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One shit post but I don’t really care much for Ningguang – don’t get me wrong, she’s fascinating in her own right, but I don’t vibe w/ her and I’m still sus of her but anyway: the symbolism of what happens in the battle of 1.3 is pretty interesting given that we know that she’s a very ambitious character who values mora but also:
[SPOILER]
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One shit post but I don’t really care much for Ningguang – don’t get me wrong, she’s fascinating in her own right, but I don’t vibe w/ her and I’m still sus of her but anyway: the symbolism of what happens in the battle of 1.3 is pretty interesting given that we know that she’s a very ambitious character who values mora but also:
[SPOILER]
Keep reading
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I like to think Yuu is something of a teacher’s pet at this point. Like, not the smartest but still gets off easy when in trouble. Gets more help with work and extra lessons.. Not letting Crowowley steal them during classes bc he needs help (that’s totally a thing right?). Just Better treatment in general
I mean if the weird homeless alien kid kept fixing all of the schools problems without understanding most of them and making everone’s jobs easier, yeah, they get special treatment.
#next up on worshipping MC#Yuu has a fan club#i don't take criticism#i can't actually#bc i'm right#twisted wonderland#twst#mc#yuu#Yuu/MC
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so Lilia being a bad cook probably has something to do with the absolute disaster that was the three fairies preparing for Aurora’s birthday and this brings me strange joy
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Remember when we all thought that Dire was going to be Dad Material? Like, the real MVP of the series? The purest man alive? And that he would help with his students bc he genuinely cared about them? And that he would basically adopt bb MC bc they need help in this world that they were basically dropped in by some spooky-wooky mirror that decided that they needed to be there for whatever reason? I still can’t wait to learn abt the mirror
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Haha. No.
The only Flying Daddy we have is Lilia and he makes up for the lack of birb in my life.
#twisted wonderland#twst#lil thoughts#we also thought we'd fall through a mirror#still not sure how the heck we dimension hopped#o well#i'm not bitter#I don't even want birb dad#not at all#I HAVE GHOST DADS
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reblog and make a wish! this was removed from tumbrl due to “violating one or more of Tumblr’s Community Guidelines”, but since my wish came true the first time, I’m putting it back. :)
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a member of our local community is missing, her name is Nia Cordell, she is a young northern cheyenne woman, she is 5’4, right before going missing she got her hair cut to a short bob.
please contact king county sheriff department or call 206-296-3311 if you have information or have seen her
she was last seen near the century link field shell station in Seattle 06/08/2020
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tfw your coworker is such a creep that you’d literally rather be kidnapped by the local supervillain than be around him
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time to steal Epel
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Why do we love Snape, or the character who was unkindly written
Claire Jordan in one of her Quora essays said that she’s been in fandom for decades and has never seen a character so loved as Snape. I concur. Excluding some recent trends that purposefully misinterpret Snape by projecting onto him a set of stereotypes he was never supposed to embody, Snape remains one of the most loved characters in the Harry Potter universe. Every poll on Harry Potter’s favourite characters confirm that Snape is always on the top 3, sometimes reaching first place.
This is not some “bad boy syndrome”. There are two main reasons for readers to have latched onto Snape so furiously, for Snape to have been so ardently discussed and defended after HBP – and these feelings only intensified after the 7th book. The reasons, I would posit, are:
1. Snape is a character that the narrative portrays as ambiguous.
2. Despite this, the narrative is often, objectively, unfair to Snape especially in favour of other characters.
Let’s address the first point. Snape is ambiguous because he has to be. There are two big plot-twists in Harry Potter: Harry is a horcrux and Snape’s loyalties. These two end up closely connected because it is through the knowledge of Snape’s loyalties that Harry discovers he must die to kill the part of Voldemort that is inside him. Snape is therefore largely written as a suspect in a murder mystery. Several commentators have argued that the structure of a Harry Potter book resembles a crime novel, and I agree. Snape has to appear guilty, but the books have to give enough clues to the reader as to his true loyalties. Independently of authorial intent, this is what makes Snape so compelling. Because:
a. Snape is cruel to his students but he constantly protects them (Harry, Draco, Katie Bell, Luna and Hermione, Neville and Ginny).
b. Snape is described as ugly but his use of language is the most sophisticated of the series to the point it becomes sensual. Just consider his first speech in class about the beauty of potions and how they “ensnare the senses” and “bewitch the mind”.
c. Snape is mean and petty but these characteristics are often accompanied by sarcasm and irony which make some of his most awful comments quite funny, such as him telling Crabbe not to suffocate Neville because he would have to mention it in a reference letter if ever Crabbe applied to a job. There is also a lot of incongruent humour in play with Snape. For example, him reading about Harry’s love life is hilarious because Snape and teenage drama are two irreconcilable dimensions.
d. Snape is cruel and bullying but the narrative offers several reasons for this. While Dumbledore’s past is revealed mostly through conversation, Snape’s past is slowly revealed in images which make it much more vivid. Snape getting a glimpse of a werewolf at the end of a tunnel. Snape’s father yelling at his cowering mother. Snape upside down and petrified by Sirius and James. Petunia calling him “an awful boy”. More than any other character, Snape is rooted in a social context that brings with it inescapable references: poverty, domestic abuse, neglect, bullying.
e. Snape is unattractive in practically all ways but he is also given the title of “Prince”. He is also one of the characters who carries a sword, and whose love is presented as “the best part” of him. These are characteristics that ennoble Snape.
f. Snape is dismissive of people’s feelings but he is also the character who is defending children because of their mothers. Lily because of his guilt, and Narcissa whom he allows to trap him in an unbreakable vow to defend her son.
g. Snape is taken as evil but the character whom the narrator uses as a morality mouthpiece – Hermione – often defends him.
h. Snape kills a man but the narrative is quick to add that his soul would likely remain intact as it would be an act of mercy, arranged between the victim and the perpetrator as Harry reinforces. Harry goes as far saying that Snape “finished him” instead of using the verb kill or murder. Furthermore, we know remorse is something that mends the soul and Snape’s whole arch is about guilt and remorse – immortalized in the scene where Snape weeps at 13 Grimmauld Palace.
i. Snape is apparently a murderer but the narrative goes to some lengths to show that just like Harry Snape has a thing for saving people. “Lately, only those I could not save” and him risking his cover to save Lupin.
j. Snape’s trauma is often discredited but the narrative allows part of his tragedy to come at the expense of the hero’s father whom Harry spent years admiring. A relevant part of James’s goodness is sacrificed in favour of Snape’s own character construction.
k. Snape’s trauma in relation to having been bullied is more often discredited by the narrative, although Fudge’s comment “the man is quite unbalanced” and the comparison established between James and Sirius’s use of Levicorpus and the Death Eaters using it on a muggle woman shows that it is something to be taken serious, although never acknowledged.
This last point leads me to my second assertion that the narrative is fundamentally unfair and cruel to Snape. For two main reasons:
a. Snape’s trauma in relation to the Mauraders is discredited by everyone that counts, namely, Lily and Dumbledore. Only Harry comes closer to understand its dimensions. We can argue as to why this is, and as to whether there was authorial intent or it is simply that JKR didn’t realise how it would sound. Lily nearly smiles when Snape is being bullied which puts in question Lily’s character as well as her friendship with Snape. Both in Snape’s Worst Memory and in the conversation about the prank, she also fails to show concern that her friend was being bullied by the boy she liked.
b. The second instance of unfairness is more serious because it is far more insidious. A careful reading of text will tell us that Snape was set up for death by Dumbledore. That Dumbledore planted the Elder Wand on Snape while thinking its power had died with him and while knowing that Voldemort would eventually reach conclusions about the Elder Wand and wish to possess it, thus killing its current owner. Not only Dumbledore never tells Snape, but he plans it beforehand. This is why he “admits” to Harry that the intention was to let Snape have the wand. Harry understands exactly what this means, and in the Final Battle tells Voldemort that Dumbledore intended the power of the wand to die with him.
This is so insidious – and cruel – that it is never openly acknowledged. Dumbledore betrays Snape, showing an impressive disregard for his life – far more than he showed for Harry’s because he knew Harry had a good chance of survival. But Snape is never given the satisfaction of having this acknowledged in the text. Snape yearned for Dumbledore’s affection but not only Dumbledore denied him that, he also denied him the truth of what he really wanted of him. Snape is betrayed by both his masters at the end. But we are never explicitly told this. This happens because the narrative is unwilling to portray Dumbledore in a truly badly light. His apparent sorrow (“poor Severus”) and his “admission” of guilt are not enough to show him remorseful because the narrative cannot bring itself to say: “I set Snape to die by planting the wand on him so Voldemort would come to possess a useless weapon”. This would change the readers’ view of Dumbledore, especially after Prince’s Tale. Remark on how cruel it is: Snape had to agree to kill Dumbledore in “good faith” so the power of the wand died with him, but all the while Dumbledore knows that Snape would get a target on his back and die from it. Dumbledore manipulates Snape into – possibly – ripping his soul and tricks Snape into his own demise. Snape thought Dumbledore was raising Harry as a pig for slaughter, but he is wrong. It is him whom Dumbledore is raising to die. The fact that this is never openly stated, and is purposefully obfuscated by the language, is somewhat cowardly. Dumbledore barely apologises, he barely recognizes it. If he did, the readers would be horrified. As in the case of Lily, Snape is sacrificed in favour of apparently “better” characters whom the narrative wants the readers to like more.
However, the flaw in the plan is that…readers aren’t stupid. I caught on to this when I was a teenager, and this has only intensified as I grew older.
Even at the end, Snape understands from the moment Voldemort mentions the wand that he is going to die. JKR said in a tweet that Snape could’ve saved himself, presumably by setting Voldemort straight, and so his silence ensured Harry’s victory. It is a possible interpretation. More possible still is that Snape accepted death after giving Harry his memories. The fact that he stops trying to starch the bleeding once Harry appears shows it. His “look at me” is the request of a man who knows he’s going to die and just wants to do so by looking at the eyes of the woman he loves. In this sense, following Dumbledore’s words that “there are things far worse than death” and that for an organized mind death is “the next big adventure”, Snape showed far more courage than both Dumbledore and Voldemort who on several occasions tried to fight the inevitability of death.
It is true the narrative offers some vindication for Snape. Harry tells Tom Riddle of Snape’s true loyalties. Riddle is not allowed to die before knowing that Snape had betrayed him and colluded with Dumbledore, all because of a power Riddle doesn’t understand – love. Harry also names the son with his – and his mother’s – green eyes Severus. Finally, Harry tells him that Snape was probably the bravest man he knew.
But still, Snape is not kindly written. There is an underlying cruelty in how Snape is treated throughout the books. Because he is so profoundly unloved, because he is barely shown kindness and because no one ever takes responsibility for what happened to him, the readers feel compelled to do so. That, I think, explains why Snape is so widely loved, and why people are so ready to defend him in unprecedented ways.
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More Screaming Half Theories Hidden in Rants and Run On Sentences Because I Can’t Focus On One Thing At a Time
I really wish the twst lads would talk more about Yuu/MC being from another world. They just kind of ignore it?
They don’t even act like it’s weird even though Mr. Gracious was all like “This isn’t possible. I don’t understand. What chaos have you brought upon us?” And I’m pretty sure that they know about the situation bc MC/Yuu has mentioned at least one thing from their world (football-) and they were like “Home thing? Home thing.”
Even if they don’t know they should still gib more love. This salty beautiful bean child gets magically yeeted over to their world and starts fixing their problems (admittedly against their will most of the time) and they don’t even ask how bb feels about missing a holiday with their loved ones. Do they think that MC was let into NR as a sheltered relative of Crowley and that’s why they stay despite being magicless and clueless? I might just be missing some things.
Also, Crowley pls send them home they are tired and are in mortal danger every other second of the day sir this is not LEgaL
Also, I need to start making good content instead of ranting half theories and asking questions.
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13/10 my new favorite sport. But what should it be called?
via @siralec.thefrenchie
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Hassidriss ‘Ashes’ Spring 2019 Haute Couture Collection
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