Group Leader
- Joined
- Jul 1, 2018
- Messages
- 1,240
Warning: Spoilers for the first 4 chapters ahead.
It might be silly to wax lyrical about a shounen manga that's so clearly based on the male fantasy, but I can't help thinking about all the subtle things it's doing to give itself literary value.
For one, such manga usually begin by giving the protagonist everything he's ever wanted. However, in this case, Zagan begins with power and riches... neither of which seems to give him any real satisfaction. Here's what he lacks:
[ul][*]A comfortable lifestyle (Delicious food, comfortable furniture etc)
[*]Security (he constantly has to worry about intruders)
[*] and, chief amongst all these: human contact. (He has no friends to speak of, let alone a significant other. Barbaros is a frenemy at best.)[/ul]The manga details his bumbling but successful efforts to achieve these things, because these are the things that will give him actual happiness. I don't think anyone can argue that he lived a good life before meeting Nephie.
Then there's the big symbolic value of exchanging his entire fortune for Nephie at the beginning. None of it was things he'd earned; rather, it was things he'd got from another mage. In essence, he decides to exchange his old life for a new one! He leaves behind the ill-gotten gains of the past, and begins earning his living by doing things that help other people. With that, he becomes part of a community instead of a pariah.
I... might need to get a life.
It might be silly to wax lyrical about a shounen manga that's so clearly based on the male fantasy, but I can't help thinking about all the subtle things it's doing to give itself literary value.
For one, such manga usually begin by giving the protagonist everything he's ever wanted. However, in this case, Zagan begins with power and riches... neither of which seems to give him any real satisfaction. Here's what he lacks:
[ul][*]A comfortable lifestyle (Delicious food, comfortable furniture etc)
[*]Security (he constantly has to worry about intruders)
[*] and, chief amongst all these: human contact. (He has no friends to speak of, let alone a significant other. Barbaros is a frenemy at best.)[/ul]The manga details his bumbling but successful efforts to achieve these things, because these are the things that will give him actual happiness. I don't think anyone can argue that he lived a good life before meeting Nephie.
Then there's the big symbolic value of exchanging his entire fortune for Nephie at the beginning. None of it was things he'd earned; rather, it was things he'd got from another mage. In essence, he decides to exchange his old life for a new one! He leaves behind the ill-gotten gains of the past, and begins earning his living by doing things that help other people. With that, he becomes part of a community instead of a pariah.
I... might need to get a life.