA myth and one part folks who (unfortunately) through their conduct perpetuate the myth.
WHAT ARE THOSE CHAINS REALLY ?
Mistress AElflaed of Duckford
An interesting discussion has come up in my life lately, and that concerns the acceptability of people having (by whatever means) peerage regalia/symbols before they are peers. Around here, this seems such a common practice among what I consider "the younger guys" (who are in their mid-to-late 20's and have been in since they were teenagers, and who are peers) that they see nothing unusual about it. "It" ranges from a person being given a chain by a knight he likes, to having a full set of "stuff" (belt, chain, spurs) hanging on the wall for someday.
Is this no different than a hope chest? Is it like people give a young girl gifts of household goods for her to keep until marriage? I think the reason I'm offended is that it seems more like the ring—like something the bride shouldn't have in her possession until the wedding.
The ceremonies by which peers are elevated have other real-world relatives. Ceremonies which bring about a transformation in the eyes of a society often involve significant objects, and the transfer of that object to the person being transformed is the moment of power in the ritual. At that moment you have something you didn't have before, and the possession of the thing is the outward sign of your social transformation. I'm thinking of the awarding of a diploma or a degree, and of marriage. The moment a person graduates from student status to "completion" is the moment the diploma leaves the hand of the school official. It no longer belongs to the school, and neither does the graduate. The moment a ring is placed on a bride she becomes a wife. One second before, she wasn't. Ring on, she is.
Some of you are thinking now that it's really the school transcript and completion of requirements that are important. A marriage can be performed without a ring—it's the proper filing of the license and certificate signed by an authorized agent of the state that makes you really married. I'm not talking about what's legal, though. I'm talking about what's magical, what's ceremonial, what forms a rite of passage.
Someone gives a squire a chain and says "Keep this for someday. I have a lot of respect for you and would just like for you to have this chain which is important to me." I'm not a knight. It just seems to me that there are other ways to say "I think you'll be a knight someday" or "I'm glad to know you." I have friends I feel will be laurels or pelicans one day. They're new, they're enthusiastic, and they're talented. What if I were to give one my own laurel medallion, right now, and say "Keep this for someday"? Would this offend any of you? That's all the "stuff" laurels get here. That's not nearly comparable to belt, chain and spurs. Maybe if I also made and gave a scroll, with arms and everything, with the name in gold, everything ready to go except the date and the names of the king and queen—would that be too much?
Every person involved in the several stories I know about this is a friend of mine. I like them, I like the people they've given things to, and still I'm offended. The tradition as I know it, as I'm comfortable with it, is this: If a laurel who would really like to be at a scheduled ceremony but can't wants to give his own medallion to a candidate, he gives it to the king or another member of the order to hold in secret until the day of the ceremony, at which time it passes from the hand of the king to the candidate. It is the magical thing which visibly transforms lord X into Master X. (In our kingdom the king often, not always, passes the medallion or chain to the circle, each peer holds it a second or two and passes it on, so it literally comes from the king through the hands of the circle.) When it's first held up it can be announced that the medallion is a gift of Master X, and it previously belonged to whoever. The candidate can be surprised and happy and never touch it until it's really and truly his and it's put on by the king or queen. It's like a ring; now he's wedded to this order or this kingdom, or however one might choose to look at it. (If there is no scheduled ceremony, I don't think any medallions should be leaving the hands of any laurels.)
At this point I'm guessing that half the readers are agreeing with me and the other half think I'm excited over nothing. Parents of people my age (I was born in 1953, so find your spot in the upcoming story) were adamant that if we lived together before marriage we would destroy ourselves and our chances for a good life, and would make a sham of any "weddings" which took place. I know very few couples my age who didn't live together before they got married. It might have ruined my mom's life if she had done it in 1947, but it didn't ruin mine. We did have to leave home, though, and be sneaky, and lose the benefit of approval of grandparents, etc. I know of unmarried couples ten years younger than I am who live together in the same house with their parent(s). (Three couples come to mind without hard thought.) Things change.
I'd like the advice of the readers. Should I just get with modern life or should I try to convince people to treat the special trappings of peerage with more significance? I realize fully that this may just be a local aberration invented and sustained by a small, crazed sub-group. There could also be entire kingdoms where owning peerage symbols before marriage (I mean before peerage) has been common practice for generations. I just don't know. I'd like to know. That's why I'm asking you.
A SOLICITED RESPONSE
by Duke Artan MacAilin
In my opinion, the symbols of peerage are just that—symbols. If a newcomer were to wear a gold chain it wouldn't make him a knight. If a master of arms were to wear a gold chain it wouldn't make him a knight either. AElflaed, you said the [laurel medallion] "is the magical thing which visibly transforms Lord X into Master X" (after it passes from the hand of the king to the candidate). I disagree with this. To me the placing of the medallion by the king is just the king recognizing the fact that the person is now a laurel. The Magical Part is when the king says "We accept you into Our Order of the Laurel…arise Master Whoever," or whatever the king says. It is the words that make the person a peer, not the symbol. Not the medallion. What if in the course of the ceremony the medallion was accidentally switched and a Pelican medallion was placed on a laurel candidate. Does that make him a pelican? No way.
So I guess that is the difference between our two ways of thinking. I didn't understand at first what you were offended by, but now I think I do. If you feel that the laurel medallion or the belt and spurs are what makes the person that type of peer then I can see where you would think it presumptuous to give someone peerage regalia. I don't and never have seen it that way. I don't think most people do either.
Take the bit about the wedding ring, that you are married after you put it on and not before. I never thought that at all. People are married after the minister or judge says, "I now pronounce you man and wife." That is why he says it. That is the rite of passage. With regard to a diploma or a graduation, that is more complicated because every school is different. Here at Cal-Poly they mail you your diploma, so do you graduate at graduation or when it comes in the mail?
In our ceremonies there is always a part where the king says you are now a peer. Not in those words, but that is the magical time—the "before and after" time.
In a knighting ceremony it takes two separate and distinct but necessary things. The first is the dubbing by another knight. To me this makes the person a knight in a medieval sense the same way that William Marshall or any medieval knght was a knight and the second thing is the king saying that the person is now in the Order of Chivalry. This distinction in medieval times was distinct as well. Any knight could knight anyone, but only the king of England could admit someone to the Order of the Garter. So I see our order of knighthood in the Society as the Order of the Garter of medieval times. And only the words of the king can admit someone into the order. You don't need to be a knight to be in the Order of Chivalry (i.e. masters of arms) and in my opinion you can be a knight (in a medieval sense) and not be in the Order of Chivalry. But to be a Knight of the Society it takes both things.
So that is why I am not offended by people having peerage regalia. Until those specific criteria are met, the symbols don't mean anything.
ENHANCING ARTS
AElflaed of Duckford
Viscountess Katlin (Atenveldt's Mistress of Arts and Sciences) called me the day after she received ThinkWell and was most interested in the question from The Book of SCA Questions about arts: "How can the position of arts in the SCA be enhanced?"
My own answer to Eowyn was:
"By education and constant propaganda to remove the desire to 'enhance' it. By recognizing its importance in situ, the expressed desire of a crazed minority to have it taken out and put in a museum might be quelled. If speeches made when awards were given emphasized how much costumes add to a tournament, how important nice armor is for a knight, how beautiful music can take a ho-hum feast and turn it into a transcendental experience—if those kinds of statements were made two or three times at every event people would start to get the idea that arts should be respected as living parts of our everyday lives, not as 'time-out, let's do arts today' dead displays on folding tables.
"What sort of medieval experience is being re-created when we lay costumes out on tables? I've asked this at and of many arts competitions, and the people nervously ignore me, or pretend they're incapable of critical thought. When would medieval folk have set out soaps and yarns and drink they'd made? At a fair. Let's have a fair then! Let's show and sell the stuff, and judge it on the sly while all that's going on. People just ignore me, because they like 3x5" cards with typewritten, mundane documentation. Then I say, "Why are we wearing costumes to do this, when it's not the re-creation of the period activity?" and they want me to stop trying to get them to think.
That was more strongly worded than it might have been if I'd planned in advance to publish it, but it's my raw reaction. I feel as though an arts competition makes one person happy (sometimes, not always) and many people unhappy. No matter what criteria are used for categories and entries, there are always people justifiably irritated. I don't think it can be made fair and equitable, and so I don't think it should be a goal to be maintained. I much prefer arts events (if there must be arts events) at which classes and workshops, rather than competitions, are the purpose of the gathering.
In the past several years there have been people more and more often saying "Every event should/must have arts." First of all I think it's a silly statement. Every event does have arts, as long as there are costumes and armor. Any time people make an attempt at eating something other than hot dogs and potato chips they're using their knowledge of what's period. Scrolls are presented at court, by kings on thrones under banners. That's art. The main reason the statement that we shouldn't have an event without "arts" bugs me, though, is that I don't like the reverse of it—that there shouldn't be an event without fighting. If at an arts event there is to be a series of sword classes or special practices, that's fine. Fighting is an art and a science. When people just say "if we don't have a tournament no one will come," I feel like saying, "Fine. We can do without the people who won't come if there's no tournament." I've seen tournaments stuck onto arts events and the effect was often that there were fighters, heralds, marshals, lists officers, water bearers and observers outside at the tournament who would otherwise have been inside taking classes.
There are a few laurels in this and a neighboring kingdom or two (is that vague enough?) who are disgusted at the idea of having a tournament at an arts fair, but who press for having "arts points" at wars without seeing the irony and hypocrisy involved. Let wars be wars. Don't make people with no interest in combat-related activities feel guilty about not going to Estrella (or any other war with arts points clumsily grafted on).
I've been accused of not being supportive of the arts because I advocated combining the arts and sciences offices, because I don't think war points for arts are appropriate, because I don't love arts competitions, and because I won't recite or agree with the alleged "fact" that the order of chivalry gets more respect than the laurels or pelicans. I do not believe that knights are more highly respected than the other orders of peerage, nor that their ceremonies are any great shakes, only that we all, since before we could talk, have been exposed to tales, legends and history which talked about knights and squires and never mentioned laurels or pelicans. We have a deeply ingrained vision of knighthood, and only a cartoony SCA vision of the other two orders. Fine. We can't change that. I believe that newcomers to the Society know who the knights are and get excited about that before they figure out that the orders of the Laurel and the Pelican are of equal rank. I feel positive that people who stay in the SCA any length of time and who are of at least average intelligence develop more respect for laurels and pelicans, in general, than they have for the chivalry as a group because of the realities of the relative difficulty of becoming a member of one of those orders. (As people become more aware, though, they also begin to see the peers as individuals, rather than averaging out all they know about the whole order. Thinking that knighthood is relatively easy to attain won't prevent them seeing a particular knight as the finest peer they've ever known, and if they feel it's difficult to get a laurel, it won't prevent them thinking a particular laurel has no business being a peer. Ultimately each peer is judged alone, and judged over, and over, and over.)
I separate the issue of encouraging the arts from the non-issue of the prestige of being a laurel. If there are people out there who have had the experience that it is much harder to become a knight in a certain area than it is to become a laurel or a pelican, please, please write and tell us.
Well, hey, I'm married
to a Laurel, and she could do without contests too. Me, I don't care one way or another, as long as contests do not serve to discourage pursuit of things artistic/ scientific/ scholarly. The side observation that Laurel and Pelican are of equal stature with Knighthood is of course true de jure, but I wonder if it is true de facto in the minds of the larger collective consciousness. I have found in my limited travels that to be a Knight seems to mean more than to be a Laurel or a Pelican. Certainly the fact that there are ceremonial distinctions made amongst the orders does nothing to lessen this perception. I wonder if this perception is seen elsewhere in the SCA? As for which is "harder to become," the only real measure I have for this is the numbers in each of the respective peerages in Meridies: 40+ Knights, thirtysomething Laurels, and less than 20 Pelicans.
—
Aedward of Glastonburh, Meridies
who was a Pelican and then a knight
One way to enhance
the position of the arts in the SCA is to make them more visible, and thus more prominent. There are any number of tools than can be used to do this: exhibitions, collegiums (collegia?), competitions (yes, AElflaed, even competitions!), etc. But these are just tools, they are not ends unto themselves. The real way to enhance the position of the arts (or anything else, for that matter) is to make it fashionable. This flies somewhat in the face of the "Art of art's sake" philosophy, but…you asked!
—
Master Hagar the Black, Outlands
HERE'S KATLIN'S RESPONSE.
SHE'S BEEN IN THE SOCIETY OVER A DOZEN YEARS AND HAS BEEN A KINGDOM ARTS AND SCIENCES OFFICER
FOR THE PAST TWO. SHE IS
BOTH A LAUREL AND A PELICAN.
To begin with,
I would like to expose the best kept secret in the SCA. There are probably some of you out there who would like to burn me at the stake as a heretic for what I am about to say, but you will have to catch me first. Here is is: the best kept secret in the SCA is: THE ARTS AND SCIENCES DOMINATE THE SCA AND INFLUENCE EVERYTHING WE DO. In fact, the fighters in the SCA are in such a minority and are so overlooked, that they have to go to extreme measures to be noticed at all. Their means are Crown and Coronet lists, Kings and Princes. You don't think this is true? Think about this: everyone, no matter who they are, has to have a costume to even attend one of our events. We consider costuming an art. Not everyone has to fight, but everyone has to have a costume. The costume may not be real good, but art doesn't have to be good either to be art. Whether they made it themselves, bought it or had someone make it for them, they support and acknowledge the arts.
Further, if a person takes up fighting, they have to have armor. We also consider armoring an art. The armor may not be real good armor, but it is still an art. The SCA has grown to such a size now that if your skills aren't up to good armor, you can buy it. Why buy good armor if ugly stuff will do the trick? Because we are all supposed to be rich medieval nobles and it is important to look the part to the best of our ability. Also there is a lot of social pressure, if not direct requests (I have made them myself) to get people to wear and use good-looking costumes and equipment at SCA events. In other words, people are requested, by subtle and not-so-subtle means to upgrade their artistic involvement.
How about the consideration that fighting is a martial art? I have just started fighting myself and it is a lot harder than I thought. The best analogy that I can come up with from my art experiences is that it is like musical improvisation. My goodness, isn't musical improvisation an art? (Musical improv is hard too and it takes a lot of time and practice to do it well, just like fighting.)
Arts in the SCA are ubiquitous. Arts are everywhere you look and everyone is involved to some degree or another. Usually when I hear this question of enhancing the arts in the SCA it is voiced as a complaint that fighters ignore artists, that artists are treated as second class citizens and that fighters are just dumb stick jocks with all the sensitivity of a rock. I find this a very unchivalrous attitude. Artists who voice this complaint want fighters to appreciate their art, but they are seldom willing to appreciate the fighters art. Granted, not everyone can fight and isn't it nice that everyone doesn't have to. However, God and all His/Her little angels can't help or protect the person who won't at least acknowledge the arts by wearing a costume. Who said that everyone must recognize and appreciate what everyone else is doing? We don't seem to give anyone any trouble if they want to specialize in, say, calligraphy to the exclusion of other arts, but just let someone specialize in fighting arts and there is no end to the howling and moaning of how this beast of a fighter is ignoring "the arts."
The stories of how some Laurel (some tend to think they are guardians of artistic purity in the SCA) came down on someone for some artistic infraction in costuming, armoring, or the art of your choice, are legion. Most of us find this kind of behaviour objectionable, and it seldom nets the perpetrator their goal. The SCA has tried to develop other methods to convince, motivate, and persuade people to improve their artwork. Some of these methods are workshops, collegiums, arts competitions, apprenticeships and awards (you know, those little sparklies that fighter-Kings give out to recognize art achievement). Most of these activities are lots of fun and people really do enjoy learning something new when it is offered in a way that doesn't make them feel bad about not wanting to. You know, flies, honey and vinegar. Most of these activities involve teaching, so let's look at the kind of influence that teachers have in the SCA.
If you didn't already have the skill when you joined the SCA and you decided that someone else was doing something really neat and that you wanted to learn how, you probably went to someone in the SCA who could teach you. The SCA really encourages the sharing of knowledge in this fashion, so you are in luck. Your teacher would teach you the way they want you to do things long before you develop your own style, and even after, you may still do things the way your teacher did. It is this ability of the artist to train and influence others that has made the SCA what it is today, not just fighting. But then, fighting is an art, so the whole of the SCA's growth and substance has, from the very first day, been directly influenced by artists. The Society is full of artists who wanted to develop a setting where their art, whatever it was, could grow and prosper, and have done it. The SCA as it is today is a living monument to that effort.
There is also the less obvious influence that SCA trendsetters have on newcomers. It takes only a few years in the SCA to notice that when some popular person is in a visible position, newcomers want to emulate them and have SCA gear just as nice as their idol's. I have seen this happen in at least two instances; the first one was for transition armor and the second was for Tudor-style costuming. The people who were doing the emulating were going (and still are) to a great deal of trouble to improve their skills so that their gear would match their idols'. Let's not forget the skilled fighter who attracts less-skilled fighters who want to improve their fighting skills by fighting with him/her. This influence is from one artist to the next, inspiration to improve and enhance the SCA with beautiful things.
I am acquainted with a Laurel who specializes in calligraphy and illumination. As I got to know this Master better, I found out that he had majored in performance art in college. This seemed to be a very esoteric subject and before I thought about it, I asked him how it was that a person trained in performance art found his way to the SCA. As soon as I said this I realized my mistake and he confirmed it by laughing at me. What is the SCA if it isn't performance art? This makes everyone, fighter, artist, newcomer, oldtimer, a performance artist at least.
Let's think about awards for a minute. In the SCA, there are two peerages given for non-fighting activity, Laurel and Pelican. For fighting, there is only one and that fighter has to demonstrate skills in non-fighting arts, dancing, heraldry, chess, and general courtesy. Pelicans and Laurels don't have to fight. Most Kingdoms have more non-fighting awards than fighting awards, and yet non-fighters are clamoring for more. They even want to determine wars with points won in an arts competition so that they can prove to fighters that they are just as good as they are. I guess I am missing something here. Aren't wars won by warriors? And aren't warriors martial ARTISTS? So aren't SCA wars won by artists? How can an artist who specializes in one art be inferior to another artist who specializes in a completely different art?
I don't think the problem of how to enhance the arts in the SCA really exists. Rather, I think the problem is more one of not seeing the forest for the trees. Our current system of acknowledging any kind of achievement in the SCA is with awards. There are a lot of attendant problems with this system, but its one great failing is that it is a one-shot deal. People tend to think that effort ends after they get the coveted award rather than looking at it as a stepping stone to greater and better things. It is all very nice for the members of the order to recommend to the King that you should have a particular award, and it is nice to receive it at a court and bask in the public acclaim, but what happens after that? What happens when you have received all the awards there are to get? What is it that will keep you feeling like your artistic accomplishments are of worth to the SCA? Perhaps this is the deeper problem that is not voiced when the discussion of enhancing arts in the SCA comes up. How do you reward the person who has every award you can give in a setting where the arts are so ubiquitous and expected of everyone?
Any artist (fighting or non) that is worth his or her salt keeps progressing in their art. They learn more, their skills become more refined, and their work becomes better and better, But how to get that really sustaining pat on the back that seems to make it all worth while is a problem that is not solved by more awards. I suspect the solutions are as individual as the artists acutely aware of the problem, so I feel that we should be asking of artists (fighting and non) what it is that they feel is a real, personal, sustaining reward for their efforts in the SCA and try to set up activities that enhance that feeling.
Teaching is a time-honored method of personal reward. I was talking with a certain Duke, who has been king many times and is not noted for his non-fighting artistic skills, about what it was that kept him in the SCA since he had just said he had done everything in the SCA that he had wanted to do. He answered that training other fighters and watching them use the skills he had taught them to win tourneys really was satisfying to him and really warmed his heart. It seems to me that this kind of reward is far more lasting and sustaining than any award the king could give him. Perhaps we need to set up workshops and collegiums where the teacher (usually a skilled artist of some kind) can watch the growth and progress of their students over a longer period of time. Apprenticeships work well this way, too. Of course, not everyone is a teacher or finds training the unskilled rewarding, so this will work for only some.
In conversations with others about what is really rewarding to them, it has sometimes been said that input from skilled to the unskilled, especially from someone they admired, was really rewarding. To that end, a really inspired solution has been the Laurel's Prize Tourney. Where else can you sit down and really discuss the joys and sorrows of being an artist with another artist? The two Laurel's Prize tourneys I have attended so far have been extremely rewarding for all concerned. First, people got to show their work in a non-threatening, non-competitive setting and they could modestly fish for compliments and not feel guilty or it. Second, they could sit down face to face with other artists who are sometimes, but not always, judged to be their superiors and discuss the fine points of style and technique. Since everyone is face to face, manners and polite speech is encouraged in a way that it is not with written comments on judging sheets. Finally, more skilled artists got to see the works of up-and-coming artists and to influence and encourage them with their comments. It is also fun to give out presents to others for no other reason than you just happened to like their work. Whether or not you got a present from the reviewing Laurels, you certainly got a lot of positive feedback and encouragement from other like-minded folk. One of the rules of gift-giving, even if it is only a verbal gift, is that it will return tenfold eventually. Share and share alike, everyone could give and everyone receive, a win-win situation.
I feel that more of this kind of activity would be generally rewarding for more people than would the making up of new awards that would benefit only a few. Show-and-tell get-togethers like this could be set up as often as you wanted and on as large or small a scale as you like. Currently, only static and sometimes performing artists have had a shot at this kind of activity and I would like to see the martial artists try something like it as well. Perhaps we can simply hold SCA arts fairs and invite everyone to show off their art, whatever it is, and then have everyone review everyone else's stuff and then have great fun giving handmade presents to favorite artists. Talk about warm fuzzies all the way around.
There is no doubt in my mind that everyone in the SCA is an artist to some degree or another. I feel that sometimes this idea is forgotten and neglected. There are some artists out there who seem to truly feel the only way to enhance SCA non-fighting art is at the expense of fighting art. On the contrary, the only way to enhance art in the SCA is to enhance all of the arts. Let's agree that everyone else is an artist, even if we don't participate in their art form, and set up activities and situations that help everyone develop their chosen art to the best of their abilities. It will take everyone's help to do this, so we can all feel we are contributing to enhancing SCA art, and coincidentally we will all reward each other on a continuing basis and make the SCA a better game for everyone.
—
Viscountess Yelisveta Katlin Savrasova,
Mistress of the Pelican and of the Laurel
A&S Minister for Atenveldt
HOW IMPORTANT IS SCA MEMBERSHIP?
(a polite dispute between AElflaed & Cariadoc)
Duke Cariadoc and I are having an exchange of letters over a difference of opinion on the importance of SCA member or, more specifically, whether there is a moral obligation to be a member. I'll try to convey each of our positions through quotes from these exchanges or from our respective books (A Miscellany and Bright Ideas…), and then would appreciate the input of others. This is not to divide the world into opposing camps, but to help us understand why others believe as they do.
From Bright Ideas and True Confessions—How and What to Do and Why (by AElflaed): "In the Outlands and at least one other kingdom, kingdom law states that only SCA members can receive awards. The corporation does not require membership for awards, but people who are in any degree serious about the Society should be members. Encourage newcomers to join. When you're recommending people for awards, check to see whether they're members. (Membership listings are available from the stock clerk, and the kingdom seneschal usually has a current one.) If your kingdom doesn't have this requirement, you might still consider it yourself, when you make a recommendation. If awards are given for service and dedication, for virtue and character, then it seems important to consider what could motivate a person to fail or refuse to maintain membership."
Duke Cariadoc bought a copy of this book at TFYC and wrote a very nice letter, with this criticism:
"Points of Disagreement…
Your attitude towards membership—in particular the suggestion that, before recommending someone for an award, you might want to check whether he was a member. That is the worst thing in the book. You will find my views on the subject in the Miscellany."
From "No Audience" (page 129 of the 5th Edition of A Miscelleny ): "The people who bear the load, who make the Society work, are the people who create the events, write the poems, tell the stories, sing the songs, sew the clothing. If you have just spent two hours deboning chickens then you are bearing your share of the load. If you are a card carrying member of the SCA Incorporated and come to every event expecting to be entertained, you are part of the load being borne."
A few pages later there is a long letter Cariadoc wrote to the board in Summer 1982. This is worth reading if you're interested, but too long and complex to quote much of here. It was a response to a letter the board had received suggesting that membership be required even to head a household or to sit in a peers' circle to advise the Crown. One small part of Cariadoc's response is: "Thus [the writer of the first letter] writes, and you apparently agree, that 'when a person takes an active part in his or her branch, the person owes it to all the other members to commit to the group at least to the extent of an associate membership.' As you and [the writer] know, there are people in the Society, probably a fair number of them, whose annual expenditures on the Society, in time and money, come to well over a thousand dollars. What you are saying, in effect, is that such people, if they do not choose to be members, are making less of a commitment (and presumably less of a contribution) than those who spend one percent as much—provided that that one percent is a payment to you for membership in the corporation…. If the board were elective it would be appropriate to deny them a vote. But they have still contributed to the Society, and it is only the confusion of the two that makes it possible for [the writer] to write what she has written, and for you to agree." Much of that letter explained Cariadoc's view of the Society and of SCA Inc. as very separate entities.
In my response I said, "I thought the letter to which you were responding was too extreme, and I too joined in the days when 'joining' meant coming to events in costume. I sent in a membership, though, and have never lapsed. [Then I went into discussion of fringe groups who only fight and party and don't encourage membership but still want their opinions heard.] I can't imagine an argument which would be acceptable to me morally for a person not being a paid member—receiving the newsletter. Anyone who can't afford $20 can't afford good armor or a costume, or site fees, or a tent, or the gasoline to travel. If a person really were poor but a good scrounger of materials, and as active and useful as your hypothetical people, I would convince the local group to give him a gift membership as reward for his service.
If [a non-member] spent five hours cooking and three hours cleaning up and was patient with newcomers, he would be a good candidate for receiving a carved box, or a costume, or a scroll of appreciation. Those are things which match the service, but I think giving someone SCA rank should match a commitment on their part to be an active member of the Society.
I can see (if I squint) your differentiation between the SCA Inc. and the Society, but I myself see them as same and different as Sandra and AElflaed. One is the mundane self and the other is the persona—the pretty side."
Cariadoc wrote: "From my standpoint, the difference has nothing to do with the difference between the Mundane and the Persona side of things. The Society exists mundanely as well—David is a member of it, and would be even if his membership in the Corporation expired. The Rialto, for example—the SCA interest group on UseNet—is part of the Society, although it has no connection with the Corporation. The Corporation could exist in persona—we could go back to calling the Board the Imperial Electors—and it would still be a different thing from the Society…. Given that distinction, I fail to understand your moral attitude towards membership. As an economist, I do not think 'can't afford' is a useful category. The relevant question is whether one should spend $20 on a membership or on something else. The possible arguments for getting a membership are that it gets you T.I. and the newsletters and that it provides some money to the central organization. The latter argument cuts in both directions, however, since, as a believer in decentralization and the difficulty of maintaining it, I am far from sure that giving the central organization more money is a good thing. In any case, if I wanted to give [them] more money I could send them a donation without being a member.
Your view seems to be that membership is a moral obligation, but I cannot see why. It is not necessary as a way of declaring that I am a part of the Society—I do that by showing up at events in garb, speaking in persona, etc…. [In reference to the business in my letter about giving a non-member a gift instead of an award:] You seem to think that rank is clearly a bigger thing than presents. I would like to believe that the arm rings I give at Pennsic are worth at least as much to the recipients as an AoA, and more than a Baronial arts award. They are certainly rarer and harder to get.
But why do you measure a commitment to be an active member of the Society by whether someone has mailed $20 to the SCA Inc.? Thousands of people have done that who are not actively committed, and other thousands have been actively committed long before they became members. It is true that most people who are an active part of the Society will eventually want to become members, because T.I. and the newsletters are useful to them. But that is effect, not cause, or commitment.
And yes, I would recommend ignoring membership in awarding a peerage."
Some of you would be interested in reading the entire exchange, and some of you may think this is too much already. Would you like to contribute to it? I still feel that in giving awards we should ignore both inactive members and active non-members, and go for the active members. Are there readers who are intimately involved, as in people who received awards without being members, and have a personal opinion based on that? Input, please.