Han SeungHee and Jeon JinSeok - One Thousand and One Nights, vol. 02, 04 (Eng. trans.)

Sep 06, 2008 21:39

This series keeps enraging me, but I read on because the art was so gorgeous. Thankfully, I have been released, since the author's note in volume 4 annoyed me so much that I refuse to pick up more! Ha, freedom ( Read more... )

a: jeon jinseok, manhwa: one thousand and one nights, a: han seunghee, sequential art, manhwa, feminism

Leave a comment

cicer September 7 2008, 05:06:01 UTC
...Huh. You know, I'm not sure why these things don't bother me about this series but...they don't! I'm a total feminist, and frequently get pissed of with sexism and misogyny in various shows, movies, and books, but somehow this one just didn't push my buttons at all, and now I'm kind of curious why. I honestly have no idea. *scratches head*

I admit that blurb from the author is extremely awkwardly phrased, but I think what she meant was that she didn't like the whole idea of the battle between the sexes/emphasizing the difference between men and women/the struggle for power between genders/etc. As I said, uncomfortably phrased, but I truly think she meant it in a pretty innocuous way. YMMV, of course.

By the by, I actually didn't interpret vol. 4 as 'let's blame his issues on his cheating mom'. Instead, I interpreted it as 'let's blame them on his crazy dad who thought it would be a good idea to murder his cheating wife in front of their ten-year-old son'. It actually made me a lot more understanding of his character, because (much like some men abuse their wives because their dads abused their mom) he just had a really crappy and traumatic example of what relationships between husbands and wives were supposed to be.

But like I said, YMMV.

Reply

oyceter September 7 2008, 05:21:43 UTC
I think I could have even kept reading the series had it not been for the author's note. I mean, I know it's not a feminist series, but sometimes there's enough leeway for me to put my own pretend spin on things.

It was just her note had every single argument against feminism in it that I see over and over and over, from "I don't call myself a feminist" to "But what about the men?" It drives me crazy. Also, though I think any sane human being would blame the sultan's issues on his insane father, the spin the manhwa seems to be giving is on the mother-the focus is all on his mother and her influence on him, not on his father, and as such, it shifts the focus of his Issues onto his mom in terms of narrative weight.

Reply

cicer September 7 2008, 05:29:12 UTC
Yeah, I get that. There does seem to be more narrative weight on the mom. I can't quite tell if that's because that's how the author wants it, or that's how the character perceives the situation, but I can see how it might feel very sexist to some.

And yeah, the author's note does make me vaguely uncomfy in the 'what about the men?' feelings it gives off, but I'm able to excuse it as just being poorly phrased. I don't blame you for being P.O.-ed, though. Like I said, this series somehow doesn't hit my feminist-rage buttons, but I can certainly see how it might hit someone else's. :/

Really, I'm mostly just in the thing for the pretty art. I admit it. XD

Reply


Leave a comment

Up