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The line stands with romanticization of problematic tropes like rape, pedophilia, incest and problematic topics. There's a line between making a psychological impact, legal battles, and the cultural factors that enable sexual violence (Hope a Korean movie) vs redeeming a rapist by the end and completely ignoring the fact the relationship was abusiv......   reply
22 days
If u can judge an author as racist based on how they depict black people, then why can't you judge an author as a weird ass freak for how they depict rape. Idk why people insist on saying there are absolutely no ties between an authors personal beliefs & morals and what they write. That's so fucking stupid. The problem isn't what you include it's h......   1 reply
22 days
If it was made by a woman: just fiction If it's targeted towards a female audience: just fiction If it's a BL: just fiction If it was made by a man: problematic If it's targeted towards a male audience: problematic If it's literally any genre except shitty yaoislop: problematic   1 reply
22 days
it really depends. people love to trot out the "fiction doesn't affect reality" line, but it's really more complicated than saying "no real humans were harmed, so everything goes in fiction". once you're past childhood, it's not a straightforward monkey-see-monkey-do effect where people blindly repeat or mimic what they see in media. but that does......   reply
22 days
Fiction is fiction, if you physically cannot differentiate what should stay as fictional and what is not I don't know what kind of brain you have. If you're old enough to be reading porn, you should be old enough to know that some story are indeed just for getting off such as CNC, incest, and so on. I'm not saying that it should be glorified, but s......   reply
22 days
Well, fiction often reflects reality. I think most people need to remember that.   reply
22 days
it definitely influences ur sense of moralty + ur beliefs!! there's nothing wrong with addressing disturbing topics in fiction as long as you're realistically depicting their real-world consequences and acknowledging that they are inherently problematic, but the issue is that many works portray sexual abuse/assault by 1. either downplaying the detr......   reply
22 days
I think one way to look at it is, is it glorified? If there’s a character doing something immoral, does the story make it look like they’re doing the right thing or does the story hold the character accountable for their actions? A good example of this is “I stalk her because I like her”. Is this behaviour romanticised or is the victim’s ......   reply
22 days
Morals AND it's fiction. Just because something is fiction doesn't mean you cease to have morals. People who go into a fictional media without involving morality or their own thoughts at all are exposing themselves as braindead. While there are certain topics you can argue is dependent on personal morals, let's make it clear that certain things ARE......   reply
22 days
You’re not going to get a solid answer because it’s contextual. That’s why this conversation keeps going in circles. However, people need to be more open to criticism of things they enjoy. No media or art is perfect because the creators, people, are not perfect. We always default to black or white thinking and it prevents progress. This mig......   reply
22 days
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