KwisatzHaderach38 t1_j3zbbqp wrote
Reply to comment by failsafe07 in Were muslim armies harder to maintain in the field? by DJacobAP
Doesn't really pertain to where he took the inspiration from, but sure, they're basically a faceless deus ex machina in the show, not much different from the green, scrubbing power of the Army of the Undead in the LOTR films. The ASOIAF books have a lot more nuance, but we'll see how that plays out if he ever finishes the final two.
failsafe07 t1_j3zbzz9 wrote
The book Dothraki are definitely better than the show, although they still have major issues. Bret Deveraux had a great series of articles on the subject over on his blog.
I’m a big fan of GRRM and I really hope he’s able to finish the series, because I badly want to read them, but I also like to acknowledge where he falls short in certain areas
leb0b0ti t1_j3zt7lk wrote
I mean.... It is a work of fiction after all. Why should we judge the historical accuracy of a story about dragons, undeads and magic ?
Redingold t1_j40wuj3 wrote
Because Martin directly claims they're an amalgam of real historical cultures with only a dash of fantasy. He makes a direct claim to historical accuracy and it doesn't hold up in the least. Martin has consciously cultivated the appearance that his series is "how it really was" and that in turn distorts what people think about real history.
leb0b0ti t1_j41dgn2 wrote
Ah ok, didn't know he was making such claims.. Must've been a sales pitch because it doesn't make any sense to claim there's any historical accuracy in a fantasy story about dragons lords.
OisforOwesome t1_j40e3nr wrote
This is one of those cases where historical accuracy would have made the show better.
If the showrunners had cared at all about making the Dothraki a credible threat, a few scenes of them doing actual Mongol horse archery stuff would have gone a long way to establishing why everyone in Westeros was frightened of them instead of that being an informed attribute.
leb0b0ti t1_j41cys8 wrote
I agree that actual horse archery would've been really cool to see on screen !
69SadBoi69 t1_j4098sn wrote
I think he is saying not that they're inaccurate historically but that they are too much of a one-dimensional charicature to take seriously
Spacefungi t1_j40zyf3 wrote
Because he claims to base the Dothraki on real nomadic cultures, and have some realistic worldbuilding with dragons/magic on top. However the Dothraki are based only on stereotypes of nomads, not on these cultures themselves.
https://acoup.blog/2020/12/04/collections-that-dothraki-horde-part-i-barbarian-couture/
KwisatzHaderach38 t1_j3zfxva wrote
Sure, GRRM can't have it both ways. He's specifically mentioned the Mongols, Huns, the great plains nations, all as inspirations because it's a good talking point to sell the pseudo-authenticity of the books, but was very lazy at best in his depictions because he envisioned them functioning as the trope of "barbarians" without actually putting much thought into what that reveals about his own perspective. He's tried to smooth it over with the "mixed with fantasy" qualifiers, but that's pretty weak. Love the books and the show both, but as far as history goes, it's all much more telling about the stereotypes held by the western mind than anything real.
KwisatzHaderach38 t1_j400f02 wrote
In George's defense, at some time in the early 90's this man thought to himself, I want to see ice zombies attacking a gigantic medieval fortress with dragons overhead. I'll always love him for that.
[deleted] t1_j404a9g wrote
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