The Brabazon Workworld: Difference between revisions
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The '''Governor''' holds near-absolute power here, especially since the workworld is rather far from [[New London]]'s authority.<ref>{{Citation|https://sunlessskies.fandom.com/wiki/The_Brabazon_Workworld|Converse with the Governor|Sunless Skies|}} ''"The Governor runs Brabazon. In the absence of more direct control from London, he is all powerful here."''</ref> He views Brabazon through heavily rose-tinted glasses,<ref>{{Citation|https://sunlessskies.fandom.com/wiki/The_Brabazon_Workworld|Converse with the Governor|Sunless Skies|}} ''""I'm immensely proud of our workers. Industry's up. Our hour refining is more efficient than ever. Our weavers are the best in the region. I've even heard rumours that Her Renewed Majesty commented positively on a glass piece made by one of our very own blowers." He beams at you. "Albion wouldn't be the same without them.""''</ref><ref>{{Citation|https://sunlessskies.fandom.com/wiki/The_Brabazon_Workworld|Listen to the Governor's request|Sunless Skies|}} ''""Brabazon must be self-sufficient. Without industry to justify their lighting, our fires will go out. We must have work." His brow furrows. "The workers refuse to understand that they live so long as they work. That is not a threat; it is a fact of living here. They require hope. Give it to them. Not enough to stir them into revolt, but enough that the fires remain lit.""''</ref> and its mission as merciful.<ref>{{Citation|https://sunlessskies.fandom.com/wiki/The_Brabazon_Workworld|Converse with the Governor|Sunless Skies|}} ''"The Governor stands by the window. He looks past the tasteless fountain to where an Overseer is sweeping up leaves. "This man here: came here with his parents and worked his way up. Paid off their debts entirely. In a few months, he should be able to afford to leave.""''</ref><ref>{{Citation|https://sunlessskies.fandom.com/wiki/The_Brabazon_Workworld|Converse with the Governor|Sunless Skies|}} ''"He points out a plaque on the wall. "This is a list of the original donors, who helped us set up Brabazon Workworld. They've all contributed to this place: a place where the destitute can learn new skills, and find a home.""''</ref> Many of the wealthy donors who tour the workworld<ref>{{Citation|https://sunlessskies.fandom.com/wiki/The_Brabazon_Workworld|Join a tour of Brabazon Workworld|Sunless Skies|}} ''"A neatly printed sign offers: 'Tours of Brabazon. Witness the Worthy Work of Albion's Unfortunates, Blessed with Toil'. Near it, several well-dressed personages are gathered in a tight group. Occasional guffaws rise above the chatter."''</ref> hold similar views,<ref>{{Citation|https://sunlessskies.fandom.com/wiki/A_Tour_of_Brabazon_Workworld|Watch the rock-breaking|Sunless Skies|}} ''"A stout gentleman with a monocle sidles up to you. "This whole place is just marvellous, eh? Kept busy while paying off debts. Given new skills and education. Simply marvellous.""''</ref> and are completely detached from the lives and suffering of the workers.<ref>{{Citation|https://sunlessskies.fandom.com/wiki/A_Tour_of_Brabazon_Workworld|Visit the glass workers|Sunless Skies|}} ''"A young lady in gaudy finery turns to you. "My parents paid for the main furnace to ensure that the poor would never go without. What did you fund?""''</ref> | The '''Governor''' holds near-absolute power here, especially since the workworld is rather far from [[New London]]'s authority.<ref>{{Citation|https://sunlessskies.fandom.com/wiki/The_Brabazon_Workworld|Converse with the Governor|Sunless Skies|}} ''"The Governor runs Brabazon. In the absence of more direct control from London, he is all powerful here."''</ref> He views Brabazon through heavily rose-tinted glasses,<ref>{{Citation|https://sunlessskies.fandom.com/wiki/The_Brabazon_Workworld|Converse with the Governor|Sunless Skies|}} ''""I'm immensely proud of our workers. Industry's up. Our hour refining is more efficient than ever. Our weavers are the best in the region. I've even heard rumours that Her Renewed Majesty commented positively on a glass piece made by one of our very own blowers." He beams at you. "Albion wouldn't be the same without them.""''</ref><ref>{{Citation|https://sunlessskies.fandom.com/wiki/The_Brabazon_Workworld|Listen to the Governor's request|Sunless Skies|}} ''""Brabazon must be self-sufficient. Without industry to justify their lighting, our fires will go out. We must have work." His brow furrows. "The workers refuse to understand that they live so long as they work. That is not a threat; it is a fact of living here. They require hope. Give it to them. Not enough to stir them into revolt, but enough that the fires remain lit.""''</ref> and its mission as merciful.<ref>{{Citation|https://sunlessskies.fandom.com/wiki/The_Brabazon_Workworld|Converse with the Governor|Sunless Skies|}} ''"The Governor stands by the window. He looks past the tasteless fountain to where an Overseer is sweeping up leaves. "This man here: came here with his parents and worked his way up. Paid off their debts entirely. In a few months, he should be able to afford to leave.""''</ref><ref>{{Citation|https://sunlessskies.fandom.com/wiki/The_Brabazon_Workworld|Converse with the Governor|Sunless Skies|}} ''"He points out a plaque on the wall. "This is a list of the original donors, who helped us set up Brabazon Workworld. They've all contributed to this place: a place where the destitute can learn new skills, and find a home.""''</ref> Many of the wealthy donors who tour the workworld<ref>{{Citation|https://sunlessskies.fandom.com/wiki/The_Brabazon_Workworld|Join a tour of Brabazon Workworld|Sunless Skies|}} ''"A neatly printed sign offers: 'Tours of Brabazon. Witness the Worthy Work of Albion's Unfortunates, Blessed with Toil'. Near it, several well-dressed personages are gathered in a tight group. Occasional guffaws rise above the chatter."''</ref> hold similar views,<ref>{{Citation|https://sunlessskies.fandom.com/wiki/A_Tour_of_Brabazon_Workworld|Watch the rock-breaking|Sunless Skies|}} ''"A stout gentleman with a monocle sidles up to you. "This whole place is just marvellous, eh? Kept busy while paying off debts. Given new skills and education. Simply marvellous.""''</ref> and are completely detached from the lives and suffering of the workers.<ref>{{Citation|https://sunlessskies.fandom.com/wiki/A_Tour_of_Brabazon_Workworld|Visit the glass workers|Sunless Skies|}} ''"A young lady in gaudy finery turns to you. "My parents paid for the main furnace to ensure that the poor would never go without. What did you fund?""''</ref> | ||
Of course, this all stands at odds with the reality of the situation. Many of Brabazon's disgruntled workers are determined to strike and end the workworld's appalling conditions.<ref>{{Citation|https://sunlessskies.fandom.com/wiki/Unrest_at_Brabazon|Unrest at Brabazon|Sunless Skies|}} ''"The workers are resentful. Tempers flare. The spark of revolution is hard to extinguish."''</ref> They can't do it alone, however, and a cadre of [[revolutionaries]] intends to help them.<ref>{{Citation|https://sunlessskies.fandom.com/wiki/The_Brabazon_Workworld|Talk to the revolutionary leader|Sunless Skies|}} ''"I want you to help us fight back, and secure better conditions for everyone who is sent here. [...] We have the will, and the strength, but lack something you have in abundance: freedom. We need provisions and materials. We need someone who can smuggle them in."''</ref> | Of course, this all stands at odds with the reality of the situation. Many of Brabazon's disgruntled workers are determined to strike and end the workworld's appalling conditions.<ref>{{Citation|https://sunlessskies.fandom.com/wiki/Unrest_at_Brabazon|Unrest at Brabazon|Sunless Skies|}} ''"The workers are resentful. Tempers flare. The spark of revolution is hard to extinguish."''</ref> They can't do it alone, however, and a cadre of [[revolutionaries]] intends to help them.<ref>{{Citation|https://sunlessskies.fandom.com/wiki/The_Brabazon_Workworld|Talk to the revolutionary leader|Sunless Skies|}} ''"I want you to help us fight back, and secure better conditions for everyone who is sent here. [...] We have the will, and the strength, but lack something you have in abundance: freedom. We need provisions and materials. We need someone who can smuggle them in."''</ref> Additionally, there is an emerging effort to help workworld employees escape their indentured servitude, called the '''New Street Line'''.<ref>{{Citation|https://sunlessskies.fandom.com/wiki/New_Street_Line|New Street Line|Sunless Skies|}} ''"You are part of the effort to free Workworlders from their employers' tyranny."''</ref><ref>{{Citation|https://sunlessskies.fandom.com/wiki/London#Visit_the_Firebrand_Conductor|Enquire about the work|Sunless Skies|}} ''"Everyone deserves the right to their own hours. To live them at the pace God intended! But on the workworlds a pauper spends a month of their life to ensure an hour of rich man's luxury. [...] Those who escape from the workworlds are hunted. My— Our patron arranges passage for as many as she can."''</ref> | ||
==References == | ==References == |
Revision as of 07:27, 10 October 2024
"The sky smells of smog and furnace-fires. You near the workworld - where debtors, the poor, and the sick are put to use."[1]
The Brabazon Workworld is a massive factory complex in Albion.
Work Them to Death
"Grimy workers trudge from work to home, eating as they go. Time is precious here: minutes not spent at work are given to sleep."[2]
The first of several workworlds[3] established in Albion,[4] Brabazon primarily employs the less fortunate who might otherwise go to debtors' prison[5] - and is rather reluctant to let them go even when their debts have been paid off.[6] Its main purpose is the processing of hours,[7] which, as one might imagine, tampers with how time works in the area.[8] However, its workers also produce rugs,[9] glassware,[10] and raw components.[11]
The workworld is notorious for exhausting the lives of its employees - both due to its abysmal working[12][13] and living conditions,[14][15] and because the workworld and its immediate surroundings run on a faster clock than the outside;[8] workers leave their shifts visibly older than when they entered,[16] and a sentence of "a few years" may manifest more like decades.[17][18] Overseers working in the factories are not exempt, either.[19] It is both unsurprising and understandable, then, that a trade in stolen hours has appeared in Brabazon.[20]
Many former employees retreat to places like Hybras in an attempt to relive their stolen youth.[21] Even more die in Brabazon - and their debt is passed on to their descendants and relatives.[22] It is not uncommon to see entire families working their way out of debt.[23]
Cognitive Dissonance
"He points out a plaque on the wall. 'This is a list of the original donors, who helped us set up Brabazon Workworld. They've all contributed to this place: a place where the destitute can learn new skills, and find a home.'"[24]
The factories of Brabazon are neighbored by a pleasant and painstakingly manicured[25] residential district called Little Nice, after the city in France.[26] This is where its higher-ranking Overseers and Governor live,[26] and where the children of Brabazon's inmates attend school between shifts of work[27][28] in hopes that they may earn their way out of the Workworld more quickly.[29] The district is protected from most of the runoff of time-processing and the fumes coming from the factory.[30] So are visitors, each given a quantity of hours to prevent them from feeling the effects.[31][32]
The Governor holds near-absolute power here, especially since the workworld is rather far from New London's authority.[33] He views Brabazon through heavily rose-tinted glasses,[34][35] and its mission as merciful.[36][37] Many of the wealthy donors who tour the workworld[38] hold similar views,[39] and are completely detached from the lives and suffering of the workers.[40]
Of course, this all stands at odds with the reality of the situation. Many of Brabazon's disgruntled workers are determined to strike and end the workworld's appalling conditions.[41] They can't do it alone, however, and a cadre of revolutionaries intends to help them.[42] Additionally, there is an emerging effort to help workworld employees escape their indentured servitude, called the New Street Line.[43][44]
References
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