Linguoboy wrote: ↑Thu Apr 27, 2023 3:15 pm
Raphael wrote:Thinking a bit more about your question, I wonder whether it might be partly because Westerners from countries other than Britain, rightly or wrongly, see the Ancien Régime as a "solved problem", in a way in which modern capitalism and racism aren't.
I'm sure that plays a role. It's far easier to romanticise the aristocracy when you don't have one. But the sort of income inequality and lack of meritocracy that an aristocratic monarchist society embodies is anything but a solved problem in the West.
The fact that things like the
Ancien Régime are in the past, and that the remaining absolute monarchies and authoritarian states are not in the modern West gives people the false image that these things are at least less acute, if not solved.
Linguoboy wrote: ↑Thu Apr 27, 2023 3:15 pm
Travis B. wrote: ↑Thu Apr 27, 2023 1:26 pmOne thing to consider is the difference between what something depicts and what something advocates. Take Game of Thrones for instance - it depicts a thoroughly, ruthlessly, brutally reactionary monarchistic world, but by no means advocates that we should replicate this in our world.
I think that's a false binary. Between objectively depicting a particular worldview and actively advocating for it, there lies normalising it.
Of course it's not a binary. Something can advocate things to varying degrees, and as mentioned in the case of cyberpunk, different people can read the same thing differently.
Linguoboy wrote: ↑Thu Apr 27, 2023 3:15 pm
I grew up in a world where, for instance, the British monarchy was completely normalised. The media was filled with positive depictions of the Windsors (Charles and Diana were married when I was 11 and wedding coverage saturated USAmerican media to the point where I even saw pictures of it in
Discover magazine) and there were no strong anti-monarchist voices around me. Then I learned about the French Revolution in high school and what a very good thing it was that France (and, as a consequence, most of Europe) had eliminated its monarchies. That's when the cognitive dissonance began to set in and it's never completely gone away.
Disclaimer: in the below I am referring to what I have heard others express about the following, not my own personal views.
About the French Revolution, the impression I always got from others was that it was started with good intentions, but soon turned into a gorefest with Robespierre et al beheading everyone they did not like (and not just the Louis XVI and Marie Antoinette but even their fellow revolutionaries), and eventually led to Napoleon. Even then, many seem to be of the view that Louis XVI and Marie Antoinette were deserving of being on the receiving end of the National Razor.
I have heard similar views of the Russian Revolution, that it started with good intentions and even though it turned utterly rotten and finally led to Stalin and his many crimes, Tsar Nicholas II et al were still deserving of what they got.
About the modern British monarchy, the impression I've always gotten from others was that they are basically benign aside from being an absolutely royal waste of taxpayer pounds. When people do bring up things that they do which are rotten, it is usually things like driving Prince Harry and Meghan Markle to leave the UK. People do not seem to equate the modern British monarchy with the
Ancien Régime or the Russian tsars or the Saudi monarchy or like. If anything, they seem to equate it with the other European constitutional monarchives, but bigger.
Linguoboy wrote: ↑Thu Apr 27, 2023 3:15 pm
Similarly with
Huck Finn. It's certainly anti-slavery and--to the extent that it humanises Jim by making him a sympathetic central character--anti-racist to a degree. But it also traffics heavily in racial stereotypes, to the point that Hemingway said it "devolves into little more than minstrel-show satire" after Jim is recaptured. In those chapters, Jim sacrifices his freedom in order to save one of the white protagonists[*], which is depicted nobly instead of tragically, and I'd argue that that reflects and promotes a worldview where Black lives don't matter as much as white lives.
[*] A sacrifice which Twain then renders moot via a deux ex machina.
Oh
Huck Finn is by no means perfect, and I have seen it analyzed multiple ways myself. It itself is a product of its time, no doubt.