Let's try out a thread to cover the whole weekend.
Please use spoiler tags for show content.
Major shows airing this Friday:
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Fire Force Season 2 [Ep6] - MAL
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Uzaki-chan Wants to Hang Out! [Ep5] - MAL
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A Certain Scientific Railgun T [Ep18] - MAL
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Appare Ranman! [Ep6] - MAL
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Food Wars The Fifth Plate [Ep6] - MAL
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Rent-A-Girlfriend [Ep5] - MAL
Major shows airing this Saturday:
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Sword Art Online: Alicization - War of Underworld Part 2 [Ep5] - MAL
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The Misfit of Demon King Academy [Ep6] - MAL
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Lapis Re:LiGHTs [Ep6] - MAL
Major shows airing this Sunday:
Sounds of Cicadas chirping endlessly
(if you think I missed something, please tell me and I'll add it in, absence of something in this list doesn't mean you can't talk about it here)
Feel free to also discuss anything else random/casual you want to discuss here too. Chat, get to know each other. Whatever! It's all welcome.
Previous 6 threads:
What's the consensus on Berserk? Individualist anticommunist rhetoric or proactive anti-savior complex narrative? Can we get a dialectical analysis going?
I have seen people make anarchist anti-authority takes on this. I have not seen people look at it from a marxist perspective, probably because it's quite difficult to interpret anything that happens in terms of class struggle created by contradictions between the productive forces. The takes I've seen have always been anarchist while quite shallow along the lines of his battle being that of a battle against all authority included that of fate itself.
I think some issues arise with even that take because ultimately even anarchism requires collaboration, and Guts fights by himself because he's special. This ties in with typical tropes surrounding power fantasies in media and I believe power fantasies in general are very right-wing.
It has been such a very very long time since I read the material or looked into this topic and my views have definitely developed a lot since my original reading, perhaps someone more up to date could get into more depth about it.
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So I dunno if you're fully caught up, but based on the most recent developments, (actual spoilers ahead)
spoiler
Griffith is basically creating a sort of socialist utopia which is the only safe haven for humans, existing solely thanks to the precarious balancing act of keeping domesticated demons that need to constantly be slaughtering something, and I wondered if this was tying into the sort of individualism that series presents.
In the Conviction arc, when Guts and the crew fight first-hand against the evils of the corrupt church it had strong anti-clerical vibes, but it also portrayed the people worshipping god expecting a divine savior to rescue them as foolish, and they then died for it. I'm wondering if a similar theme might not arise; people flock to Falconia as a safe haven, but, either by deliberate disaster engineered by Griffith or because of the whims of chaos, the system collapses and thousands more people are slaughtered in the end, as a sort of lesson that you can only rely on your own strength.
My initial takeaway is that it can be seen as reactionary, but then again, expecting a savior to come and solve your problems is also ill advised. Just like seizing the reins of state power as a revolutionary will not magically happen by themselves, someone must step forth and put that effort in on their own initiative instead of waiting patiently for the next Lenin to arise.