#got s3
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joanna-lannister · 1 year ago
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CERSEI LANNISTER 3.04 | “And Now His Watch Is Ended”
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thedragonqueens · 7 months ago
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DAENERYS TARGARYEN ICONS | 3.01 & 3.02
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gracelyns · 2 months ago
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Catelyn died thinking most of her children were dead...
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covillain · 4 months ago
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Since my awesome sister apparently wants me to suffer, she told me to watch game of thrones. Well I had to cope somehow…
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editfandom · 1 year ago
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Daenerys Targaryen - Game of Thrones, S03E07
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kuramirocket · 4 months ago
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The dragons existed in times of peace before Dany's time, for example, when there were no wars in the Seven Kingdoms or how the Valyrians claim they first discovered them simply living in the Fourteen Flames. Dragons are not inherently evil in this series. They are protective of their rider and can show affection and empathy.
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They are capable of mass destruction because of their strength, ability to grow very large and breathe fire, but again this does not make them inherently evil.
Dragons can bond and love. Dragons can kill and destroy. They represent a threat to their enemies and represent freedom to the slaves of Essos. It's not all black and white.
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So yes, why should a dragon not be capable of planting trees?
"dragons plant no trees" gets thrown around a lot as fact, but i think the veracity of that claim is still up for debate in the books. because dany (like bran and jon and many others) is a narrative symbol of hope and rebirth within the series because of her connection to dragons and fire, not in spite of it. this is because dragons in asoiaf have a much more expansive narrative function than simply 'nuke metaphor'. the 'exclusively weapons of war' image they have acquired breaks down immediately if you recall that the first thing dany does with them is begin dismantling an unjust status quo. she rallies the unsullied at the gates of astapor with cries of dracarys! dracarys! freedom! <- dragons as a symbol of hope and freedom for the persecuted. and obviously they've been built up as an oppositional force against the others. we're told when the last dragon died summers became shorter. in that respect the dragons, or more specifically, fire which is warmth which is passion—very much embodies life against the numbing, deadening threat of eternal winter that the others represent. but fire also consumes, which simultaneously makes dragons agents of destruction, or as adwd shows: the monsters who eat little girls and leave behind their bones. but when dany found herself chained to a false peace which effectively undid her cause in meereen, it was the dragon that rescued her and reignited her fire to fight back—which is to say that dragons represent a wealth of contradictions within the text and this is likely something grrm means to parallel with the others to some extent, by questioning their apparent narrative role as the one true evil. because i doubt the series is gearing up towards a spectacle-esque battle wherein our heroes get to practice righteous, easy violence on a monolithic army of monsters. that feels like it would undo a lot of asoiaf's preoccupation with investigating violence against socially acceptable targets, even if said target is ice sidhe. and this binary between a one true good and a one true evil, i.e. melisandre's philosophy ("if half an onion is black with rot, it is a rotten onion. a man is good or he is evil.") is not something the story takes as given.
instead there's this exchange between bran, jojen, and meera in asos: "but you just said you hated them." / "why can't it be both?" / because they're different. like night and day, or ice and fire." / "if ice can burn. then love and hate can mate."—and i think it's talking about reconciling two conflicting ideas. because the dream of an eternal summer is just as unsustainable as the threat of eternal winter. i think the battle for dawn is more about questions of seasonal harmony. the first line from agot's summary says, "long ago, in a time forgotten, a preternatural event threw the seasons out of balance", so it's not totally out of question for the series to end with that seasonal balance restored once more. and that question of balance and how it can be achieved then works as a metaphor for a bunch of other things. because asoiaf at its core is very interested in exploring big contradictions, like love and duty? how do you keep all your oaths without betraying someone you love? how can one hope for a just, rightful ruler in a world where the systems in place can never allow such a thing? how do dragons plant trees?
you cannot frame dany's arc as a binary choice between planting trees or embracing (dragon)fire. because the fire is hers, it is a part of her, that's who she is. and her character has always existed outside of rigid dichotomies. at the end of agot she had two options, resign herself to a life of seclusion as a widow or die with the last of her family in that pyre, instead she performed a miracle. presently, i think grrm means to explore necessary, revolutionary violence with her arc because you cannot deal with institutional slavery by simply negotiating with slavers like she does in adwd. and the consequences thereof because she's also been set up to be more reckless with dragonfire in the future. but i think there will be an eventual reconciliation there, between her dreams "to plant trees and watch them grow." and her role as the mother of dragons, as a revolutionary figure. because if ice can burn, then maybe dragons can plant trees. they'll learn how to.
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coppertophomegurl · 6 months ago
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Bridgerton season 3 was really a win for the fat girls, and the gingers, and the wallflowers, and the bisexuals.
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myfairstarlight · 6 months ago
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We joke but the fact NO ONE bats an eye when Penelope and Colin are unchaperoned in broad daylight, or the way they keep to themselves in the corner of balls and other events, speaks a lot of how little the ton considers Penelope as a desirable debutante. Fife and co mock Colin for his friendship with her. Portia catches them alone in a room and somehow doesn't jump on the YOU MUST MARRY train. Even Anthony, albeit s1 Anthony so he's a bit dumb, comments that Colin has danced multiple times with Penelope yet it does not signify.
Side note but I would kill to see his reaction when he hears Colin interrupted Penelope's and Debling's dance lol.
Everyone sees Colin running after Penelope multiple times this season, and everyone assumes it's out of pity, rather than care. Like she's not even the one chasing him, he's the one doing it in all four episodes!
Never in their wildest fantasies could they imagine Colin Bridgerton being interested in Penelope Featherington indeed. And oh boy, are they in for a rude awakening! Because that boy is already loud with his actions when he wasn't even aware of his feelings, but he's gonna be even louder with his words to make sure everyone understands how much Penelope Featherington is beloved by him.
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mroddmod · 8 months ago
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one of the very few to show the batch kindness back on kamino
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guys Sasha is not the responsible one in the archives. She saw a weird guy with fucked up hands and an uncanny laugh and immediately followed him to several secondary locations. I’m SO sorry to say this but the only og archives crew member with self-preservation instincts is Tim
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vrailaru · 4 months ago
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stress ball
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kuramirocket · 10 months ago
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Daenerys Stormborn the queen we chose. The queen we deserved.
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boysborntodie · 4 months ago
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TUA S4 proved that Netflix cancelling their shows after the first season is actually a good thing
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wwapich · 2 years ago
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a little guy as a little knight
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blorbologist · 1 month ago
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kuramirocket · 5 months ago
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People actually blame Rhaenyra for this?? Why am I surprised.
Who would want to get married to someone they don't love and force to give birth because of monarchy? Especially as op stated when Rhaenyra witnessed her own mother suffer and ultimately die because of it. And even then she stilled married Laenor and both tried to concieve a child, but were unable to. So, Rhaenyra still performed her duty, or at least tried to, regardlesd of her own feelings and desires on the matter.
Rhaenerya wasn't wrong at all in wanting to explore her sexuality and sleep with whoever she wanted. She wasn't careless or selfish. She still was responsible imo, but obviously wanted liberty in a sexist world. That isn't wrong.
Sexism and opressive systems should be destroyed, especially with a Dracarys! Just like Daenerys wanted to do!!
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People need to get out of here with their misogyny.
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rhaenyra not wanting to get married in the show and ‘do her duty’ has nothing to do with viserys ‘spoiling her’ or her being a ‘selfish brat’ but everything to do with watching her mother be forced into pregnancy over and over again, each time resulting in a dead baby and eventually DYING because of this; she views marriage as a death sentence.
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