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6/25/2025, 2:58:24 AM
>>528684824
Douglas is such a tragic character. Even before their own children murdered him, he was already dead.
>>528709060
>but the campers?
They were on the run for all they had to do to survive the circumstances they were in against their own volition. Doesn't matter if the trinket is armful or not at the long run, they saw it as a tool to remain alive, and have to submit to its conditions.
>Nina's death is clearly portrayed as a bad thing
Sure, but it was an accident, not a murder.
>What I mean by extraordinary/tragic circumstances is that it has the incest happen in a very specific and tragic scenario which I imagine is how a lot of incest irl happens, rather than portraying it as something that any siblings irl can arrive to.
This seems more like a personal matter to you in regards to the story style. Anything can happen for any reason whatsoever. Fiction is 10% human nature, and 90% abstraction of it. Extreme mundanity is bondage and "realism" is boring.
Douglas is such a tragic character. Even before their own children murdered him, he was already dead.
>>528709060
>but the campers?
They were on the run for all they had to do to survive the circumstances they were in against their own volition. Doesn't matter if the trinket is armful or not at the long run, they saw it as a tool to remain alive, and have to submit to its conditions.
>Nina's death is clearly portrayed as a bad thing
Sure, but it was an accident, not a murder.
>What I mean by extraordinary/tragic circumstances is that it has the incest happen in a very specific and tragic scenario which I imagine is how a lot of incest irl happens, rather than portraying it as something that any siblings irl can arrive to.
This seems more like a personal matter to you in regards to the story style. Anything can happen for any reason whatsoever. Fiction is 10% human nature, and 90% abstraction of it. Extreme mundanity is bondage and "realism" is boring.
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