My Fanfics. Read 'em. Or not.McJon01: We all know that the real reason Archer would lose to Rider is because the events of his own Holy Grail War left him with a particular weakness toward "older sister" types.
Realized today all the Counter Guardians we've seen are Japanese.
let us consider - momentarily, without revisiting more complex media-ecological topics which i have discussed in this thread before - that writing, or if you like, the recording of signs, SIGNIFICATION, is a gift from the gods. the ability of writing to convey meaning in the absence of a speaker - a ghostly 'non-presence' of enculturated tradition so tospeak, the authority of a BOOK, or a STONE TABLET, an INSCRIPTION - is originally divine. mythologically this is on a sound basis. almost every literate culture of antiquity has some kind of origin story which posits a divine origin for the practice of recording signs. Fu Xi in china, cadmus (a demigod) in greece, etc. the gods come down and teach humans how to write. it is, ab initio, a DIVINE MYSTERY in a very precise sense. [I would like you to incidentally recall phenomena like the High Speed Divine Language, the Universal Language, and so on]. that tales of ancient heroes and so on are RECORDED at all, that we know about them, that they gain the materiality and authority of a TRADITION - this itself is a mystery which echoes divinity.
now - what happens in 'human history'? many things, but among them, very prominently in terms of how human history is retroactively 'perceived' is precisely the immense extension, intensification, and mechanisation of the PRACTICE OF WRITING. from the stylus in clay --> the quill pen on vellum ---> the printing press on paper ---> the rotary electric press on newsprint ---> typewriters on letterheads ---> word processors on floppy discs ---> smartphone keyboards on twitter. human civilisation in a large sense has brought itself to the status of an immense, unparalleled, continuous, ceaseless, process of INSCRIPTION. always, everywhere, some kind of writing, recording, signification, is going on.
now what happens, in TM, when a [divine] mystery becomes widespread, well-known, no longer secret or the preserve of a select few?
answer: the mystery declines, and technology replaces it. (source: rin tohsaka's anus, fsn prologue)
why is it that persons who are KNOWN ABOUT AT ALL only through a mass industrialised culture-industry apparatus (in a larval form throughout much of the 19th century) should not be 'heroic spirits' in the same sense that we should expect persons who existed in the BC to be? the answer, ADVANCING LOGICALLY FROM NASU'S OWN PREMISES - is that the mystery of their being recorded at all, is gone.
かん汗ぎゅう牛じゅう充とう棟
Expresses the exceeding size of one's library.
Books are extremely many, loaded on an oxcart the ox will sweat.
At home piled to the ridgepole of the house, from this meaning.
Read out as 「Ushi ni ase shi, munagi ni mitsu.」
Source: 柳宗元「其為書,處則充棟宇,出則汗牛馬。」— Tang Dynasty
She invented the polar area chart, which is like the pie chart but much more visually impactful to scream her point louder and more clearly.
That just replaces "Heroic Spirits are made by cultural significance of their legends" with "Heroic Spirits are made by being recorded at a certain period of time". Which is arguably even worse as their qualities become completely meaningless.
Last edited by Blastedspider; June 6th, 2020 at 02:55 AM.
But that's still a function of their age more than anything else, isn't it. There's no difference between Ancient Greece recording ten or twenty famous demigods versus the, I dunno, one hundred contempraries found in Indian literature. If the act of recording their legend was enough to bestow mystery on them, then following Nasuverse (apologies for using the word) premises and proliferation of the written word diluted it then that should have somehow become notable before the modern age, no?
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There's also the subject of Heroic Spirits that existed as real people at some point versus pure fabrications put into paper versus potentially real people deified after the fact.
Last edited by Deathhappens; June 6th, 2020 at 03:41 AM.
shit BL says
Once and always and nevermore.
underestimating the quantitative and qualitative transformation in writing/inscription brought about first by paper media then by movable-type printing. indians have 100 heroes greeks 20 or whatever - at that early stage the quantities aren't so important as long as media technologies qualitatively, as how they structurally enforce 'monopolies of knowledge' (closure, rarefication, secrecy, mystery). see harold innis "empire and communications" - early chapters on ancient egypt, ancient rome - on time-biased versus space-biased media.
Last edited by Dullahan; June 6th, 2020 at 03:58 AM.
かん汗ぎゅう牛じゅう充とう棟
Expresses the exceeding size of one's library.
Books are extremely many, loaded on an oxcart the ox will sweat.
At home piled to the ridgepole of the house, from this meaning.
Read out as 「Ushi ni ase shi, munagi ni mitsu.」
Source: 柳宗元「其為書,處則充棟宇,出則汗牛馬。」— Tang Dynasty
I see.
but unironically.
かん汗ぎゅう牛じゅう充とう棟
Expresses the exceeding size of one's library.
Books are extremely many, loaded on an oxcart the ox will sweat.
At home piled to the ridgepole of the house, from this meaning.
Read out as 「Ushi ni ase shi, munagi ni mitsu.」
Source: 柳宗元「其為書,處則充棟宇,出則汗牛馬。」— Tang Dynasty
Is it me or is Sigma relative unpopular. Like for example this MADof the entire fate series, the f/sf part has every master servant pair EXCEPT for Sigma and watcher. Mean dude is literally 1/2 of a main protagonist and barely gets fan art or discussion. AYAKA (other 1/2 of the main protagonist) on the other hand gets like a ton of fanart (thx richard) and discussion about her identity
Tfw your GF gets more fanart that you.
Sigma is a pretty uninteresting boy.
Ayaka is a mysterious cute girl.
It was obvious who would be more popular. The rest of the cast being so much crazier also overshadows him.
Sigma has heavy Narita Protagonist syndrome, comparable to Firo or either of the drrboys. He tries to write the Tohno Shiki by writing a blandass regular joe and telling the reader about his DARK PAST and how he FUCKS and KILLS MEN and might be ACTUALLY CRAZY, and then that never gets brought up again and he gets a big tiddy tomboy girlfriend for no apparent reason and with no apparent chemistry. No, two autistic people will not ever be attracted.
Narita protagonist is always the worst part of the Naritawork, can't prove me wrong. This character is a deliberate move to create someone a normal person could possibly empathize with among all these eccentric cool people doing cool things, which then proceeds to fail on every level because instead of a normal person he writes a predictable robot because he fails to grasp that such characters are only ever defined by being made stranger by their immediate context.
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He kinda tried to go out of his comfort zone with Mark Zuckerberg, but it just made everything worse.
I'm not up to date with FSF, but I'd argue Sigma is worse than at least the guys from DRRR. They have the benefit of starting out as the regular, relatable person being dragged into this crazy world, only to later be revealed as always being part of it all. The suddenness and scale of the twist makes for great moments.
Sigma starts out already as this super special edgy character, referencing Fate/Zero, with the novel emphasizing his status as a solo agent while also being part of one of the factions. Any attempt at being the relatable human character was already thrown out of the window by that point, leaving only his boring personality as a hint that that was supposed to be his role, but Narita goes further still by setting him up as the chosen one.