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Dragonchoice
- Necessity or Destiny?
"'
Kitti Ping made the choices gender imperative.'"
(Dragonsdawn, p 352)
Gender preference is perhaps the most visible quirk exhibited
by Kitti Ping's creations in their Impression choice. Queen
dragonets only choose female riders. Bronze, brown and blue
dragonets only choose male riders. The system would be straightforward
if not for green dragonets who, early in Pern's history, proved
themselves quite willing to flout Kitti's imposed programming.
In this, as in so many of the factors that affect dragon choice,
dragonets demonstrate that their will to survive is stronger
than their need to conform to Kitti's vision.
The gold, bronze, brown and blue dragons do behave as Kitti
intended - selecting riders of their own sex - and this is
frequently interpreted within both canon and fandom as evidence
that gender preference is foremost in a dragonet's mind. It
is, after all, a far more observable and quantifiable criterion
than such intangibles as "telepathic potential"
and "openness". Yet green dragonets would not choose
boys if gender preference were truly their primary concern:
in that case a girl, any girl, would be favourable, whether
a female candidate standing for a queen egg or, failing that,
somebody in the stands. We know this is not so from the undeniable
evidence that greens have chosen boys to the complete exclusion
of girls throughout most of Pern's history.
Why, then, do green dragons exhibit this willingness to defy
gender convention in choosing their riders? It seems highly
unlikely that Kitti had the prescience - or, indeed, the breadth
of mind, given how frequently her traditional tendencies are
mentioned - to foresee a need for greens to choose boys, let
alone the time to programme such a clause into the dragon
template. Neither is there any evidence to indicate that green
dragonets are simply too stupid to distinguish between male
and female minds. While few green dragons are developed in
much detail in canon, much less male-ridden green dragons,
no suggestion is ever made that greens mistakenly believe
their male riders to be female.
The answer to the problem of why only greens choose riders
of the opposite gender is much simpler: the availability of
female candidates was severely restricted from a very early
stage. As if the need to populate a new planet with a limited
gene pool were not reason enough, the initial Threadfall losses
made a woman's childbearing ability her most precious commodity,
and this conflicted with the lifestyle of a fighting dragonrider.
With fifty percent of dragonets hatching out green and a
diminishing number of girls on hand to Impress them, green
dragonets experienced a clash between their natural survival
instincts and Kitti's directive that they choose riders of
their own gender. Instinct won. Green dragonets started to
choose boys when there weren't enough girls, and this in turn
fuelled the decline in female candidates, for there was little
reason to have girls Impress fighting dragons when boys could
take their place.
Yet given a choice between a boy and a girl, both meeting
the initial criteria of telepathic ability and receptivity,
a green dragonet will choose the girl - in this case the compromise
of choosing a male rider, against Kitti's programming, is
not necessary. It is for want of receptivity that this is
seldom seen in canon until Mirrim's Impression of Path. After
centuries of boys, and only boys, Impressing fighting dragons,
what girl would believe herself able to Impress a green? And
a female candidate on the sands for a gold egg might have
both the requisite telepathic potential and the desire to
Impress a queen, but would not consider herself a candidate
for a fighting green. In Mirrim's case, the idea of Impressing
a green had already been planted in her head by Brekke. Believing
herself capable of Impressing a green opened the way for Path
to find her.
Fandom frequently protests that, if boys Impress greens,
girls should Impress blues, but this is flawed logic. Greens
began to choose male riders not on a whim, but because circumstances
- a lack of female candidates - forced it. For a blue dragonet
to choose a girl as his rider, the reverse - a lack of male
candidates - would have to be true. Should this situation
ever occur, then blues, and indeed, browns and even bronzes,
would most probably begin to look to girls as riders rather
than die unimpressed, but the likelihood of a massive drop-off
in the number of boys available to Impress is very low. Unless
a male-specific plague wipes out all the men on Pern, odds
are that there will never be a female blue rider.
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