I'm sick of doomer posts and I want to laugh at hidden weird reactionary sentiments in children's books.

  • extremesatanism [they/them]
    hexagon
    ·
    edit-2
    3 years ago

    My first reply was going to say “no, it’s entirely a story about liberation” but you got me to think about it more and how it kinda runs with a bunch of black-and-white Dickensian tropes.

    yeah, the message of the movie is pretty much objectively good just like Dicken's novels but if you decide to apply an analytical cultural cross-section of it for... Some reason, it comes across as weird. But I know that most people don't do that because doing that is also weird, but I was a weird ass kid. Sorry again for being a sarcastic shit

    Did you read The Twits as a kid? It’s not as well-known but it is definitely an example of Roald Dahl writing some fucked-up stuff, like a step-by-step description of how to gaslight your spouse.

    No and now I am afraid yet want to know more

    • infuziSporg [e/em/eir]
      ·
      3 years ago

      Different people react differently to the same things. For instance, as a kid I got all concerned about stuff in Winnie The Pooh, but not in CATCF.

      Mr. Twit does a thing to Mrs. Twit where he tries to play on her fear of shrinking, so he slowly makes table and chair legs longer until they're much bigger in proportion to her. And a bunch of other stuff, there's large amounts of animal cruelty in there too.

      • extremesatanism [they/them]
        hexagon
        ·
        3 years ago

        For instance, as a kid I got all concerned about stuff in Winnie The Pooh, but not in CATCF.

        Makes sense, I think I freaked out about Winnie the Pooh at least once too

        Mr. Twit does a thing to Mrs. Twit where he tries to play on her fear of shrinking, so he slowly makes table and chair legs longer until they’re much bigger in proportion to her. And a bunch of other stuff, there’s large amounts of animal cruelty in there too.

        What the actual fuck