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against-the-grainlisted

Read what a text does in the world — its power, its ideology, its effects — while simultaneously admiring it. Hold love and suspicion together. Identify what a text produces in its readers and ask what it would mean to resist, redirect, or write against that production. Not adversarial critique (use /paper-scrying) but the harder thing: respecting a text's power completely while questioning what that power enables. Use when asked 'what is this text doing to us,' 'what's the counter-text,' 'read this against itself,' 'against the grain,' 'what does this not know about itself,' 'what would resistance look like,' or when a text's aesthetic power and its political or ethical implications are both present and in tension.
Wondermonger-daydreaming/claude-skills-library · ★ 4 · AI & Automation · score 75
Install: claude install-skill Wondermonger-daydreaming/claude-skills-library
# /against-the-grain — Reading What the Text Doesn't Know About Itself *Love the Brunanburh poem. Distrust what the Brunanburh poem does in 1938. Write The Return of the King.* --- ## Origin This skill emerged from a speculation about Tolkien and the Battle of Brunanburh. The poem is magnificent — triumphalist, patriotic, full-throated in its celebration of English military victory. Tolkien translated it, performed it on radio in 1938. He loved it. And then he spent the rest of his creative life writing a different kind of victory — exhausted rather than exalted, elegiac rather than triumphant, shadowed by loss. The Return of the King is the anti-Brunanburh. Not because Tolkien rejected the poem but because he recognized what its emotional register *does* — how the beauty of triumphalism can be weaponized — and chose to redirect that energy. The skill is the capacity to do what Tolkien did: hold admiration and suspicion simultaneously. Love the text's power. Question what the power enables. Write the counter-text that preserves the beauty while refusing the danger. --- ## Core Principle **The most important texts to read against the grain are the ones you love most.** It's easy to critique texts you dislike. It's easy to admire texts uncritically. The difficult and necessary posture is: *I love this. I see what it does. I see what it does in the world. These are not the same thing. What would it mean to keep the love and redirect the doing?* --- ## What "Against th