Ingrid Bolsø Berdal as Sergeant Delphine Angua von Überwald in 'Going Postal' |
About Delphine Angua Von Überwald:
"Her senses sharp and a mind that’s quick.... few escape the piercing gaze that sees beneath all pretense and facade... those who know she has two forms, respect and fear to tread the paths that may cause her wrath...but those who lack this insight or wit...seldom learn much past their first meeting."
- ScottMan2th
Angua by Tolman Cotton http://www.deviantart.com/art/Sergeant-Angua- 262669447 |
Women In Fiction: Delphine Angua von Uberwald, Terry Pratchett's Discworld
Somewhere around the 12th or 13th book in a series which now numbers over thirty, Terry Pratchett subtly segued from writing Dungeon Dimensions fantasy stories to writing social satire with a fantasy finish. The shift was gradual, as the Discworld (a flat world on the back of four elephants and a space turtle) was always simply a more magical mirror through which to see this world. It was probably around the time that the books about the Ankh Morpork City Watch hit their stride that it began to happen; I like to think that the introduction of one of fiction's most kick-ass female characters helped to spur this on.
Delphine Angua von Uberwald is the first woman to join the City Watch. She has to put up with the jokes and the gestures and the badly beaten out breastplate. What's more, she really knows what it's like to have a bad hair day: she's a werewolf.
If you think PMT is bad, try suffering from Pre-Lunar Tension. Hair follicles swelling, nails lengthening, acute awareness of the full moon. It's easy enough to be a werewolf if you don't care about being human, but Angua's an ethical werewolf. She's a vegetarian three weeks out of the month; whilst happy enough to unleash her deadly jaw when keeping a criminal (like her brother) in check, during the week when she's, ahem, sleeping in a basket, farmers in the Ankh Morpork area scratch their heads when chickens go missing but money has been pushed under the door.
Working with a vampire (in Thud), she comes up against her biggest prejudices and born instincts. Vampires, with their innate capacity for style and sensuality, make her feel like she's just a grubby, scruffy dog. And, after all, doesn't anything that's part-human and part-wolf have to be just a little bit dog-like? Her boyfriend, Carrot, is the heir of Ankh Morpork's long-defunct throne, but he likes to pretend he isn't. However, it turns out charisma comes with the genetic territory. While it would never occur to him to abuse it, being the Nicest Man on Earth, if he even thinks of whistling, she comes running.
Angua is undoubtedly one of the best-written female characters in modern fantasy fiction; in any fiction, for that matter. She's grumpy, true, but she's also intelligent, logical, loyal and a trustworthy copper. She does her job methodically, throwing herself into an investigation against her own family when it's called for. She kindly passes on hints, tips and unwanted clothing to the dwarf girls who are, against years of tradition, allowing themselves to be recognised as women (although it'll take another few centuries to lose the beards... they're still dwarfs after all). She's tough and uncompromising and relishes the compensations of being a werewolf, such as being able to track the scent of any criminal even days after they've left the scene.
One of Pratchett's great strengths as a writer is playing with stereotypes and social groups without ever giving in to them. Dwarfs, trolls, humans, vampires, zombies and werewolves all have their typical characteristics, but they're all individual characters, too. Angua's intelligence and sense of morality set her apart from many of her kind, but she can also be stubborn and narky (traits she shares with the resolutely sensible Susan Sto Helit, Death's granddaughter). However, she's never helpless, and it's wonderful to see, in a genre where authors are imagined to be pale and twitchy, sweating slightly over their female creations, proof that fantasy is not just for men, and that woman can be represented fairly and with style.
Alex Roumbas is Deputy Editor of Shiny Shiny. She's been reading the Discworld books, in order, since 1996 and shows no sign of stopping.
Thank you to: http://www.dollymix.tv/2007/07/women_in_fiction_delphine_angu.html
Finally. It all comes out. High time, too. So now we know.
ReplyDeleteBut the unanswered question is Why?
Just for fun Robert.
DeleteDelphine Angua = Katherine de Chevalle - like identical twins. Thanks for clearing up that particular mystery. I confess that Terry Pratchett is not my cup of tea but each to their own. Your enthusiasm is definitely infectious but I've been vaccinated.
ReplyDeleteI didn't much like the first couple of books. I found them a bit silly and annoying, There seemed to be too many 'in' jokes and the footnotes irritated me. But he hooked me with the third and after that I was lost. Having said that, I only read Patrick O'Brian these days.
DeleteI've read DW Volume 1 and never really got much further than half way through Vol 2. I rather like the character of Delphine Angua von Überwald so I might one day just pop forward to that Volume. I did find many of his names and references very clever and I'm intrigued by her name and the reference to an 'over forest' if my translation is correct.
ReplyDeleteGeeb, Angua definitely has a slightly Germanic background...
DeleteThe earlier volumes weren't as good as the middle ones. 'Night Watch', for example, is very good. I think. Of course, to enjoy Pratchett, you mustn't be too serious and nit-picky. Suspend belief and read for fun.
I just thought I'd mention that I'm on the 5:2 diet too.
ReplyDeleteAha. Partner in eating. Do you have a particular day(s) of the week Cro? I tend to work around what's on, but I usually do Tuesday and Thursday. How long have you been doing it?
DeleteMy nephew is a huge Terry Pratchett fan. You have inspired me to give him a try over the Christmas holidays. I am always looking for female protagonists to use in my male dominated games programming classes. And like the gentlemen, I was wondering about your blogspot name too ~ maybe a good old Google search would have answered our question, but not as succinctly.
ReplyDeleteI think you might enjoy Angua. And also her dwarf friend Cheery. Vime's wife Sybil is formidable (she raises dragons), but in a different way to Angua. And of course there's Granny Weatherwax, (who is the mistress of the practice of Headology) and Nanny Ogg, and ...and ... plenty more!
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