- Joined
- May 11, 2019
- Messages
- 8
Whoah now that's something. I did not expect this at all.
It is also in human nature to do none of the above. Whatever we humans do, it is by our choice. That is the human nature, as is condemning people who harm other people, and as is condemning people for making up shitty excuses for people who harm other people.It is in human nature to conquer, subdue and destroy all that it cannot conquer and subdue.
Good thing nobody does that, then. There are, whoever, people who go around and say "sure, I know this action would harm people and you know this action would harm people and everyone around us would harm people, but this is part of this time's/place's culture, so let's pretend it never ever harmed anyone".There’s no need to go around and tell us the story of “ok, we decided this is bad, so now we’re not going to do it anymore and pretend it never happened”, or worse, “this is wrong for me, so it’s wrong for everyone, in any condition, at any time. ”
But you can't read a historical work - because this is the manga we are commenting on, even if slightly fictionalized - with a modern key; you have to read it taking into account the morality and thought that was present at the time. If at that time the emperor was considered a God descended to earth who could get up one morning and have half of his people killed because he wanted to, and slaves were considered as valuable as a laying hen, the only thing you can do is accept it and take it as a given.
Then go read some other manga, There is absolutely no reason a work has to omit moral deficiencies in its telling of a time period just to conform to your sensitivities. Slavery was thing back then, in that place, at that time, and this work depicts parts of it. If you don't like it, get the hell out...There is absolutely no reason why i should see, or read about, a person doing an obviously fucked up thing, and not think "Man, this is one fucked up person".
Is that how you treat fiction you consume? Only read books that contain good things happening to people you agree with, so that you never had to — the horror! — sympathise with a victim of something you consider unjust? Because that approach would explain a lot about the concerning lack of critical thought in some people in this thread.Then go read some other manga, There is absolutely no reason a work has to omit moral deficiencies in its telling of a time period just to conform to your sensitivities. Slavery was thing back then, in that place, at that time, and this work depicts parts of it. If you don't like it, get the hell out...
How did you get that from what I wrote? If a story draws me in and the mc is relatable, I don't much care if good or bad things happen to him/her if it makes sense storywise, unless it goes totally off the rails it's the flavor of a story. Likewise, if good or bad things happen to secondary characters, that may include those who are slaves, I don't really care either way if it's integral to the story or setting. If the story is good, I read. If it isn't, I drop it. If the mc is a slave owner but it's appropriate for the setting(harem, classic greek, sex/war/debt slave, etc etc) and the story is fun to read, I read.Is that how you treat fiction you consume? Only read books that contain good things happening to people you agree with, so that you never had to — the horror! — sympathise with a victim of something you consider unjust?
. ...meaning I'm not fan of bowdlerized(censored) versions simply to make them palatable to modern audience. Which is pretty much the opposite you're accusing me of...There is absolutely no reason a work has to omit moral deficiencies in its telling of a time period just to conform to your sensitivities.
And yet you just advised someone who called out a character in story for bad behaviour to stop reading the story, as if acknowledging characters' faults is the same as not liking the story. Curious, isn't it?How did you get that from what I wrote? If a story draws me in and the mc is relatable, I don't much care if good or bad things happen to him/her if it makes sense storywise, unless it goes totally off the rails it's the flavor of a story. Likewise, if good or bad things happen to secondary characters, that may include those who are slaves, I don't really care either way if it's integral to the story or setting. If the story is good, I read. If it isn't, I drop it. If the mc is a slave owner but it's appropriate for the setting(harem, classic greek, sex/war/debt slave, etc etc) and the story is fun to read, I read.
Pointing the finger at a historical work that tells a horrible reality will not change that horrible reality.
Well, you clearly already have an answer to that: dogpile everyone who dares to acknowledge that characters in works of fiction that do bad things did bad things.So, after blamoring ALL societies in this world from prehistory to World War II – because all societies and all cultures, more or less, practiced slavery and waged war by killing each other cheerfully – what do you think we should do?
More putting words in other peoples mouthes. Booooriiiing. Come up with better arguments, please.Conviction in absentia? To erase them from our memory forever, because they are ugly, dirty and bad they don’t deserve to be studied and remembered?
And after you do, will anything really change? Saying that slavery is bad and prostitution is wrong makes them magically disappear?
That is factually false. Plenty of people are saying that slavery is acceptable, some of them even think that it should be acceptable at this time. That's why pointing out that actually slavery is bad is always good.For the umpteenth time, NO ONE is saying that slavery is acceptable, at any time. But it has always existed, it exists, and unfortunately it will always exist, even if in different forms, because it is in human nature to exploit others, even one’s own fellow men. And it’s not something I’m making up right now that at certain times and places on earth this was the normality, not only accepted but even favoured by culture, politics, even religions.
"Pointing the finger at things" was how all the changes in society started. Followed by people telling those who point fingers to shut up (you know, kind of right you right now), followed by them not shutting up, followed by more voices joining in, followed by decisions to put words into action, followed by action, followed by consequences. And the world we live in, however horrible, is now better for it.Pointing the finger at a historical work that tells a horrible reality will not change that horrible reality.
Not for lack of trying on behalf of those who would like us to shut up 😎Also because it’s gone now, and time doesn’t go back.