2013-02-07, 14:14 | Link #11961 | ||
The Mage of Four Hearts
Author
Join Date: Mar 2010
Age: 33
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You know, I figured Shiranui was going to save herself, actually.
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2013-02-07, 14:20 | Link #11962 | ||
Homo Ludens
Join Date: Nov 2007
Location: Canada
Age: 34
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The whole problem with the way Medaka behaved before the election was that she was behaving that way for the wrong reasons. That's why calling her a monster back then made sense. Now it doesn't. Quote:
As an aside, I really liked those two this chapter. |
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2013-02-07, 14:37 | Link #11963 | ||
The Mage of Four Hearts
Author
Join Date: Mar 2010
Age: 33
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Kotobuki, at least, is the same sort of monster as Fukurou, which is a different sort of monster from Iihiko, but still a monster, so forgive me if I don't take the fact that they agree with Iihiko to mean we should agree with Iihiko.
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2013-02-07, 14:41 | Link #11964 |
Member
Join Date: Dec 2009
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From Iihikos point of view it makes sense. Shiranui copied Iihiko. Theres nothing left to fight over, even worse she would destroy in that fight the body of the person she tries to safe. If anything she could try to appeal to whats left of Shiranui. Thats what Nienamie will try, supported by her style, i predict.
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2013-02-07, 14:59 | Link #11965 | |
Homo Ludens
Join Date: Nov 2007
Location: Canada
Age: 34
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Quote:
Well, maybe I'm wrong and next chapter we'll get some admittance that, no, Medaka should no longer be considered a monster. Then I will be satisfied. |
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2013-02-07, 15:07 | Link #11966 | |
The Mage of Four Hearts
Author
Join Date: Mar 2010
Age: 33
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Why not? Because morally speaking, their views are repugnant, and their reasoning is repugnant, so the fact that they agree with Iihiko is supposed to clue us in that Iihiko is wrong here.
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2013-02-07, 15:42 | Link #11969 |
Senior Member
Join Date: Apr 2012
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Ofttimes, it is difficult to differentiate between "obvious author stand-in soapboxing" and "we are supposed to not agree with these people, it is only their opinion". Especially since even villains can serve as the author's mouthpiece, on occasion.
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2013-02-07, 18:06 | Link #11970 | |
Romanticist
Join Date: Aug 2009
Age: 33
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Quote:
Yep. This is no longer a matter of her being selfish or selfless anymore. By virtue of her sheer stubbornness, her absolute refusal to submit to anyone else's standards, she's a monster right down to the core. Take note that calling her a "monster" doesn't mean that she's an abhorrent person, but rather that she's completely alien to the idea of humanity. She's too perfect a person, right down to her unshakeable will. Even Iiihiko, who used to a hero, couldn't keep fighting until the end.
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2013-02-07, 20:45 | Link #11973 |
Junior Member
Join Date: Feb 2013
Age: 30
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Well, her heart has been destroyed. There's a hole that has the size of a hand with pretty sharp claws in her stomach. Her body is covered in injuries since her fight against Iihiko in Shiranui village - who used nothing more than glasses to utterly defeat her. She saw her attack being reflected, and right after she came back and used her final trump card...Iihiko just came back, possessing Shiranui's body. Right after, he blocked her strongest attack with nothing more than a single finger. In my point of view this is already more than enough for someone to despair, but Iihiko went as far as killing(?) her friends right in front of her...And she was still trying to stop him.
...After all this, you can't really blame Iihiko for calling her a monster. At this point, a lot of heroes would be probably reaching the despair event horizon.
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2013-02-07, 21:28 | Link #11975 |
Senior Member
Join Date: Oct 2011
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that's true, but the reason why they never give up and never fold even if they have absolutely no logical reason to continue is because they have purpose. the purpose usually is about "for my friend" or "to "protect something", if the purpose was lost then do you expect them to continue. (like ichigo from bleach when all of his friend memories were modified)
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2013-02-08, 00:16 | Link #11977 | |
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Join Date: Aug 2008
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Quote:
Last edited by Thth; 2013-02-08 at 00:44. |
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2013-02-08, 08:09 | Link #11979 |
Senior Member
Join Date: Oct 2007
Age: 35
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"Bakemono" is a fine word to describe Medaka. I disagree that the word "monster" carries any moral implications--it represents only a judgement, a presumption, on the part of the accuser. By nature, the word "monster" only carries connotations of something unknown, beyond comprehension, of the ones using that word. Fear, desperation, uncertainty--to be called a monster is to be put into a position of inherent superiority.
All sentient minds, born into the social context of humanity, will tend to think of themselves as "human" (or try to become "human"). By developing some natural concept of "human" within themselves, they come to naturally define a contrasting intuition called "monster". The accusations of Medaka's 'monstrosity' right now belong to Iihiko alone. Kakegae and Kotobuki might agree with him conceptually, but it is only Iihiko himself who has experienced the irrational feelings of fear and repulsion. Iihiko defined a "hero" to be "a person with a purpose". And he defined a "human" to be "someone who lives just to live". Beyond these two definitions, other types of human are beyond his comprehension. That is why Medaka has become a monster to him: because she has been reduced into a mess possessing neither a purpose, nor the self-preservational instinct necessary to live. Medaka's trampling by Iihiko represents a complete breakdown of her self. There is no way to treat her senseless "determination" as a victory; neither any way to believe she carries any hint of her former heroic nobility. Instead, what Medaka's singleminded desperation (and the results it brought her) can represent is only something broken; as Kakegae said, someone like a chronic gambler, spiralling into self-destruction. However, what I think Medaka's breakdown proves in itself is Medaka's humanity--because humans are irrational, weak, self-destructive and pointless. Iihiko's neat, rational explanations "Heroes have a purpose", "Humans just try to live" are precisely the reason why Medaka became an incomprehensible monster to him--he cannot comprehend irrationality, can't hope to grasp self-destructive weaknesses. Medaka is superior to Iihiko in the nature of being human. That is the victory I think she earned over Iihiko in this chapter. She is human because only someone with Iihiko's monstrous strength could call Medaka's actions in this chapter those of a monster. Medaka only did something any weak, irrational, desperate human, would be capable of doing--clinging onto someone's legs, and not giving up. |
2013-02-08, 12:22 | Link #11980 |
Senior Member
Join Date: Apr 2012
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I want to say: I am absolutely not satisfied with this chapter.
Return please to me a "true" Medaka. This is sort of a fake - as is Medaka-3. True Medaka never despaired. True Medaka always thought in a critical situation as a calculator. True Medaka always collated goal and means. Shiranui why is so important to her? This is what is skewed to mad battle manga, where friendship more important than love or other people? |
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action, comedy, harem, nishio, romance, shounen, student council |
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