It works for any marginalized group being discriminated against for who they are and who they’re born as. The point however though is that’s what it’s an allegory for. Y’all are all looking at this too literally. A perfect example of someone missing the forest for the trees. It’s trying to make that overall point. If people don’t remember to look at it in that context they’re missing the point of the story. It’s really just a lack of media literacy from a lot of people in here.
It’s like reading animal farm and not being able to get past the fact that the animals are cooperating. That ain’t the point. It’s the ability, or apparently the lack thereof, of being able to think about a concept abstractly.
That’s not an argument why it’s a good metaphor for racism or homophobia. You’re just saying “it’s a metaphor.”
For what? What - specifically - about Rogue’s condition maps to an experience that occurs in the real world? That she was born that way? That makes it an equally valid metaphor for, like, ugliness.
I know what a metaphor is. I’m asking what is the metaphor? What are we supposed to see and learn from Rogue’s condition? That humans treat each other poorly because we have trouble reconciling our differences? That’s the same metaphor as all the X-Men.
Having examples like her just muddies the waters, because people like her and cyclops are actual living proof that some mutants genuinely are inherently dangerous to others.
A mutant baby can kill its entire family. Humans are at least partially justified in fearing them, or fearing having a child that’s one of them. Not because they’re bigots, but because a mutant child has a much greater chance of causing harm.
That can map to disability - childhood, adolescent, and adult behavioral disorders are a very real issue - but that’s a gross thing to intentionally associate with race.
My brother what the hell? I just made a whole comment about how you’re looking at it too literally and you’re missing the Forest for the trees by focusing on her instead of the general point. Then you made an entire comment focusing specifically on her.
As for whether or not it’s a good metaphor, well that was never the question or anything either of us talked about. But I think yes X-Men is an excellent metaphor for discrimination based upon your birth and who you are. It’s extremely meaningful for a lot of people and I think it’s changed a lot of Minds over the decades.
Lol I’m not taking it literally, I’m taking it analytically. It’s entirely valid to dissect a metaphor and analyze what it means and why. An allegory is itself an argument - a way of using fictional elements to deliver non-fictional ideas. It’s normal to argue for or against the allegory as being a useful delivery system for those ideas.
If it’s not a good metaphor… well, that’s exactly what the rest of us are talking about when we critique the Rogue/Storm thing. You are the only one in the room that doesn’t understand that we are all calling that a bad metaphor.
We know the forest is there, we just think there’s a big stupid tree that is actually blocking our view.
Edit - and for the record, I’m not critiquing the entire forest! The rest of the metaphor is pretty good. But those examples really do undercut their own delivery of the idea.
Storm’s comment was directed at Rogue. The one who was excited about a cure for her horrible condition that makes it so she can’t touch another human being without fucking them up. If literally anyone else had asked if it was true there was a cure then your point would make sense but Rogue actually does need the cure. It was shitty writing to have it be Rouge that got that lecture and people are right to call it out.
It works for any marginalized group being discriminated against for who they are and who they’re born as. The point however though is that’s what it’s an allegory for. Y’all are all looking at this too literally. A perfect example of someone missing the forest for the trees. It’s trying to make that overall point. If people don’t remember to look at it in that context they’re missing the point of the story. It’s really just a lack of media literacy from a lot of people in here.
It’s like reading animal farm and not being able to get past the fact that the animals are cooperating. That ain’t the point. It’s the ability, or apparently the lack thereof, of being able to think about a concept abstractly.
That’s not an argument why it’s a good metaphor for racism or homophobia. You’re just saying “it’s a metaphor.”
For what? What - specifically - about Rogue’s condition maps to an experience that occurs in the real world? That she was born that way? That makes it an equally valid metaphor for, like, ugliness.
I know what a metaphor is. I’m asking what is the metaphor? What are we supposed to see and learn from Rogue’s condition? That humans treat each other poorly because we have trouble reconciling our differences? That’s the same metaphor as all the X-Men.
Having examples like her just muddies the waters, because people like her and cyclops are actual living proof that some mutants genuinely are inherently dangerous to others.
A mutant baby can kill its entire family. Humans are at least partially justified in fearing them, or fearing having a child that’s one of them. Not because they’re bigots, but because a mutant child has a much greater chance of causing harm.
That can map to disability - childhood, adolescent, and adult behavioral disorders are a very real issue - but that’s a gross thing to intentionally associate with race.
My brother what the hell? I just made a whole comment about how you’re looking at it too literally and you’re missing the Forest for the trees by focusing on her instead of the general point. Then you made an entire comment focusing specifically on her.
As for whether or not it’s a good metaphor, well that was never the question or anything either of us talked about. But I think yes X-Men is an excellent metaphor for discrimination based upon your birth and who you are. It’s extremely meaningful for a lot of people and I think it’s changed a lot of Minds over the decades.
Lol I’m not taking it literally, I’m taking it analytically. It’s entirely valid to dissect a metaphor and analyze what it means and why. An allegory is itself an argument - a way of using fictional elements to deliver non-fictional ideas. It’s normal to argue for or against the allegory as being a useful delivery system for those ideas.
If it’s not a good metaphor… well, that’s exactly what the rest of us are talking about when we critique the Rogue/Storm thing. You are the only one in the room that doesn’t understand that we are all calling that a bad metaphor.
We know the forest is there, we just think there’s a big stupid tree that is actually blocking our view.
Edit - and for the record, I’m not critiquing the entire forest! The rest of the metaphor is pretty good. But those examples really do undercut their own delivery of the idea.
Storm’s comment was directed at Rogue. The one who was excited about a cure for her horrible condition that makes it so she can’t touch another human being without fucking them up. If literally anyone else had asked if it was true there was a cure then your point would make sense but Rogue actually does need the cure. It was shitty writing to have it be Rouge that got that lecture and people are right to call it out.