Nietzslime wrote:You know, the thread's kind of moved on from where it started, but for what it's worth there's nothing really wrong about enjoying a book for its world or setting and the technical or clockwork aspects of its construction that make it up. Some people prefer to analyze this part of a story, the setting, along metrics they are more familiar with because it makes it more comfortable when they imagine this world, and since most works have an element of either otherness or escapism of some kind at some point most normal people will imagine themselves in that world, and how they would interact with it. I mean, if that wasn't the case, aesthetic parts of books would be basically meaningless and attractive people would find very little success in Hollywood. The question 'What would it be like to [be an ad executive in the 60s, be a New Jersey mob boss, rule a fantastical kingdom]?" naturally extends to "What would I do in those places?" and that's a pretty powerful and iconic thing that narratives allow us to do. Having a superiority complex to this sort of reading is ludicrous and moronic.
How about where it's so shallow and uncritical it's not even right
Like people who just repeat uncritical dialogue as fact within the work when this is clearly not the case or reduce powerful moments of character work to 'opened the door a bit slow'
I'm not talking about analysing your bullshit fantasy show
I'm talking about people who both examine a work closely or repeatedly and are actually ignorant of basic facts within it because they don't even try to connect anything
I mean if I see something I might think 'let's look that up see what the fans think surely they know more'
And all you find is bald repetition of the superficial events (spot went to the zoo, spot was happy) and no real understanding of them
How can you be obsessed with something and never ask any questions about it