{"version": "1.0", "type": "rich", "title": "I always knew Games Workshop was British, and the Warhammer Fantasy factions were obvious mappings of medieval protonations, but...", "author_name": "kontextmaschine", "author_url": "https://kontextmaschine.com", "provider_name": "kontextmaschine", "provider_url": "https://kontextmaschine.com", "url": "https://kontextmaschine.com/post/41489458720/", "html": "<p>I always knew Games Workshop was British, and the Warhammer Fantasy factions were obvious mappings of medieval protonations, but it&rsquo;s only recently struck me how much the W40K factions are mappings of forces from the more modern British imaginary.<br/><br/>Like, the Space Marines obviously take the place of the German war machine of WWII - technologically superior, purity-obsessed totenkopf ubermenchen, defeatable mostly by virtue of not being able to field enough expensive units. The Imperial Guard is the Red Army - tanks, tanks, masses of human-wave infantry, tanks, and ruthless commissars holding things together by executing their own troops.<br/><br/>A more interesting thing is how the &ldquo;British&rdquo; faction is\u2026 the Orks. Their dumb, violent, and happy warband culture is some straight hooligan/casual/skinhead shit, and the &ldquo;run shirtless into battle wielding crap, it&rsquo;ll work because we believe enough in the magic paint we slapped on everything&rdquo; is maximum Celt.<br/><br/>(&lsquo;Course not all the factions are that resonant, especially the more recent cash-in ones. The Eldar are just Tolkein elves\u2026 in space! The Necrons are mummies\u2026 in space! The Tyranids are LOLGIGER, the Sisters of Battle are LOLNUNS. For a culture with an actual chaos magic tradition, the Chaos forces are pretty simplistic drawn-on-binder horn-throwing WOO METAL. The Tau are what, Japan? Maaaaybe nonaligned Scandanavian Social Democrats if you squint, but honestly screw the Tau.)<br/><br/>In this schema it&rsquo;s a little curious how the &ldquo;Nazi&rdquo; and &ldquo;Red Army&rdquo; forces are fundamentally on the same side, though when you add in the wash of Popery I guess it makes sense as a unified British vision of the Totalitarian Other. Which makes it a little amusing that that&rsquo;s the human side. I&rsquo;m sure I&rsquo;m not the first one to note that the whole effect is awfully rightist, though I suppose that&rsquo;s why it fits in so well with the nerd right-populism of the 'chans (as I like to think of it, &ldquo;waifus, warhammer, and white nationalism&rdquo;).</p>"}