What a lot of fans don't seem to get is that it is all about personality types, not functional specialties, or political recruiting. Girls are "recruited" for Ajahs based on the perception that they will fit in with the rest of the club. There might be SOME competition for girls who could go either way, but there doesn't seem to be any political advantage to having a larger Ajah, all seven being equally represented in the Hall, and thus the political process. There are no popular referendums or votes that affect anything outside of an Ajah, so really, all that increasing the number of sisters in your Ajah does, is dilute the effect of your vote for Sitter or First Whatever, as well as increase the competition for those positions. When they were both raised to full sisters, Seaine had a much easier road to the Hall than did Pevara.
I think it’s pretty obvious that most women end up in a specific Ajah based on personality traits, but being an emotionless prig only gets you into the White if you are also a Logician as well. The reverse, however, doesn’t seem true … one can be a logician minded person, but if she does not have the proper disposition she’s likely going to end up elsewhere. Much like we see how circumspect Reds are about any positive feelings they may have for men. Pevara had to really hunt to find a handful of women in her Ajah who she felt weren’t actually man-hating. I’ll never understand how a dark friend uprising that killed her family drove her to the Red, seems like the Green would have been even MORE interesting to her unless the dark friend that killed her family was also a male channeler.
Regarding your point on Ajah size, I would say politics in the Tower are far more reliant on extra-Ajah alliances with other groups than anything else, so there might be more going on with the Ajah Heads and between “rank and file Aes Sedai” than we really know. The tidbits we hear on alliances in New Spring and later from Siuan hint that the Hall reacts in voting blocks to these alliances, but since we know that Sitters will be un-chaired if actual collusion is discovered this seems to point to Ajah Heads having secret meetings beyond what we already knew about. Possibly informing Sitters of their Ajah’s what the latest alliance shifts are all about and explaining why trouble between Sisters 100 years ago outside of the Tower had created more strain between the Blues and Yellows. It’s reasonable to assume that members of the Ajah outside of Heads and Sitters are involved in the inner-Ajah politics too. For example, the White Ajah Sitters were not aware of what Alviarin was up to since Seaine, Saroiya were not involved in raising Elaida, and Ferane, the Ajah Head, didn’t seem to punish Alviarin for breaking with the Blue-White alliance in the Hall, nor did Adelorna take issue with Talene for participating in the breaking of the Green-Blue alliance. It would seem that these women were likely somewhat involved in over-throwing Siuan, if not directly giving permission, then by remaining silent on the breach of long standing alliances and perhaps even colluding with Galina, Suana and Jesse to orchestrate it. Obviously others were involved such as Shemerin, Danelle (aka Mesaana) and Joline so it seems like Tower politics run far deeper than just the Sitters and Ajah Heads.
Actually, I don't get the impression anyone really knows much about the Ajahs. Aes Sedai especially seem to be more inclined to quell any though of an outsider judging or making distinctions among the sisters: as far as anyone else is concerned, they are ALL Aes Sedai, and that's all anyone needs to know. They don't WANT people favoring one Ajah or another, or judging any sister by any criteria other than possession of shawl and ring. Until the Wondergirls start getting deeper into their training, even the readers don't know much about the differences. We had no idea what the Greens were all about, or why they had so many Warders, until Egwene asked Alanna in tDR (something she and Elayne both failed to pick up throughout their entire novitiate). That said, fighting supernatural threats DOES seem to be the most obvious notions to occur to people signing up for such an organization, even if they don't know exactly who does it. We would have thought Auror was a cool job in the Potterverse even if we never knew there was a word for it.
True, yet it’s fairly well recognized that Aes Sedai have varying functions. Everyone knows some basics like the Red hunt males and the Greens fight in the Blight. Healing is also a well-known function even right from the start of the series. Women who are likely to go to Tar Valon to become Novices clearly know that they will at the very least receive an education. Which was the point of my earlier post, women come to the Tower seeking something they assume the Tower can fulfill, and that likely pre-disposes them toward certain Ajah. I think this contributes to the relative size of each Ajah because it somewhat pre-selects who even comes to the Tower. Reds and Greens have the most obvious purpose to an outsider. Women seeking knowledge would also be drawn in and be predisposed to Grey/Yellow/Brown/White depending on the type of knowledge and the personality involved, but because this isn’t the most widely known part of being Aes Sedai this is a smaller group.
As readers we didn’t know more than the TR folk until we learned from them learning, IIRC we don’t even encounter a Green until Alanna, aside from casual mention, RJ didn’t really get into the Ajahs beyond the Blue and Red until TDR and beyond … I’m not even sure we knew all 7 colors until then. Early in the series we really only met Elaida, Liandrin and Verin outside of the Blue … aside from a couple of mentions like Serafelle or Maigan and Anaiya (I think) being in Fal Dara. We don’t really get introduced to all of the Ajahs until TSR when more Aes Sedai start interacting with the main cast.
Anyway, it seems that in WoT, women adhere rather closely to a number of common generalizations, many of which I have heard expressed in the real world as well. Even the differences in saidar & saidin reflect this, as do the distribution of the Five Powers, and the mechanics of linking.
One of the perceived differences between men and women is that men tend more to abstract loyalties and ideals, while women tend to more visceral, immediate and personal loyalties and priorities. According to this worldview, a woman might fight as fiercely as a man, but in the manner of a she-bear defending her cubs, instead of for a flag or a slogan. Such women merely transpose the subject of feminine ferocity to a nation or a political agenda or whatever.
Note that both of the combat Ajahs are focused on defense and countering threats: the archetypal feminine priority of security. And they link methods with personalities: the Greens are militaristic, while the Reds are more like LEOs. Although the initial impression of the Greens was highly sexualized, later sources assert that most Aes Sedai-Warder relationships are chaste. Elayne notes as much as well, that her early interest in the Warder bond was based on adolescent romanticizing situations which were nothing of the sort. And even the first impressions of the Greens support this view, rather than a retcon: the first observed difference by a PoV character is that on the road from Fal Dara to the ship for Tar Valon, the Greens are up late every night talking cheerfully with their warders at their campfire. If they were actually the nymphos of reputation, they would have been in the tents getting it on. That is the reality of Greens vis a vis men: they like their company, and get into masculine type stuff (being one of the largest Ajahs, they are also much less likely to be of a personality type). They need that, because they have to accompany armies. They COUNTER the Dreadlords with the Shadow's forces, they don't do the fighting themselves. For that you need troops. So that's why Alanna says you have to love men. Even Cadsuane, for all that she seems to be a 300 year old virgin from one of the most notoriously misandrist societies in WoT, has compassion and understanding for men where few other people in the entire world do. Her behavior after Rand is wounded by Fain is the most telling example of this, I think. How many other sisters would have heeded Min's admonition about his reaction to waking up surrounded by strange Aes Sedai. Cadsuane is not the sort to slack on security, so she could not have seriously been afraid of what he might do. The only explanation, which fits with her promise to her unconscious charge, is that she is concerned about the psychological harm it might do Rand, and that she wants to spare him that.
So even though they are entirely feminine in manner and reputation, the Greens like men. The Reds, on the other hand, resent and suspect them, like cops do minorities. Yet, while they might not have the strict military-inspired hierarchies of the Greens, they appear to match their "opposites" in discipline and control and the authority granted their Ajah Head. What's more, they, more than any other Ajah, seem to maintain an "us against the world" mentality, which probably reinforces how the Ajah with the largest population, tends to adhere most closely to its stereotypes. There should be more atypical Reds than other Ajahs, but they seem to be more universally hardassed than the rest. Even the more humanized ones like Tarna, Pevara and Silviana could at the mildest be called "tough but fair".
And these are the stereotypes of women in masculine pursuits or authority positions. One of the boys, or a battleaxe. Reveling in their feminine distinctions, or rejecting masculinity altogether (as the epitome of symbolic womanhood, there is no role in the story for an Aes Sedai who rejects femininity or embraces masculinity, much less a whole Ajah of them - even the most homosexual Aes Sedai we see, Galina, is femme & not butch), but they are both unquestionably female archetypal personalities, for all they are supposed opposites. And they are the largest Ajahs, because in WoT, male and female have been forced into opposition by the Shadow, when they are supposed to be working together.
The Blues and Whites are the smallest, because ideals and logic are both aspects of abstract thinking, which is a masculine archetype. In between are the Yellows, with their nurturing, and the Grays with their conciliation and peace-making. The scholasticism of the Browns is not a typical female role, but hardly avoidable given the fantasy archetypes of the magical scholar, not to mention the scholastic experience of the PoV characters who are our window inside the Tower. I think even if there was no Shadow threat or taint, the Greens and Reds would still be pretty big, but would have different focuses. Maybe take that investigative and law enforcement thing Beonin seems into from the Grays. But they would still be considerable in number, because their personality types are so important in the spectrum of female activity. They are the two most involved with men, and a key aspect of the WoT ethos is that while they are distinct and discrete by necessity, the genders must work together. Functional societies in WoT have specific roles, and especially authority positions, for each sex. Many different lands show similar perceptions of what is male and what is female, such as the respective spheres of influence of the First Prince of the Sword in Andor, and the Master of Blades among the Sea Folk, and even the King of Tarabon in contrast with the Panarch. Men and women have to work together, so it stands to reason that the two most important personality types for women are those geared toward dealing with men, one way or another. Not to mention the feedback mechanism by which balance is maintained in WoT would have two such contrasting types of approach to dealing with men. The affection & acceptance of the Greens is balanced by the wariness & scrutiny of the Reds. The other Ajah personality types would represent the sorts of women who can take or leave men, or have then in their lives on specific terms (family members/Warders), but whose lives are not ABOUT men. If they have careers, they are technical or traditionally feminine, as opposed to say, military or business or skilled heavy labor (which are the types of women who join the Green or Red).
One of the perceived differences between men and women is that men tend more to abstract loyalties and ideals, while women tend to more visceral, immediate and personal loyalties and priorities. According to this worldview, a woman might fight as fiercely as a man, but in the manner of a she-bear defending her cubs, instead of for a flag or a slogan. Such women merely transpose the subject of feminine ferocity to a nation or a political agenda or whatever.
Note that both of the combat Ajahs are focused on defense and countering threats: the archetypal feminine priority of security. And they link methods with personalities: the Greens are militaristic, while the Reds are more like LEOs. Although the initial impression of the Greens was highly sexualized, later sources assert that most Aes Sedai-Warder relationships are chaste. Elayne notes as much as well, that her early interest in the Warder bond was based on adolescent romanticizing situations which were nothing of the sort. And even the first impressions of the Greens support this view, rather than a retcon: the first observed difference by a PoV character is that on the road from Fal Dara to the ship for Tar Valon, the Greens are up late every night talking cheerfully with their warders at their campfire. If they were actually the nymphos of reputation, they would have been in the tents getting it on. That is the reality of Greens vis a vis men: they like their company, and get into masculine type stuff (being one of the largest Ajahs, they are also much less likely to be of a personality type). They need that, because they have to accompany armies. They COUNTER the Dreadlords with the Shadow's forces, they don't do the fighting themselves. For that you need troops. So that's why Alanna says you have to love men. Even Cadsuane, for all that she seems to be a 300 year old virgin from one of the most notoriously misandrist societies in WoT, has compassion and understanding for men where few other people in the entire world do. Her behavior after Rand is wounded by Fain is the most telling example of this, I think. How many other sisters would have heeded Min's admonition about his reaction to waking up surrounded by strange Aes Sedai. Cadsuane is not the sort to slack on security, so she could not have seriously been afraid of what he might do. The only explanation, which fits with her promise to her unconscious charge, is that she is concerned about the psychological harm it might do Rand, and that she wants to spare him that.
So even though they are entirely feminine in manner and reputation, the Greens like men. The Reds, on the other hand, resent and suspect them, like cops do minorities. Yet, while they might not have the strict military-inspired hierarchies of the Greens, they appear to match their "opposites" in discipline and control and the authority granted their Ajah Head. What's more, they, more than any other Ajah, seem to maintain an "us against the world" mentality, which probably reinforces how the Ajah with the largest population, tends to adhere most closely to its stereotypes. There should be more atypical Reds than other Ajahs, but they seem to be more universally hardassed than the rest. Even the more humanized ones like Tarna, Pevara and Silviana could at the mildest be called "tough but fair".
And these are the stereotypes of women in masculine pursuits or authority positions. One of the boys, or a battleaxe. Reveling in their feminine distinctions, or rejecting masculinity altogether (as the epitome of symbolic womanhood, there is no role in the story for an Aes Sedai who rejects femininity or embraces masculinity, much less a whole Ajah of them - even the most homosexual Aes Sedai we see, Galina, is femme & not butch), but they are both unquestionably female archetypal personalities, for all they are supposed opposites. And they are the largest Ajahs, because in WoT, male and female have been forced into opposition by the Shadow, when they are supposed to be working together.
The Blues and Whites are the smallest, because ideals and logic are both aspects of abstract thinking, which is a masculine archetype. In between are the Yellows, with their nurturing, and the Grays with their conciliation and peace-making. The scholasticism of the Browns is not a typical female role, but hardly avoidable given the fantasy archetypes of the magical scholar, not to mention the scholastic experience of the PoV characters who are our window inside the Tower. I think even if there was no Shadow threat or taint, the Greens and Reds would still be pretty big, but would have different focuses. Maybe take that investigative and law enforcement thing Beonin seems into from the Grays. But they would still be considerable in number, because their personality types are so important in the spectrum of female activity. They are the two most involved with men, and a key aspect of the WoT ethos is that while they are distinct and discrete by necessity, the genders must work together. Functional societies in WoT have specific roles, and especially authority positions, for each sex. Many different lands show similar perceptions of what is male and what is female, such as the respective spheres of influence of the First Prince of the Sword in Andor, and the Master of Blades among the Sea Folk, and even the King of Tarabon in contrast with the Panarch. Men and women have to work together, so it stands to reason that the two most important personality types for women are those geared toward dealing with men, one way or another. Not to mention the feedback mechanism by which balance is maintained in WoT would have two such contrasting types of approach to dealing with men. The affection & acceptance of the Greens is balanced by the wariness & scrutiny of the Reds. The other Ajah personality types would represent the sorts of women who can take or leave men, or have then in their lives on specific terms (family members/Warders), but whose lives are not ABOUT men. If they have careers, they are technical or traditionally feminine, as opposed to say, military or business or skilled heavy labor (which are the types of women who join the Green or Red).
By and large I agree with your points here. I would note that RJ pulled a lot of role reversals for his world which I think plays into what you are discussing above and in some cases flips it on its head IMO. While the Yellows, Greens and Reds fall directly into the gender norms you discuss I think the Greys and Blues flip gender roles in standard WOT fashion. Nearly every successful culture in WOT is led by female negotiators/law makers/political figures. Domani, Sea Folk, Far Madding, Mayene, Andor, Aiel and to a degree the Seanchan all have women in the key roles for trade and legal and political leadership, relegating the men to “the muscle”. Meanwhile, Cairhein, Illian, Tear and the Borderlands are far more aggressive and warlike and led by the male half of society and we see them portrayed as either somewhat villainous or noble in the extreme, but also as societies that are fundamentally flawed, even when we are supposed to see them in a positive light we are shown that they are a bit foolish or perhaps stagnant (i.e. Tenobia is essentially a woman trying to be a man and thus ends up an ineffective ruler).
Back to Ajah … I guess what I’m getting at is that RJ was deliberately trying to take what we think of as masculine archetypes and portray them as feminine archetypes in his world, thus we get Greens who are actually not all that sexual after all and Reds who are kind of sexually predacious like Toveine. Leane is the only Green we see who is even remotely sexualized or IMO “feminine” by real world standards, and like all Domani women she doesn’t actually follow through. Merise, Cadsuane, Elza, Vandene, Asne and Seonid (who’s a lesbian) look at men more like dogs to be trained than as objects of affection. The Reds are more feminine IMO, we certainly have more horny Reds anyway! I think Galina is what one could call “butch in the streets, femme in the sheets” she is sexually aggressive and essentially sexually harassed Tarna and was moving in the same direction with Erian.
I think that women who are not members of an Ajah are not good judges of whether or not a peer would fit. Seaine thinks Pevara would make a good Green, but how much does she know about what goes on in the Green OR Red Ajahs? If Pevara is not a great Red, how did she become a Sitter? She might have a different view of the Ajah's methods, and odd tastes, but that doesn't necessarily exclude her from what makes a really good Red. Egwene, superficially, would be a great Red, because she has no real positive or affirming relations with any men. She is a constant critic and always in an adversarial position with the men in her life, even Gawyn. But her actions, she would seem to hate them. From her first appearance, to his last thought about her, Rand is always on target about her opinions or reactions, and feels compelled to ask her not to pick the Red. But Egwene and the Greens don't think so.
Functionally speaking, there is a lot of overlap between Ajahs. Alanna says as much when describing what the Greens do. She is a better Healer than Verin, Cadsuane hunts men better than any Red (and some readers have accused her of having typical Red attitudes towards men), Elayne is a superb diplomat, Vandene is as learned as a Brown, and Egwene as devoted to her cause as any Blue.
The Blues range in Healing ability from Moiraine, who is excellent, to Sheriam, who is Egwene's touchstone example of an Aes Sedai who can't do it. They have field agents like Moiraine, and bureaucrats like Siuan.
From the other end, a lot of sisters we see could do well at more than one Ajah's function, as you seem to be pointing out. By the metric of the specializations, Cadsuane could be a Red, she concentrates on causes like a Blue, and however atypical her methods, is as effective a diplomat as a Gray. Moiraine is enough of a soldier and warrior to impress the Borderlanders (and seems to have spent as much time along the Blightborder as many Greens her age), she is a good Healer, and by quantity over quality, blows any Red out of the water at male channeler hunting with her single find. I don't see much indication that the average Yellow would have done much better at the common form of Healing. Elayne is credited with sufficient political acumen to impress Blue sitters, she is diplomatic (and legal-minded) enough for a Gray, and her reverse engineering talents could probably find a scholastic outlet. She is the most "head over heart" thinker of any major female character, and with the right philosophical training could do well in the Whites. I don't think anyone doubts Nynaeve could do just as well in the Green as the Yellow or even the Red, given her quirky intuitive methods of reading people and figuring things out. She passionate enough to get into causes, and had experience sitting in judgement that she might make a good Gray. Egwene could do Blue or Red, as mentioned above, though I don't think she'd make a good Brown or White, and she's too abrasive and flexible for a Gray, but she would be an acceptable Yellow, if you swallow Suana's Sandersonian formulation. By that token, Verin, Cadsuane and Elayne would make good Yellows, too.
Anyway, my point is that while functionally, a given woman might be good for many different Ajahs on paper, I think it's really a matter of personalities and thought process, and how you get along with certain types of people. Nynaeve would not get along with the Green hierarchy ( "other people...made stupid rules" ), Egwene would let herself be diverted from pursuit of a channeler or her cause, for another one, Elayne would be too much more interested in the results instead of the process for Tower politics or negotiating treaties. Elayne is a fighter, who works well within hierarchies and goes after enemies without counting the cost or risks. That makes her a Green, not skill specialization. Egwene shares those traits to a large degree, and that's pretty much what the two of them have in common. Whatever other traits and skills Nynaeve has in her arsenal, her focus, from the first time she channeled through the end of the series, has always been about healing. Even her momentary fixation on avenging the mess Moiraine made of the Two Rivers folks' lives was in a misguided belief that it would somehow fix what Moiraine did to them. Her insights and abilities to figure stuff out could be a form of diagnostic talent.
Functionally speaking, there is a lot of overlap between Ajahs. Alanna says as much when describing what the Greens do. She is a better Healer than Verin, Cadsuane hunts men better than any Red (and some readers have accused her of having typical Red attitudes towards men), Elayne is a superb diplomat, Vandene is as learned as a Brown, and Egwene as devoted to her cause as any Blue.
The Blues range in Healing ability from Moiraine, who is excellent, to Sheriam, who is Egwene's touchstone example of an Aes Sedai who can't do it. They have field agents like Moiraine, and bureaucrats like Siuan.
From the other end, a lot of sisters we see could do well at more than one Ajah's function, as you seem to be pointing out. By the metric of the specializations, Cadsuane could be a Red, she concentrates on causes like a Blue, and however atypical her methods, is as effective a diplomat as a Gray. Moiraine is enough of a soldier and warrior to impress the Borderlanders (and seems to have spent as much time along the Blightborder as many Greens her age), she is a good Healer, and by quantity over quality, blows any Red out of the water at male channeler hunting with her single find. I don't see much indication that the average Yellow would have done much better at the common form of Healing. Elayne is credited with sufficient political acumen to impress Blue sitters, she is diplomatic (and legal-minded) enough for a Gray, and her reverse engineering talents could probably find a scholastic outlet. She is the most "head over heart" thinker of any major female character, and with the right philosophical training could do well in the Whites. I don't think anyone doubts Nynaeve could do just as well in the Green as the Yellow or even the Red, given her quirky intuitive methods of reading people and figuring things out. She passionate enough to get into causes, and had experience sitting in judgement that she might make a good Gray. Egwene could do Blue or Red, as mentioned above, though I don't think she'd make a good Brown or White, and she's too abrasive and flexible for a Gray, but she would be an acceptable Yellow, if you swallow Suana's Sandersonian formulation. By that token, Verin, Cadsuane and Elayne would make good Yellows, too.
Anyway, my point is that while functionally, a given woman might be good for many different Ajahs on paper, I think it's really a matter of personalities and thought process, and how you get along with certain types of people. Nynaeve would not get along with the Green hierarchy ( "other people...made stupid rules" ), Egwene would let herself be diverted from pursuit of a channeler or her cause, for another one, Elayne would be too much more interested in the results instead of the process for Tower politics or negotiating treaties. Elayne is a fighter, who works well within hierarchies and goes after enemies without counting the cost or risks. That makes her a Green, not skill specialization. Egwene shares those traits to a large degree, and that's pretty much what the two of them have in common. Whatever other traits and skills Nynaeve has in her arsenal, her focus, from the first time she channeled through the end of the series, has always been about healing. Even her momentary fixation on avenging the mess Moiraine made of the Two Rivers folks' lives was in a misguided belief that it would somehow fix what Moiraine did to them. Her insights and abilities to figure stuff out could be a form of diagnostic talent.
I think we have a ton of examples of misconceptions around an Ajah not your own! Tons of stereotyping too “typical Brown with her head in the clouds” etc… I actually think Egwene would be a better Green because she looks at men as tools or as something to be trained to “the proper way of thinking” a Red would be more inclined to ignore men altogether, which I don’t think Egwene was capable of. Honestly I always thought of her as more of a Blue than anything, but that might have more to do with her political actions than her personality.
I think we are supposed to see Pevara as some kind of bridge into the side of the Red Ajah that we didn’t see in the beginning of the series. All of the early Reds were essentially villains, but at some point RJ decided to show us that there are good women in the Ajah too so we got Pevara, who should/could have been a Green, Sashalle who is honest and capable and political like a Blue and Silviana who is tough but fair and sought justice even though it would cost her personally.
I think you misunderstand the point I was getting at about cross-function. Clearly all Aes Sedai are trained to do as many functions as might be necessary so you have women like Cadsuane who has done more than most Reds in terms of serving their purpose. To me that’s not much different than a random person helping put out a house fire … you might not be a firefighter, but you aren’t going to do nothing if the house next door is on fire. Cadsuane has 2 huge reasons for being so in the thick of things with male channelers: 1. She’s spent hundreds of years “in the field” increasing the odds of her encountering them. 2. She has her ornaments that make them obvious to her. Moiraine having a strong Talent doesn’t speak much to her personality really, but she acts a bit like a Green and a bit like a Grey. I would imagine the Yellows probably paid attention to her early on when her ability with Healing was noticed, but it’s also clear that they didn’t pursue her.
I doubt that's a unique Blue philosophy. They don't care about what other Ajahs care about, so to them it doesn't look like the others are making good use of their people, but what do they really know about what the others want?
Moiraine might show a variety of interests and Ajah talents, but they are all in service to her cause. She does or becomes whatever she has to in order to serve that cause. Even rejecting a life of politics, the supposed main skill of her chosen Ajah.
I don't think the Blues are necessarily politicians, they are idealists and activists, and it is an indicator of the current state of the Tower that idealism and activism translates into political scheming and power games. The political focus is hardly unique to that Ajah, either. How many Yellows do we see running around the world looking to Heal? All of them seem far more oriented toward the Tower than might be expected, and only the Reds have the excuse of being on top of things, what with the world remaining unbroken for three thousand years, and even RJ giving them credit for being so effective at hunting men that they have culled the trait from the population. Every other Ajah's chosen specialization seems to have a negligible effect on the world, except maybe the Whites, who explicitly don't care. What matters in choice of Ajah is how and why you use whatever skills, regardless of with which Ajah they are generally associated.
Moiraine might show a variety of interests and Ajah talents, but they are all in service to her cause. She does or becomes whatever she has to in order to serve that cause. Even rejecting a life of politics, the supposed main skill of her chosen Ajah.
I don't think the Blues are necessarily politicians, they are idealists and activists, and it is an indicator of the current state of the Tower that idealism and activism translates into political scheming and power games. The political focus is hardly unique to that Ajah, either. How many Yellows do we see running around the world looking to Heal? All of them seem far more oriented toward the Tower than might be expected, and only the Reds have the excuse of being on top of things, what with the world remaining unbroken for three thousand years, and even RJ giving them credit for being so effective at hunting men that they have culled the trait from the population. Every other Ajah's chosen specialization seems to have a negligible effect on the world, except maybe the Whites, who explicitly don't care. What matters in choice of Ajah is how and why you use whatever skills, regardless of with which Ajah they are generally associated.
Maybe, but it’s also clear that Blues don’t really believe in “specializations” whereas we’ve seen Whites, Greys and Browns who seem pretty specialized in what they study and Reds, Greens and Yellows are inherently rather specialized based on their purpose. Seems like the women in those Ajah who are not specialized are the outliers rather than the norm (Cadsuane) as opposed to the Blue who seem to encourage generalization. Even their purpose is open to all sorts of interpretation.
Yes I agree with the comment that Blues are idealists and activists I think that aligns with “seekers of justice and causes” etc. I would also say that I think we got a heavy dose of the most political women in the Tower as that tends to breed itself right along with OP strength since that is the most direct/easy route to power for Aes Sedai. Just look at the women who hang around Tar Valon … almost all of the strongest women hang around the Tower rather than run around out in the world. Nearly every woman with strength above 16/17 seem to hang around the Tower unless they are sent on some kind of mission. Only when they retire do they seem to leave the Tower, but the weaker women seem to roam out more … probably so they don’t have to deal with the stupid hierarchy. If I was Cabriana or Dagian I’d be out there too instead of spending my life as a jumped up Accepted!
Domani Drag Queen in the White Tower ... Aran'gar watch out!
Noticed something odd
13/10/2016 09:31:54 PM
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Familiarity breeds contempt?
14/10/2016 12:41:44 AM
- 997 Views
Re: Familiarity breeds contempt?
17/10/2016 06:35:20 PM
- 769 Views
Ironically, that was a rather ill-informed comment
18/10/2016 11:25:44 AM
- 711 Views
Re: Ironically, that was a rather ill-informed comment
18/10/2016 03:54:23 PM
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Well the Seanchan. even more than the Aiel, are a completely alien culture
19/10/2016 12:09:01 AM
- 734 Views
Possible, yet we know there are also "arms men" throughout every nobles lands
19/10/2016 04:38:39 AM
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Re: Ironically, that was a rather ill-informed comment
18/10/2016 04:02:54 PM
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Re: Ironically, that was a rather ill-informed comment
18/10/2016 05:03:58 PM
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Re: Ironically, that was a rather ill-informed comment
18/10/2016 07:18:13 PM
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I think politics keeps women away from the Blue
18/10/2016 10:20:50 PM
- 594 Views
I think it's RJ's gender commentary - Blue are ambitious, which is not a stereotypical female trait
19/10/2016 02:57:51 AM
- 792 Views
By and large agree ... more thoughts on this tomorrow when I'm in front of my computer, on iPad now *NM*
19/10/2016 05:19:20 AM
- 310 Views
Sorry, I am gonna ramble a bit
19/10/2016 09:19:01 PM
- 756 Views
Re: Sorry, I am gonna ramble a bit
19/10/2016 09:48:17 PM
- 567 Views
Re: Sorry, I am gonna ramble a bit
20/10/2016 06:13:27 PM
- 673 Views
Re: Sorry, I am gonna ramble a bit
20/10/2016 07:14:51 PM
- 530 Views
I guess that's my issue with it
20/10/2016 09:53:38 PM
- 685 Views
Technically men would only be a threat up to a certain age(which they should know) unless trained..
21/10/2016 08:47:20 AM
- 785 Views
The Seanchan are not a military culture. That's why they are so good at it.
19/10/2016 12:21:36 AM
- 648 Views
Forget the "locals"... IIRC Aes Sedai have kids "rarely" not "never".
14/10/2016 06:40:56 AM
- 617 Views
Another good point!
14/10/2016 03:28:44 PM
- 597 Views
... Oh! I get it it now. The Tower likely just sends sisters out of the city to have their kids. lol
14/10/2016 04:38:30 PM
- 591 Views
I think the numbers of Aes Sedai mothers really are very very low, or secret
15/10/2016 01:10:11 AM
- 794 Views