January: Difference between revisions
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== A Darkened Path == | == A Darkened Path == | ||
<blockquote>''"January was once the Dean of Benthic. Now she has a great deal to say about the ivory tower, most of it bitter, but she remains unmistakably professorial."''<ref>{{Citation|https://fallenlondon.wiki/wiki/Invite_January_to_the_Board|Invite January to the Board|Fallen London|}}</ref></blockquote>January was the Dean of Benthic College at some point in the past;<ref>{{Citation|https://fallenlondon.wiki/wiki/Persuade_January|Persuade January|Fallen London|}}''"She was once the Dean of Benthic. She has not forgotten how to argue like an academic."''</ref><ref name=":0">{{Citation|https://fallenlondon.wiki/wiki/Invite_January_to_the_Board|Invite January to the Board|Fallen London|}}''"January was once the Dean of Benthic. Now she has a great deal to say about the ivory tower, most of it bitter, but she remains unmistakably professorial."''</ref> her disdain for the [[University]] as an institution suggests that she may not have left her position willingly.<ref name=":0" /> A book apparently authored by her, kept in the [[Agendums of Ascent]], discusses methods of radicalizing students of various disciplines.<ref>{{Citation|https://fallenlondon.wiki/wiki/The_Calendar_Code|The Calendar Code|Fallen London|}} ''"This is not a true textbook. It presents key concepts from a multitude of different subjects, but only in summary. The bulk of the text dwells on methods to radicalise students of that discipline; lines of argument which lead the listener to feelings of dissatisfaction and righteous outrage."''</ref> Another of her books documents the injustices perpetrated by the [[Judgements]] | <blockquote>''"January was once the Dean of Benthic. Now she has a great deal to say about the ivory tower, most of it bitter, but she remains unmistakably professorial."''<ref>{{Citation|https://fallenlondon.wiki/wiki/Invite_January_to_the_Board|Invite January to the Board|Fallen London|}}</ref></blockquote>January was the Dean of Benthic College at some point in the past;<ref>{{Citation|https://fallenlondon.wiki/wiki/Persuade_January|Persuade January|Fallen London|}}''"She was once the Dean of Benthic. She has not forgotten how to argue like an academic."''</ref><ref name=":0">{{Citation|https://fallenlondon.wiki/wiki/Invite_January_to_the_Board|Invite January to the Board|Fallen London|}}''"January was once the Dean of Benthic. Now she has a great deal to say about the ivory tower, most of it bitter, but she remains unmistakably professorial."''</ref> her disdain for the [[University]] as an institution suggests that she may not have left her position willingly.<ref name=":0" /> A book apparently authored by her, kept in the [[Agendums of Ascent]], discusses methods of radicalizing students of various disciplines.<ref>{{Citation|https://fallenlondon.wiki/wiki/The_Calendar_Code|The Calendar Code|Fallen London|}} ''"This is not a true textbook. It presents key concepts from a multitude of different subjects, but only in summary. The bulk of the text dwells on methods to radicalise students of that discipline; lines of argument which lead the listener to feelings of dissatisfaction and righteous outrage."''</ref> Another of her books documents the injustices perpetrated by the [[Judgements]],<ref>{{Citation|https://fallenlondon.wiki/wiki/Season_Conclusions_(Guide)#The_Season_of_Revolutions|Season Conclusions (Guide)#The Season of Revolutions|Fallen London|}} ''""If you want to remember the crimes you've seen here, take this:" she holds out a book, entitled the Liber Stinguendi. "A work of my own. [...]""''</ref> and she notes that she has written many others, although they are not printed under her revolutionary alias.<ref>{{Citation|https://fallenlondon.wiki/wiki/Season_Conclusions_(Guide)#The_Season_of_Revolutions|Season Conclusions (Guide)#The Season of Revolutions|Fallen London|}} ''"The Liber is strong stuff. I have other works that may be more easily digestible. The University might even still stock some of them - though you won’t find them listed under January."''</ref> | ||
Among many other subjects, she has studied the [[The Discordance|Discordance]], and believes she can use it to further the Liberation of Night.<ref>{{Citation|https://fallenlondon.wiki/wiki/Ask_about_what_she_found_at_Hurlers_(January)|Ask about what she found at Hurlers (January)|Fallen London|}}''"Nothing," says January. "I did not find an old ally; I did not learn anything of its history, nor observe the nature of its solitude. I did not learn to dine on shadows, or find sustenance in the dark. I did not experience a miracle of providence. And so the Liberationists to come will not benefit from what I have not learned."''</ref> | |||
While January's further background is never directly mentioned, it is made quite clear that she is Jewish. She inherited a shofar from her family<ref>{{Citation|https://fallenlondon.wiki/wiki/Grant_January_the_right|Grant January the right|Fallen London|}} ''"The ram's horn is longer than her arm. "It has been in my family a long time[…]" She lifts the horn and blows, a blast that goes on and on, more and more loudly, until it seems impossible for anyone to keep blowing; but she continues anyway."'' (T'kiah gedolah!)</ref> and references<ref>{{Citation|https://fallenlondon.wiki/wiki/Ask_about_her_goals_(January)|Ask about her goals (January)|Fallen London|}}''""It is always only the beginning of the work," she says. "A hand up, a word in an ear, a few pages written in a forbidden book. We do not have to complete the work, but we may not set it aside.""''</ref> ''Pirkei Avot'',<ref>[https://www.sefaria.org/Pirkei_Avot.2.16?lang=bi Pirkei Avot:] ''"It is not your duty to finish the work, but neither are you at liberty to neglect it."''</ref> a compilation of rabbinical teachings on ethics and morals. | While January's further background is never directly mentioned, it is made quite clear that she is Jewish. She inherited a shofar from her family<ref>{{Citation|https://fallenlondon.wiki/wiki/Grant_January_the_right|Grant January the right|Fallen London|}} ''"The ram's horn is longer than her arm. "It has been in my family a long time[…]" She lifts the horn and blows, a blast that goes on and on, more and more loudly, until it seems impossible for anyone to keep blowing; but she continues anyway."'' (T'kiah gedolah!)</ref> and references<ref>{{Citation|https://fallenlondon.wiki/wiki/Ask_about_her_goals_(January)|Ask about her goals (January)|Fallen London|}}''""It is always only the beginning of the work," she says. "A hand up, a word in an ear, a few pages written in a forbidden book. We do not have to complete the work, but we may not set it aside.""''</ref> ''Pirkei Avot'',<ref>[https://www.sefaria.org/Pirkei_Avot.2.16?lang=bi Pirkei Avot:] ''"It is not your duty to finish the work, but neither are you at liberty to neglect it."''</ref> a compilation of rabbinical teachings on ethics and morals. | ||
== Historical and Cultural Inspirations == | == Historical and Cultural Inspirations == | ||
While January's stated motivations are | While January's stated motivations are metaphysical, it is also possible that her observation of rising anti-Semitic sentiments and violence throughout the latter half of the 19th century has shaped her desire to end oppression. Starting in the 1880s, waves of violence (e.g. pogroms) drove over two million Jews to flee the Russian [https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Pale_of_Settlement Pale of Settlement] (which today spans several countries in eastern and northeastern Europe), the historical region of [https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Galicia_(Eastern_Europe) Galicia] (now split between Poland and Ukraine), and Romania. Most of these people immigrated to the United States, with a minority going to Ottoman-controlled Palestine. In the world of ''Fallen London,'' some went to the Neath instead.<ref>{{Citation|https://fallenlondon.wiki/wiki/Reconcile_newcomers_to_the_halakha_of_the_Neath|Reconcile newcomers to the halakha of the Neath|Fallen London|}} ''"Jews from Russia, from Romania, from Lithuania arrive constantly in Wolfstack. The traditions they find here, even among their own former countryfolk, are inevitably strange to them."''</ref> | ||
==References== | ==References== | ||
{{Scroll box|text=<references/>}} | {{Scroll box|text=<references/>}} |
Revision as of 05:12, 5 October 2024
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"'It is always only the beginning of the work,' she says. 'A hand up, a word in an ear, a few pages written in a forbidden book. We do not have to complete the work, but we may not set it aside.'"[1]
January, also known as the Masked Curator, is a senior member of the Calendar Council. She is also the founder and guardian of the Museum of Injustice, an institution that exists to document and record oppression.[2][3] She wears a Janus mask, with one side scowling and the other weeping.[4] Her true appearance is left undescribed beyond her artwork.
Justice, Justice You Shall Pursue
"We will not even be able to imagine something beyond this hierarchy until we have brought it down."[5]
January is an ardent and outspoken supporter of the Liberation of Night,[6][7] believing it to be the surest and greatest way of dismantling injustice,[8] and fantasizes about extinguishing the Sun and Moon alike.[9]
January is not a light conversationalist; she seems to always be thinking about some deeper subject even while making small talk and sharing stories.[10] Even with those she trusts, she probes for deeper details about their lives and families.[11] When given the opportunity, she is a brilliant schemer, always steps ahead of everyone else in considering the ramifications of a plan.[12][13] She knows August well, though they aren't exactly friends,[14] and she values April highly as an ally.[15]
January critiques the Emancipationist school of thought as championed by Furnace Ancona, on the grounds that they prefer to ignore and escape oppression rather than confront it.[16] She thinks similarly of Cornelius and his Prehistoricists; according to her, they assume mistakenly that higher powers must behave by their own rules.[17] She cannot argue, however, with the unphilosophical desire to lead an army of one's own creations.[18]
In the Sunless Skies timeline, as of 1906, she has left the Neath with December and February. The three revolutionaries reside in Pan in Eleutheria.[19]
A Darkened Path
"January was once the Dean of Benthic. Now she has a great deal to say about the ivory tower, most of it bitter, but she remains unmistakably professorial."[20]
January was the Dean of Benthic College at some point in the past;[21][22] her disdain for the University as an institution suggests that she may not have left her position willingly.[22] A book apparently authored by her, kept in the Agendums of Ascent, discusses methods of radicalizing students of various disciplines.[23] Another of her books documents the injustices perpetrated by the Judgements,[24] and she notes that she has written many others, although they are not printed under her revolutionary alias.[25]
Among many other subjects, she has studied the Discordance, and believes she can use it to further the Liberation of Night.[26]
While January's further background is never directly mentioned, it is made quite clear that she is Jewish. She inherited a shofar from her family[27] and references[28] Pirkei Avot,[29] a compilation of rabbinical teachings on ethics and morals.
Historical and Cultural Inspirations
While January's stated motivations are metaphysical, it is also possible that her observation of rising anti-Semitic sentiments and violence throughout the latter half of the 19th century has shaped her desire to end oppression. Starting in the 1880s, waves of violence (e.g. pogroms) drove over two million Jews to flee the Russian Pale of Settlement (which today spans several countries in eastern and northeastern Europe), the historical region of Galicia (now split between Poland and Ukraine), and Romania. Most of these people immigrated to the United States, with a minority going to Ottoman-controlled Palestine. In the world of Fallen London, some went to the Neath instead.[30]
References
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