So_Indecisive
Primordial sin of Sloth
- Joined
- Jun 9, 2022
- Messages
- 227
- Points
- 103
So there's something I've noticed with anime. Not all anime in general but Shonen anime these two deep rooted issues to me are counterintuitive to the ideal of hard work defeating talent and revolution that these works promote.
Whether it be 'Bleach', 'Naruto', 'Dragon ball', 'HxH' and other Shonen works inspired by these, there is a strong element of fatalism and the reality that your bloodline determines your achievements.
'Naruto' is after 'Dragon ball' the most representative figure of this.
Naruto early on is depicted as an unloved orphan boy lacks in talent but uses determination and the friends he made along the way to go from the last in his class to the leader of his village. Let's all be honest in terms of talent no one in his class could directly compete with him his Uzumaki blood grants him enormous amounts of chakra and a strong vitality. His father was the former leader of the village, him becoming the hokage was like a feudal prince inheriting the throne. His teachers one of the strongest people in the village. At the end of the series we even find out that he is the reincarnation of the youngest son of a literal god, there is nothing ordinary about this boy at all.
I will not try to discount Naruto's personal achievements but we cannot deny that more than half of his achievements are due to blood and his parents connections.
Dragon ball's protagonist is an alien with an unreasonable body type everyone knows in dragon ball being a pure human being is the original sin, that's why my boy Krillin's the GOAT.
Let's not even get started with bleach. Ichigo's father is the one of the five major nobles of the soul society and a former captain, his mother a pure blood Quincy.
Another thing is the concept of shonen protagonists being the prophesied saviors of their respective worlds. It just shows that the mangakas of these works or maybe Japanese society in general believes that achievements are decided by fate and the nobility of blood.
Since when did we as a people begin to have the idea that blood determines achievement and people are born nobler than others, because in many literary works the protagonist either changes his race or acquires the blood of a superior race or isn't even human at all.
It seems like even though I'm pessimistic about humanity I still advocate the idea of the indomitable spirit of human beings.
Whether it be 'Bleach', 'Naruto', 'Dragon ball', 'HxH' and other Shonen works inspired by these, there is a strong element of fatalism and the reality that your bloodline determines your achievements.
'Naruto' is after 'Dragon ball' the most representative figure of this.
Naruto early on is depicted as an unloved orphan boy lacks in talent but uses determination and the friends he made along the way to go from the last in his class to the leader of his village. Let's all be honest in terms of talent no one in his class could directly compete with him his Uzumaki blood grants him enormous amounts of chakra and a strong vitality. His father was the former leader of the village, him becoming the hokage was like a feudal prince inheriting the throne. His teachers one of the strongest people in the village. At the end of the series we even find out that he is the reincarnation of the youngest son of a literal god, there is nothing ordinary about this boy at all.
I will not try to discount Naruto's personal achievements but we cannot deny that more than half of his achievements are due to blood and his parents connections.
Dragon ball's protagonist is an alien with an unreasonable body type everyone knows in dragon ball being a pure human being is the original sin, that's why my boy Krillin's the GOAT.
Let's not even get started with bleach. Ichigo's father is the one of the five major nobles of the soul society and a former captain, his mother a pure blood Quincy.
Another thing is the concept of shonen protagonists being the prophesied saviors of their respective worlds. It just shows that the mangakas of these works or maybe Japanese society in general believes that achievements are decided by fate and the nobility of blood.
Since when did we as a people begin to have the idea that blood determines achievement and people are born nobler than others, because in many literary works the protagonist either changes his race or acquires the blood of a superior race or isn't even human at all.
It seems like even though I'm pessimistic about humanity I still advocate the idea of the indomitable spirit of human beings.