cellio: (sca)
Monica ([personal profile] cellio) wrote2005-07-11 11:09 pm
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SCA: badly-behaving peers

A question has come up among some SCA folks, and I'm interested in hearing a broader perspective. Particularly because I've been a peer for a while and have become less active in recent years, it's possible I'm a bit out of touch.

Non-peers: to what extent do you look up to peers (define "look up" however you like)? Are you negatively affected (again, define how you like) if a peer does something bad?

Peers and non-peers: if a peer does something bad, is that significantly worse to you than if a non-peer did it? To what extent does the behavior of an individual peer reflect on his order or on the peerage in general? Does the answer vary based on what the peer did?

I'll post my own thoughts later; I want to hear others' first.

Clarification: "bad" = "behaves badly", not "produces substandard work". Sorry I didn't make that more clear.

[identity profile] estherchaya.livejournal.com 2005-07-12 01:15 pm (UTC)(link)
er... not trying to be completely daft, but um... what is a "peer" in an SCA context? I'm gathering it's less a peer in the conventional sense and more a, well, um, an expert in a field? Someone who has attained some distinction in a field?
jducoeur: (Default)

[personal profile] jducoeur 2005-07-14 09:53 pm (UTC)(link)
Just a terminological followup, which may help clarify: the SCA term "Peer" in this case is drawn from the sense of "Member of the British House of Lords", not "Someone who is a peer of everyone else around". (The former sense derives from the latter, but winds up meaning something very different...)