Double-page supporter
- Joined
- Dec 25, 2019
- Messages
- 197
It's funny how much hate "My Hero Academia" has gotten lately, and people seem to enjoy reading it to the end to say it's bad.
I'm not going to put MHA in first place either, but Deku's story and the others have always had more to do with "helping others" than "being the most powerful of all". Something that, I could be wrong, Horikoshi left more between the lines than in the main plot.
In Brazil, the joke that stuck is that "Deku ended up a salaried employee (CLT), single and without recognition".
But hey, did you know that the most powerful people are teachers? All Might became a teacher, remember? Some of the heroes in the MHA universe are teachers too. MHA is a universe of people with quirks, and Deku has always been the exception (he was born without a quirk). And those who didn't pay attention missed the penultimate chapter (Deku going to talk to Uraraka is a clear sign of sentimental interest. And I believe that on the penultimate page, there is a discreet image of Deku and Ochaco talking).
As for recognition, I understand that given the mechanics created in the story, Deku was happy - although a little upset - to be a teacher at UA. The last page of the story (the conversation with All Might giving Deku a uniform) only satisfied the fans. But it would be OK if Deku were just a teacher too. Statues are nothing more than representations of desires - and this was a common metaphor throughout the story, just see that the All Might Statue was always a reference to the story - either to be vandalized when the heroes failed, or to be a meeting point and hope for the population when it was meant to be.
My Hero Academia, as someone on Twitter would say, is sort of Paulo Freire's "Pedagogy of the Oppressed" in manga - it's how a person grows up in a universe and learns how to be a citizen within it. Midoriya is a true progressive, a leftist, a guy who would do anything to talk to his opponent before resorting to violence - and he has ALWAYS been like that. Muscular, Shigaraki, etc... in most of the fights he tried to talk, either before or after.
Anyway, chatter aside, I hope the story gets a few more spinoffs to settle doubts once and for all (like the origin of quirks and how the universe of the series came together). There's no need to make a "Dekoruto" or "Shipudden".
Thanks to Horikoshi (who knows if he reads English forums...) and thanks to everyone who followed the series. 10 years of patience... imagine those who read One Piece...
I'm not going to put MHA in first place either, but Deku's story and the others have always had more to do with "helping others" than "being the most powerful of all". Something that, I could be wrong, Horikoshi left more between the lines than in the main plot.
In Brazil, the joke that stuck is that "Deku ended up a salaried employee (CLT), single and without recognition".
But hey, did you know that the most powerful people are teachers? All Might became a teacher, remember? Some of the heroes in the MHA universe are teachers too. MHA is a universe of people with quirks, and Deku has always been the exception (he was born without a quirk). And those who didn't pay attention missed the penultimate chapter (Deku going to talk to Uraraka is a clear sign of sentimental interest. And I believe that on the penultimate page, there is a discreet image of Deku and Ochaco talking).
As for recognition, I understand that given the mechanics created in the story, Deku was happy - although a little upset - to be a teacher at UA. The last page of the story (the conversation with All Might giving Deku a uniform) only satisfied the fans. But it would be OK if Deku were just a teacher too. Statues are nothing more than representations of desires - and this was a common metaphor throughout the story, just see that the All Might Statue was always a reference to the story - either to be vandalized when the heroes failed, or to be a meeting point and hope for the population when it was meant to be.
My Hero Academia, as someone on Twitter would say, is sort of Paulo Freire's "Pedagogy of the Oppressed" in manga - it's how a person grows up in a universe and learns how to be a citizen within it. Midoriya is a true progressive, a leftist, a guy who would do anything to talk to his opponent before resorting to violence - and he has ALWAYS been like that. Muscular, Shigaraki, etc... in most of the fights he tried to talk, either before or after.
Anyway, chatter aside, I hope the story gets a few more spinoffs to settle doubts once and for all (like the origin of quirks and how the universe of the series came together). There's no need to make a "Dekoruto" or "Shipudden".
Thanks to Horikoshi (who knows if he reads English forums...) and thanks to everyone who followed the series. 10 years of patience... imagine those who read One Piece...