Monday, 24 July 2023

On Moral Ambiguity and Colonialism

I have recently finished reading three books on a roughly similar theme: Undaunted Courage, Stephen Ambrose's account of the Lewis & Clark expedition; and Buddy Levy's Conquistador (a biography of Hernan Cortes) and River of Darkness (about the first descent of the Amazon by Francisco Orellana).

This theme is, in essence, the moral ambiguities of imperialism and colonialism. I am fully persuaded by the argument that these are basically Bad Things and that trying to carry out a defence of them (as some have recently done) is probably misguided. And it is very difficult, in reading the accounts I've mentioned (all three of them fabulously written, by the way) to see past the sheer cultural - in many cases genocidal - destruction and environmental degredation that would follow in the wake of the endeavours of men like Cortes and Pizarro. Even genial Meriwether Lewis, who clearly loved the natural world and was fascinated by the people he met in the American West, was the unwitting harbinger of an apocalypse that itself followed on the heels of other European-induced apocalypses of staggering scale. Yes, the Aztecs and Inka were themselves callow and brutal imperialists, and yes, American Indians were no strangers to genocidal violence, and yes, everybody was at it in those days, but the cataclysmic effects of European colonialism are truly without historical parallel and are worth treating separately on that basis alone. As Napolean said, quantity has a quality all of its own, and the fact that the Aztecs and Spaniards, for example, were both imbued with fairly similar sets of motives shouldn't distract us from the sheer vandalism that was unleashed by the latter in their conquest of Mexico. None of this is our fault (only a moral illiterate would suggest that the sins of the great-great-great-great-great-great grandfather should be visited upon the great-great-great-great-great-great grandaughter), but it should nonetheless fill one with horror to contemplate just how much destruction was wrought on the New World and the scale of what was lost.

And yet the mature human mind should be capable of holding within it contradictory emotions without feeling the need to reconcile them or banish one in favour of the other. And it is important also therefore to accept that, for all the bad that resulted from the expeditions of men like Cortes or Merwether Lewis, they were in many respects hugely admirable people. Cortes (Pizarro even more so) was a truly monstrous figure. But he was also, without doubt, one of the bravest and most intelligent men who ever lived - somebody who truly merited being labelled a genius. Think of the sheer courage and resourcefulness that it must have taken to set off on those ships across the Atlantic, let alone to conquer an entire civilisation after arrival on the other side; think of the iron will, the determination, the absolute intolerance of failure that must have imbued every atom of his being. Think of having the balls - I think the use of the word is appropriate in this context - to burn your entire fleet, your only vehicle home, right before the eyes of your men to make it clear to them that the only alternative to victory was death. Think of taking on and defeating a much bigger army of your own countrymen in order to remain at liberty to finish what you have started. Think of what you could achieve if you had a tenth of his gumption and cunning. This was a serious man. 

Lewis and Clark, meanwhile, are much more relatable figures, partly because they seem to inhabit a world much more like our own, and partly because the records they left are so much more personal (and endearingly spelled). But it bears remembering that these two were striking out into a vast continent that was, as far as they knew, peopled entirely by hostile bands of native people who would just as soon shoot them full of arrows as look at them, and possibly roamed by prehistoric megafauna and lost tribes of Israel. And they had no means of contacting home, no means of travel except by boat or on foot, and nothing to live on except the supplies they could carry and whatever they could hunt or catch in the wilderness. Whatever the results of their expedition, these men were giants: 'undaunted courage' barely begins to describe their character. Francisco Orellana, meanwhile, had already seen three quarters of an approximately 4,000-strong expedition die before they had even left the Andean foothills, yet plunged on to get all the way to the mouth of the Amazon with his small band of 50 comrades a year later. Believe me, stumbling around in the dark in an English woodland at night is scary enough. Doing that in the Amazon rainforest can't even be contemplated - and after he had finished he set off to do it all over again. 

A person's personal qualities, that is to say, can in themselves - taken in isolation - be deeply admirable and even inspirational despite the causes in whose name they are deployed and the ultimate consequences which they have. This is unpalatable, perhaps, but inescapable. And it is worth contemplating with reference to D&D, given that many D&D PCs, particularly those in the old school framework, themselves represent mini-Corteses, Pizarros and Orellanas. These rogues whose characters we play often do despicable things for despicable reasons. But that doesn't mean that they can't also display certain qualities that in other contexts would be described as virtuous. 

40 comments:

  1. A daring post indeed.

    As every conquest of the past, it's difficult not to be very severe (our ancestors, even out great-great-grandparents, were pretty savages in everything involved in war and conquest and the West is now much more severy judging it) but it's also difficult not to relativize it (in the end, nearly all conquest were as destructive: the mongol invasions, the islamic expansion, the roman conquest, the assyrian expansion... and that's only thinking in 'western' senses: the gupta empire in India or the expansion of the Han in China were pretty savage too). Even some modern expansions were very, very brutal (Nazi, Soviet, Imperial Japanese...) but they were 'short' in a time scope (a couple of decades) so the repercussions don't feel as strong.

    It's a hard position, because it's difficult not to judge but it's also difficult not to be a hypocrite doing it.

    In my D&D settings I borrow a LOT of historic nuances because of my formation and of my personal tastes, but I always center in using very vague tropes and archetypes for the evil dudes. In my actual (and best developed) you can see a 'byzantine' civ or a 'norman' civ for example, but the orcs and servants of darkness look more like the 'generic evil ones', with a lot of slavery, chains and sacrifices, but we have worked a lot for you to not connect this to any existing civilization. Because I think that could have a lot of implications that I don't really want.

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    1. I don't think historical nuances are really fully avoidable. But that's okay. Probably need to write a post about that.

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    2. I don't think that they are 100% fully avoidable either, but I think you can make an effort indulging in fantasy. For example, in my setting orcs, goblins and nearly all the 'evil humanoids' are all monsters created by magic. They don't even reproduce and don't have different sexes, they were created by horrible magicians in the past and they can 'auto-create' themselves by a process inspired by the Uruk Hai in the movies of the Lord of the Rings (and not in the books, I really dig the image of orcs 'creating themselves' in dark factory-like caverns and I think that it's pretty D&D: a justification for some weird dungeons!).

      They ''born'' fully operational and are, in general, pretty nasty bastards, each of them breeds with one strange trait (goblins are cowardly, orcs are brutish, hobgoblins are militaristic, etc). The thing is that they were magically created to be obedient to the dark wizards of the past, but said wizards are gone, so they instinctively follow the strongest one of each group. This creates a lot of conflicts and in-fighting in the groups, but also when a leader is 'indiscutible', they are very well organized and can be really dangerous.

      This obviously makes them really fantastic and dehumanizes them (arguably they are not even mammals!), and I think that works pretty well for D&D. And if you see these monsters you can't really associate them with any culture, because they are effectively created as a non-culture (although I don't think it's a perfect solution, but it works well for me). I don't really dig the early D&D 'kill the orc women and children' themes, a little bit too much for me.

      Said that, a normal and rational humanoid can be bad, obviously. And you can fight and kill them even if they are not bad! But that creates another type of conflict and I think that works better that way. Entering an orc nest and hacking and slashing without remorse? Cool. Doing the same with bandits, pirates or enemy troops? No! The encounters could end in the same hack slash, sure, but the weight it's very different, at least when I'm DMing.

      Sorry for the long message!

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  2. 1:

    Well said. Life is too complex to reduce to judgemental simplicities. We can only follow our own ethical callings, tempered inevitably by our emotional biases as these will be. And we all have to reduce that complexity to something manageable at some point -- e.g. "colonization is bad" is a simple encapsulation that I'd stand by, so long as it's understood that this is shorthand, not the actual belief that there aren't nuances and a ton of complexities.

    I think about a book I read a few years ago, about the lead-up to the Opium Wars, an exploration of the interactions between the British Empire and China, the two great powers. Two things that stick in the mind:

    -- an Indian man who is still remembered in his region of India as a great philanthropist. He invested his wealth in schools, hospitals, infrastructure, and did everything he could to improve the lives of his community. He gained this wealth through selling opium, against the wishes of the Chinese government and to the detriment of Chinese society. He was also a Knight of the British Empire. He was a strong supported of British rule -- he was Indian and he was British, not just in that he was a subject of the Crown, he was an active supporter and official of the Empire. The British Empire did great damage to India and to China, but also we have Indians renowned for their investment in humanitarinism to this day, who were also unapologetic supporters of that empire because it permitted that humanitariaism. (I always say, a central province of an empire lifted into a higher standard of living will have a different view of that empire than an outlying village whose people were massacred because the empire wanted their land. Recall also, that the history of the British Isles is itself one long string of colonizations and invasions. The Romans, the Danes, the Angles, the Saxons, the Frisians, the Normans with their French and Latin favoured over native English, to say nothing of Scots, Welsh, Cornish, etc. all being different peoples. As for Britain being part of Christiandom -- that's Roman-Judaic. Neither Greco-Roman or Judaic culture is native to the British Isles. To say nothing of how we currently drown in American media influence -- not the same culture at all)

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  3. 2. - The conflict between individual British traders who wanted to trade with individual Chinese against the Chinese government's wishes and the East India Company who wanted to respect the Chinese government's decree (and so retain their monopoly). Both sides had the same motive -- their own financial benefit, tempered with a "larger", more "honourable" ideal that justifies it. The traders were gushing about the brotherhood of man, about how "Englishman and Chinaman share the same values of freedom and goodwill", while the Company was making the point that "how would you, as Englishmen, respond if Chinese citizens were coming ashore on Britain and telling the people to ignore or defy the government?" Both sides were making fair and thoughtful points while obviously being motivated by their financial benefit.

    Keep in mind I'm a big critic of modern Anglo geopolitical policy, for multiple reasons. I'm not a fan of the "Western Empire", the "American via London Hegemony" or whatever you want to label it, not at all. I might be considered quite radical, in fact, in my opposition to "Anglo culture". But ethical considerations and criticism, no matter how strong, are not the same as moral denunciations.

    Personally, I tend to suspect the influence of the martyr-happy Abrahamic religions for what I think is one of the most harmful attitudes of our society -- the belief that *victimhood is righteous*. To be a victim, it's held, is to gain moral righteousness, particularly over the purpetrator(s). Anyone who understands issues like community and domestic violence, conflict between nations, etc., understands that there is rarely any clear unambigious or one-way line in these things (sometimes there is, but those are the easier situations to resolve anyway). The idea that moral standing lies with a victim, I believe, merely gets in the way of resolving dangerous and harmful situations and of improving human prosperity.

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    1. Yes, Rene Girard has a lot to offer in respect of that last paragraph.

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  4. Another thoughtful post that provides more justification for dropping alignment from the (Advanced) game.

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    1. Possibly. OR can the alignment system incorporate Cortes? Lawful Evil?

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    2. Before he fought the Aztecs, Cortez ran across a dozen small states in Central America that begged him to take out the Aztecs, they even joined him in the fight. Lawful Evil doesn't seem right.

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    3. My answers to your questions would (likewise) be "possibly," but it's tough. Quibbles and controversies aside, I think most would look at the Catholic Church as a Lawful Good entity...and "evil" or not, Cortes was an agent of the church. And LE as a force is associated with the diabolic (devils, Nine Hells, etc.)...not really Church-friendly,

      I went through a lot of this stuff a couple-three years back when I was kicking off my new campaign and considering 16th century South America as a setting. You can read my thought process here:

      http://bxblackrazor.blogspot.com/2019/06/problematic-content-i-like.html

      The TL;DR version is, I could only make "alignment" function by making it setting specific.

      Of course, in the end I decided that making alignment functional in my campaign...in a way that represented (and justified) the dichotomies inherent in adventurers like Cortes...was far less important than just playing the game.

      So I just cut alignment. A lot simpler.

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    4. I'd call Cortez Lawful Neutral. He was certainly Lawful. One of my favorite bits in the History of the Conquest of Mexico is how he and his men established the colony of Vera Cruz, and then issued themselves a commission to conquer Mexico. It reminds me of an old Far Side comic: "Huh. I guess he does have a permit to do that."
      I don't think anyone would dispute that HC's primary motive was personal ambition, but -- as others have pointed out -- a hell of a lot of Mexicans preferred him to the Aztecs; and I'm pretty sure he would have been a lot happier if he could have managed the whole thing in a bloodless coup rather than house-to-house fighting.

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    5. They preferred him to the Aztecs for the five seconds it took before they mostly died of smallpox and witnessed their civilizations brought to ruin. Again, I think what is interesting here is the quantity and quality of the destruction wrought. In that respect Cortes may pound-for-pound be the single most damaging person to have ever lived.

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    6. To expand on the alignment point - does the fact that some people see it as expedient to ally themselves with a person at a given moment preclude him personally being Lawful Evil? I don't think so.

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    7. Can you really blame Cortez, or Columbus, or anybody for the smallpox? That was inevitable as soon as the New and Old Worlds made contact, there simply is no scenario wherein we develop the smallpox vaccine before we develop the oceangoing ship, so *somebody* was going to discover the New World and *somebody*, no matter how well-intentioned, was consequently going to wipe out 60-90+% of its population with viral pathogens he didn't understand. It wouldn't have mattered if the guy on that boat was Christ the Redeemer himself: from the moment the continents split, it was fated to happen.

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    8. Hard to say. Often the spreading of smallpox and other diseases was deliberate. And there's no doubt that Cortes and Pizarro and the other conquistadores were out to destroy the civilisations they found in the New World however it was achieved.

      It's also the case that one should probably take the blame for what one achieves through negligence even if not acting deliberately.

      But I agree it is important for people to remember that a lot of what some call 'genocide' was accidental.

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  5. What's awesome about D&D is that you can have adventures disconnected from colonialism. The idea that ruthless treasure hunting = colonialism is backwards logic, the same as saying that all rectangles, trapezoids, and other quadrangles must are squares. RPG protagonists are ruthless men of unstoppable willpower. Historically that describes a lot of terrible people, but it also describes Achilles, Heracles, Beowulf, and Jesus. Not to mention Conan, Fafhrd, Solomon Kane, and Batman?

    D&D has always been careful to set up fair targets for expeditions and its that black and white morality that takes all the flak. "You can't fight the bad guys, because villains like Cortez called their victims bad guys too so you're just repeating his lies!" (Missing the point that D&D villains are almost always military expansionists murdering plunderers.) Then we only have room for shades of grey where everybody is spineless fence sitters and dirtbags, or shallow urban-american morality plays.

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    1. I agree with your last paragraph partially, but I think in OSR circles it's more common for D&D PCs to amoral (or morally ambiguous) rogues in a world which is itself full of moral ambiguities.

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    2. Mild disagreement - "Ruthless" is not a great descriptor of Jesus or Batman. "Without Pity, Merciless, and Cruel" isn't really an admirable character trait.

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  6. Many have observed that the US Civil War was essentially imperialist/colonial (we wanted their things and to change their behavior) and yet it's universally praised. Thoughts?

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    1. Isn't every war ultimately about wanting other people's things or changing their behavior?

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    2. Claiming the Civil War was an act of imperialism or colonialism is fundamentally unserious. If one portion of a nation wants to secede, preventing that from happening is neither imperial expansion nor colonization, as the seceding party is still recognized as being part of its original nation (hence why it's called a civil war).

      I'd imagine the war is praised today mostly for ending the practice of slavery in the US.

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    3. I agree with what Anonymous said.

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    4. As someone who has been enjoying the Radio War Nerd podcast Civil War series (which I totally recommend), the comment everyone is responding to is neo-Confederate Lost Cause propaganda. The South were the first to take up arms in the war by raiding Fort Sumter, after the election of Abraham Lincoln, who was anti-slavery. I also recommend googling “the caning of Charles Sumner” to see how violently even Southern politicians responded to antislavery arguments.

      I was going to write a longer post to this effect, but in brief, I’m ok with historical moral relativism (and really I think it’s inevitable in fantasy since ~50% of the fantasy genre is about romanticizing the past.) But as a reasonably well-read American, I try to stick to a pretty basic rule, “don’t do sympathetic portrayals of Confederates or Nazis”

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    5. It's also worth remembering that if the Confederacy had secured its independence there was a powerful movement within it to create a slave empire across the Caribbean and Central America, and that in fact not long before the Civil War southern 'filibusters' had reinstituted slavery in Nicaragua for a brief period. I totally agree - a bit of moral relativism is inevitable and probably sensible in some contexts but that doesn't mean we can't call a spade a spade.

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    6. >>Many have observed that the US Civil War was essentially imperialist/colonial (we wanted their things and to change their behavior) and yet it's universally praised. Thoughts?<<

      The Confederacy started the war from fear the Union would one day end slavery, with no desire to conquer the Union, while the Union fought to keep existing territory, with initially no desire to change the Confederate way of life (ie slavery). So no, not really. It's one of the least imperialist wars of the past few hundred years.

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  7. It is poisonous to read history wearing a regime issued political headlamp. Luckily, most people reading history in depth for pleasure are older, in their forties at least, they have lived enough to appreciate the importance of older literary histories, so in one sanitary gesture they can dismiss the college standard-issue 'crossed-eyes of the overworld'.

    I try to avoid anything written after WWII. I don't trust anyone to describe what happened, or explain why the US chose Stalin over Hitler - the twenty year history of Russia from 1917-1939 is demonic, and the Russians became the implacable enemy of the US but the US preferred to have a completely occupied Europe, east and west, rather than threaten Russia as they had Japan.

    Politics is hard, it comes *after* so much hard won knowledge, read history for a decade and you will be slow to apply regime approved 'politics' (which are really sponged up emotions from the msm). Politics is hard, it demands sane instincts, in an environment when big pharma is coming of age as the primary political instrument of the invisibly tiny elite.

    ====

    TLDR:

    Prescott's *The Conquest of Mexico* comes in a beautiful two volume edition copiously illustrated by Keith Henderson who illustrated The Worm Ouroboros for ER Eddison.

    Take a look for free:
    https://archive.org/details/gri_33125000323200/page/252/mode/2up

    To buy:
    https://www.abebooks.com/servlet/SearchResults?an=prescott&bi=0&bx=off&cm_sp=SearchF-_-Advs-_-Result&ds=30&kn=Keith%20Henderson&recentlyadded=all&rollup=on&sortby=17&sts=t&tn=conquest&xdesc=off&xpod=off&yrh=1950

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    1. Are you Kent? I feel like you might be Kent.

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    2. He's providing neat and useful stuff for people to read and not once has he complained none of us know what we're talking about. No way it's Kent.

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    3. You aren't privy to the comments from him that I haven't allowed to become public!

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  8. Some, ah, interesting comments on this one.

    Imagining a world without Cortes is an interesting thought experiment. He was a particularly exceptional individual. Without Cortes, would Central and Southern America have even been colonised in the same way (even with Pizzaro), or would something like Japan have happened, with traders and missionaries operating out of port settlements more or less permanently? Slower exposure to Europeans wouldn't have prevented the decimation caused by disease, but perhaps the Aztec would have continued to build their strength, and would have been less shellshocked by the arrival of shiny, gun-toting centaurs? With more time to get to know them, would other groups have been less willing to side with the Spanish? Would the Inca have been more wary of Pizzaro? What would North America have become if the Aztec empire persisted?

    Or maybe there were 50 other Cortes' waiting for their chance?

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  9. It seems to me that the first men who crossed over from Asia into what is now Alaska (some 15,000 to 20,000 years ago) unknowingly doomed their far descendants to mass death from Eurasia's viruses.

    Even if every single European who came to the Americas was a bona fide saint, he still would have been carrying viruses against which the Americans (after 15,000+ years of isolation from Eurasia) had no immunity.

    Even if the Europeans never visited the Americas, then eventually some Americans would have visited Eurasia and brought back viruses with them to America.

    Once men left Eurasia for America (and followed by 15-20 millennia of isolation), I cannot think of a realistic scenario that does not end in most of the Americans dying from Eurasian viruses. Sad, but ineluctable.

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    1. Yes, this is definitely true, and not widely known. There are two very good popular nonfiction books, 'Guns, Germs and Steel', and '1491', which I'm sure you've read, which deal with it extensively. I think I'm right in saying that Pizarro had amazing good fortune in happening to arrive in Peru at the very moment that the Inka were dealing with both a civil war and a deadly plague thought to have spread from further north (with the coming of Europeans).

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    2. IIRC one of the GURPS alternate history sourcebooks gets around this by positing that in some timeline, the Romans (iirc) make contact with the Central Americans but then aren’t really able to exploit the situation. The Central Americans then die massively of plague like in our reality, but without a colonial presence, a few hundred years later they’ve recovered and are ready to go over and kick Late Roman ass, leading to a Mesoamerican-dominated timeline. ;)

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    3. >>a Mesoamerican-dominated timeline<< The Romans had a several thousand year technology advantage too, and were probably the premier militarists of all time, so this seems a bit unlikely.

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    4. Whoops! Didn't realize I just replicated this comment above, sorry Noisms. That's what I get for not reading all the comments first.

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  10. A modern world dominated by the Aztec Empire rather than by the USA does not seem a terribly appealing prospect.

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  11. "the cataclysmic effects of European colonialism are truly without historical parallel"

    Ahem.
    Mongols.
    Ahem.

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