Actually, the real world is more important than stories. If representation has real-world benefits (it does), then it trumps fictional settings. I don't think they're mutually exclusive at all, but if they were, I'd choose the one that makes the real world a better place every time.CrashGordon94 wrote: ↑Tue Oct 13, 2020 4:24 pmSure, but you shouldn't break your story or setting for it, which is my point. If something doesn't fit, it doesn't fit.
I believe the abundance of examples of your method of critique failing is proof of a major downside that you aren't really acknowledging.CrashGordon94 wrote: ↑Tue Oct 13, 2020 4:24 pmYou could, but it wouldn't matter. The "faulty" ones don't invalidate the legitimate ones.
It is not a fact, it is an opinion. And one I think has some flaws. For starters, instead of thinking about how your bias might be affecting how you view the work, you simply uncritically accept that your view is correct. Framing it as a fact means you don't have to think about it, which feeds into the idea that it's not worth thinking about. But maybe there's value in thinking about how you think about things.CrashGordon94 wrote: ↑Tue Oct 13, 2020 4:24 pmToo bad, that's just a fact and there's no way to break from it without devolving into the "uncritically accept whatever you see on screen" thing you keep weakly saying you don't support (but clearly do if you come out with points like this).
And if you don't want to think about the lens you're using to analyze media, that's fine. Just don't tell other people that they're unthinking when what they're doing is just thinking differently from you. For example, it's actually possible to critically accept whatever you see on screen. To accept it, but then also think about it.
Actually, it's a lot of fancy words for "The experts agree with me. Get rekt scrub."CrashGordon94 wrote: ↑Tue Oct 13, 2020 4:24 pmThat's a lot of fancy words and posturing but at the end of the day, a "framework" where it isn't possible for things to contradict is one that doesn't allow for any analysis at all, any "framework" that actually functions will recognise that sometimes something put into a work won't fit or work.Freeverse wrote: ↑Sat Oct 10, 2020 11:15 pm The vast majority of critical theory is explicitly subjective. The common understanding of critical theory, that essentially anyone doing any kind of serious media analysis follows, is that a subjective framework of one kind or another is both necessary and useful. I am not saying that all critique must follow from the academic model, but by and large, art is understood by the people who study it to be highly subjective.
What I'm saying is that, actually, I'm following along with a so-called "unworkable ideal" that was created long before I was born by a multitude of other people, in a framework that has continued to adapt and evolve throughout my lifetime. I am not the original source of this process, I actually learned it by reading, discussing and thinking about art.
Giving a name to this junker of an ideal doesn't fix that.
But I'm trying to be polite.
It's a paradigm that recognizes all parts of a story, and then chooses to interpret what you would call contradictions as simply another part of the story. Then, having chosen to take this approach, attempts to explore how the pieces all fit together, even if some of the pieces are more complicated or more difficult to place next to each other. And hey, one person might fail to put the pieces together, but assuming that because you can't, no one can, is arrogant.CrashGordon94 wrote: ↑Tue Oct 13, 2020 4:24 pmI never said otherwise, but a paradigm that doesn't allow them to exist and be recognised doesn't allow for any of the other things you claim you care about.
I literally said that I agree with some of the things you say, just not all of them. I disagree with the axiomatic rule you're arguing for, even though there are specific conclusions you arrive at that I nominally agree with. I simply frame them as opinion, while you frame them as fact. That is not backpedaling, it's explaining.CrashGordon94 wrote: ↑Tue Oct 13, 2020 4:24 pmYou absolutely are. You keep claiming to not support what I say you do but that's clearly false if you come out with shit like "there is in fact a place for whatever is inside the story, because that's where it is", the only way to do that is if you support exactly the reductive, uncritical "accept whatever you see on screen without thinking" position I've been pointing out that you do.
Nope. "I liked that! Here's why I liked it! Here's why I think other people might like it! Here's why I think some people might not like it! Here's why I disagree with the reasons I think people might not like it! Here's the parts that I may not have liked, but didn't ruin it for me! Here's how I relate these ideas to my life! Here's an idea about what the author might be trying to say! Here's some cool info related to the work! Here's another work that's similar in ways that I also like! Here's a work that's similar that I didn't like! Here's and why I prefer this thing! Here's some stuff that wasn't in this work that might be interesting in future works of the same setting! Here's a T.V. that looks like an apple..."CrashGordon94 wrote: ↑Tue Oct 13, 2020 4:24 pmThe only way "there is in fact a place for whatever is inside the story, because that's where it is" is if you uncritically accept everything on screen, but otherwise it is absolutely indisputably possible to show things that contradict or don't fit. And such an idea does indeed kill off all analysis and criticism because there's not really anything you can do with uncritically accepting everything other than just go "I liked that!" and stop there. And there's plenty of reason to want to do something other than that, but the ideal you push allows for absolutely nothing else.
I never said it was impossible to point to things that you believe don't fit, only that it is impossible to objectively prove they don't. You can make an argument for why they don't fit, which would involve thinking, or you can make an argument for why a contradiction might actually make sense, which would also involve thinking. You can also think about something else entirely, because art is complicated and there's plenty to think about without even considering that one, tiny element.
What you can't do, is logic your way into having the perfect answer that none shall question because it's so obviously correct that disagreeing is only possible if you're not thinking.
First of all... yes it is. It happens all the time around here. I've been lurking for a while, and there are plenty of posts that indicate, quite strongly, that there are people around here who uncritically accept certain videos of Chuck's. And that's not to mention all the times people disagree with him by saying some version of "I see Chuck's point, but I just like watching this for fun". And that's normal. No one is critical 100% of the time, just like no one can truly "turn off" their brain and completely disengage with all thinking whatsoever.CrashGordon94 wrote: ↑Tue Oct 13, 2020 4:24 pmI could certainly see that uncritically accepting whatever you see might be the othodoxy some places, but certainly not anywhere like here.
But also, you are continuing to make an assumption about my position that I have repeatedly said is untrue. The idea in question is the inherent subjectivity of art. Being subjective is not remotely the same thing as being uncritical. The fact that you seem either unwilling or unable to conceive of a way that someone could think critically while being subjective is bad faith at worst, and a failure to engage at best.