Yes, the gender swap characters - that's exactly it :)
I think the concept of the goddess has done a great disservice to Brigit. I've been reading Celtic stuff ahead of publishing my thing, and Brigit definitely is in a category with Hephaestus and the Lightbringer and other gods of cleverness, craft and the forge. This often seems...de-emphasised by her goddessliness, when I see her written and drawn; she's never filthy with soot and sweat with the smile which is the pleasure of the mastery of her craft and hair out of place. She's always a bit...motherly, slender, white skinned and we'll dressed.
I love the idea that the differently gendered Finnish spirits might genuinely represent different aspects. I think you're on to something. I can't think right now of any equivalent deity system, although there are a couple like Frig/Frigga where Deities appear as male or female and we're not sure if they're the same or not. Hmmm.
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I think the concept of the goddess has done a great disservice to Brigit. I've been reading Celtic stuff ahead of publishing my thing, and Brigit definitely is in a category with Hephaestus and the Lightbringer and other gods of cleverness, craft and the forge. This often seems...de-emphasised by her goddessliness, when I see her written and drawn; she's never filthy with soot and sweat with the smile which is the pleasure of the mastery of her craft and hair out of place. She's always a bit...motherly, slender, white skinned and we'll dressed.
I love the idea that the differently gendered Finnish spirits might genuinely represent different aspects. I think you're on to something. I can't think right now of any equivalent deity system, although there are a couple like Frig/Frigga where Deities appear as male or female and we're not sure if they're the same or not. Hmmm.