#source: gunnerkrigg court
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Annie's Recklessness, Annie's Responsibility
More recently in Gunnerkrigg Court, the overall opinion of the supporting cast is that Annie is reckless, impetuous, and self-serving, endangering herself and others with her carelessness. This has increasingly become taken as fact by the overall narrative.
Annie is reckless, with little respect for authority, and a tendency to take on risks far beyond her capabilities. What few people acknowledge are the reasons why she behaves this way. It isn't as simple as, "Annie is selfish, Annie is a spoiled brat."
Annie has been put into environments where she was left unsupervised, often with etheric beings, exposed to horror and death, from a young age. Beyond even the psychopomps, Annie grew up using lockpicks to get into places she shouldn't have been, presumably to satisfy her own curiosity. This behavior could only have arisen in circumstances where Annie wasn't been adequately supervised (and likely fairly bored and lonely to boot).
She wandered the halls of Good Hope visiting the dying with the psychopomps before she even realized what she was doing. One of the most extended flashbacks we have to that period of her life is her being sent to guide a boy who died of fire. She was terrified of the monstrous manifestation of the fire; it was her mother's promise that she would not send Antimony into danger that led her to brave the fire, and comfort the boy.
Importantly, Annie notes in her framing of the memory that this was "something I have always kept in mind," which I take to inform her reaction to the Court. This is where Surma sent her after her death, after all- and it would explain much of Annie's blasé response to danger and peril soon after her arrival to the Court.
What's also very important to take from this is the responsibility Surma and the psychopomps placed on her; Annie was the one in charge of approaching and calming the boy. This sense of personal responsibility is also notable in "Broken Glass and Other Things"; in a brief flashback to Annie dropping a glass, we see Surma telling Annie she shouldn't be cleaning it up. Annie replies that it was her fault, and she should clean it up. Surma: "You might hurt yourself." Annie, her finger bleeding from the glass: "I'll be just fine."
It's a pretty straightforward summation of Annie's approach to danger. If she feels personally responsible for the problem, she feels she has to resolve it, whatever the cost to herself- and downplay said cost. We see this over and over with Jeanne- Annie insisting she should have tried to help her, and was a fool to get scared. "I should have faced my fear as I did with Martin". The source of this overblown sense of responsibility, and her fixation on helping Jeanne, becomes obvious as we see her interact with the psychopomps. They insist she should have known to give Surma a chance to make a last record, and Annie agrees with them- adding that she has to "do it right next time... with Jeanne". Annie is transferring her guilt over not doing enough for her mother onto Jeanne's predicament.
And the psychopomps have always treated her as essentially a variation on Surma, fully capable of taking on as much responsibility and risk. Of course, they're inhuman entities- it can be discussed that they have a flawed perception of human age. We see another etheric being, Reynardine, call Anja a child as often as Antimony. But it's has a noticeable impact on Annie's conception of herself, her own culpability and capability.
This of course often clashes with how others treat her: Eglamore scolds her for breaking the rules (while at the same time encouraging her to be more like her mother, and not get caught), Jones both encourages her for having initiative, but reminds her that she doesn't need to do everything herself, and that she should tell others (in this case, about Jack's condition in Spring Heeled). Important to note, this happens directly after Annie confesses "I feel like this is all my fault..."- again highlighting her tendency to both try to handle situations herself, and then blame herself when it goes wrong.
Of course Annie tries to solve problems on her own. It's not like many people were solving problems for her when she was little. Surma encouraged her to go work with the psychopomps, the psychopomps treated her as fully capable of entering stressful situations, and her father was emotionally and often physically absent. Eglamore and Jones both give conflicting messages: don't break the rules, but don't get caught when you do. Keep investigating the Court on your own, but also ask for help.
Eglamore, Donnie, and Anja's attempt to confiscate Reynardine from her is maybe the closest any of them got to directly intervening for her safety; but of course Annie objected on moral grounds, and the nature of her possession of Reynard made it unsafe for them to take him from her. And while it was dangerous, it's not like Annie was incorrect: what they were doing was inhumane.
Of course Annie acts without informing authority figures of her plans, and neglects to ask for help much of the time. She grew up with very little outside support. I would point most obviously to her father, who had no patience to etheric sciences- something that would have of course impacted his ability to support Annie while she was working with the psychopomps. Did he even know she was doing so? We have no record of him even showing physical affection to her, nevermind words of approval or love. One of Annie's fondest memories of him is him binding her feet during martial arts training, and her taking the opportunity of his distraction to furtively, lovingly hold onto the seam of his shirt.
Beyond Tony, the Court itself it an incredibly hostile, corrupt entity! They prove their willingness to toy with her during the decision of whom will be Court Medium- and their apathy and potential desire to have leverage over Annie is also displayed by their knowledge and allowance of her cheating off of Kat. Over and over again, the Court has displayed its unreliability to Annie- past and present. One of Annie's first mysteries was that of Jeanne, whose murder was intentionally covered up by the Court.
Annie accidentally highlights this very power and apathy: when explaining that she's supposed to be in detention, she says, "I don't care. They know where I am if they want to find me. What are they going to do, tell my parents?"
This last could come off as very conceited, but perfectly highlights Annie's distrust and alienation from authority in her life. It's not that there's 'no one to hold her in check' until Annie's dad returns; it's that no one has actually acted in her best wishes, while treating her as a full person. There's a reason she gets so attached to Ysengrim; he protects her, and encourages her take on challenges. There's a reason she trusts Jones more than most people in the Court: Jones isn't part of the Court, and Jones isn't trying to take away her freedoms. Of course Annie wants to keep her independence; when she's been denied true emotional support, she's going to learn to become self-reliant.
Of course, this does have consequences! For Antimony, and other people around her! But it's ridiculous when everyone constantly blames Annie for taking initiative, for being blasé about the supernatural- the supernatural has been there for her in a way the Court has not. Ysengrim, Reynardine, were there for her when Eglamore, Tony, the whole Court, was not. People expect Annie to take on enormous risks and act like an adult, and then punish her for failing by treating her like a child.
Reynardine and Jones are the closest anyone has come to providing reliable emotional and practical support. Reynardine of course tried to kill her when they first met (and was generally a creep for most of their acquaintance, but that's another can of worms), and Jones by her own admittance has a detached awareness of human relationships (see her dynamic with Eglamore). But they both show up when Annie needs help, and try to both instill in her an awareness of the danger, and their respect for her.
Annie does not need her dad to show up and being a rigid authority figure, to reign in her wild behavior. She needs someone who is present, who respects her autonomy and skills, and makes sure she knows she can rely on them when things are tough- so that she feels she can go to them for help.
Annie is not spoiled. Annie is carrying around the guilt of her mother's death and amateur ferrying to the afterlife with her constantly, transferring that guilt onto other lost souls. Annie is not spoiled. Annie has been abandoned and neglected by both individuals and systems that should have protected and guided her. Annie is not spoiled. Annie has been continually placed into dangerous situations, and developed means of dealing with them, leading to her having a warped sense of what is an acceptable level of risk.
Annie is not spoiled. She is displacing her own need for a parental figure onto magical beings that have variable motives, grasps on reality, and understanding of human development and relationships, because the humans around her refuse to step up to the task. Annie is not spoiled. Annie has learned to repress her emotions, from her father, Ysengrim, and Jones, further causing her to hide her own fear and pain, and so come across as flippant or emotionless in the face of danger. Annie is not spoiled. She is the main character of a comic, and the narrative treats her as such, putting the weight of the world on her shoulders, which she continully tries to carry on her own because there are so few people she can trust to carry it for her.
Annie is not spoiled.
#submission#gunnerkrigg#gunnerkrigg court#gunnerkrigg court critical#thank you for the submission @kestrelknight!
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PINNED POST!!!
This is a web-log about webcomics, thus the name
Started in 2012 but immediately abandoned, revived in 2022 to be a place for me to share my thoughts about my favorite webcomics and about the medium of webcomics in general.
My favorite webcomics still running are El Goonish Shive and Order of the Stick, and I’m also still a big admirer of Gunnerkrigg Court.
Links to my stuff...
General Webcomic Content:
(^^^ Source: Reinventing Comics by Scott McCloud)
Longform OC General article/essay on the nature of Webcomics: What Is Webcomics? (There was always intended to be a part 2, maybe someday!)
Weekly Webcomic Roundups, a series of OC longform weekly articles that discussed the happenings in various webcomics that week
The first 10/1/22
The second 10/9/22
The third 10/17/22
Reblog of reaction by blujayonthewing to comics theory from Mort Walker’s The Lexicon of Comicana
Reblog with link to “What Is Webcmics,” above, of post about decline of art by literallyaflame, linked by roach-works to webcomics specifically
Reblog of thewebcomicsreview’s story of the early history of webcomics
El Goonish Shive Content:
Longform Reaction to last page of “Balance” arc and the mysteries it clears up, and its hints at future
Page reaction to latest My Love in Stitches page, comparing to similar moment in EGS:NP
Every time someone says “pressure release chopsticks”
Reaction to latest page
Longform Answer to mintcarousel’s question about the nature of the character Grace, explaining her heritage and powers
Longform Reaction to latest page, explaining callbacks and implications
Page reaction to latest EGS:NP page, comparing to similar moment in Order of the Stick
EGS REBLOGS
MUCH MORE! Beneath the cut:
Order of the Stick Content:
Reblog of saturniade re-draw fancomics
Reblog of long-form page reaction by theoutcastrogue
Reblog of panel reaction by bobauthorman
Reblog of MiTD cosplay photo by anmitdcosplayer
Reblog of general observation by song-of-oots
Reblog of grassknotts re-draw fancomic
Reblog of general observation by song-of-oots
Reblog of character appreciation of Belkar by kirbyofthestars
Reblog with commentary of character theory re Belkar by opti-mized
Linking of this page to a similar plot-point in online novel series Curse Words
Linking of a panel from this page to unrelated D&D fanfic by bixbythemartian
Reaction to panel of this page
Reblog of Meme-ification by grassknotts of OOTS characters
Reblog and comment on page reaction by chetungwan
Reblog and comment on post of panels selected to show Belkar’s character arc by opti-mized
Reblog of fanart by trainwreckgenerator
Reblog of longform character analysis of Belkar by inbarfink
Gunnerkrigg Court Content:
Reblog with comment of orville-redenbacher-space-hero page reaction
Reblog of library-graffiti “recent updates” reaction
Reblog with comment of acesvega page reaction
Reblog with comment of faline-cat444 page reaction
Reblog with comment of andmaybegayer connection of two pages reaction
Reblog of analysis of Treatise 10 by andmaybegayer
Reblog with comment of thewebcomicsreview page reaction
Reblog of bstormhands page reaction
Back and forth between gunnerkriggcritical and myself regarding the character Tony
Back and forth between gunnerkriggcritical and myself regarding the character Jerrek
Reblog of cameoappearance panels selected to demonstrate theory about the direction of the plot
Page Reaction
Reblog with comment of orville-redenbacher-space-hero page reaction
Page Reaction
Reblog of library-graffiti panel reaction from panel from this page
Back and forth between gunnerkriggcritical and myself regarding a page reaction
Back and forth between gunnerkriggcritical and myself regarding the character Jack
Back and forth between gunnerkriggcritical and myself regarding the character Annie
Back and forth between gunnerkriggcritical and myself regarding a page reaction
Back and forth between gunnerkriggcritical and myself regarding a page reaction
Reblog of faline-cat444 page reaction with page reactio of following page
Other Webcomic Content:
Reblog, originally from Will Santino’s Instagram Source
Reblog, Lil Molotov Cocktail cartoon. source unknown
Reblog oneshot webcomic by staticevent
Reblog with comment oneshot webcomic by floccinaucinihilipilificationa
Reblog of bibberly blog of Get Your War On webcomic strip
Reblog with comment of oneshot webcomic by jaciopara
Reblog of oneshot webcomic by mochimars based on poem by Nael, age 6, from anthology They're Singing A Song In Their Rocket
Reblog of oneshot webcomic by haxbomb
Reblog of oneshot webcomic by mcnostril
Reblog of page of webcomic myloveinstitches
Reblog of oneshot webcomic by murdercake
Reblog of oneshot webcomic by shencomix
Reblog of oneshot webcomic by shubbabang
Reblog of oneshot webcomic by leftoversalad
Reblog of latest page of webcomic val-and-isaac
Reblog of general comment by the-girl-who-sold-the-wxrld on the webcomic Heartstopper
Reblog of recommendation post of spooky, queer webcomics by thetoadcrow , with My Love in Stitches added
Reblog of page by cosmogalaxy2 combining all chapter-heading panels from the webcomic Heartstopper
Reblog of 5 pages of webcomic Liberta
Reblog of page of webcomic myloveinstitches
Reblog of page of webcomic club-cryptid-by-sarah
Reblog of oneshot webcomic by saccharinescorpion
Reblog of pin-up of webcomic My Love in Stitches
Reblog of webcomic page by foxes in love
Reblog of oneshot webcomic by nellucnhoj
Reblog of latest page of webcomic val-and-isaac
Reblog of oneshot webcomic by lotldraws
Reblog of oneshot webcomic by mixmioart
Reblog of latest page of webcomic tredlocity
Reblog of page of starfleetrambo webcomic Dream Diary
Reblog of oneshot webcomic by summercomfort
Reblog of page of webcomic by inkgoblinz
Reblog of oneshot webcomic by Brad Jonas
Reblog of latest page of webcomic tredlocity
Reblog of a page of the webcomic cassiopeiaquinn with great commentary by thewebcomicsreview invoking theory from Scott McCloud’s Understanding Comics
Reblog of oneshot webcomic by cassandracalin
Reblog general discussion of webcomic fandom
Reblog of oneshot webcomic by myjetpack
Reblog of oneshot webcomic by myjetpack
Reblog of page of webcomic myloveinstitches
Reblog of oneshot webcomic by incidentalcomics
Reblog of oneshot webcomic by cherryistired based on Tumblr story posted by gallusrostromegalus
Reblog of oneshot webcomic by rebeccacohenart
Linking of a page from Dr McNinja to unrelated meme
Reblog of oneshot webcomic by atlas-of-galaxies
Reblog of page of webcomic the Recloseted Lesbian
Reblog of page of webcomic My Love in Stitches
Reblog of oneshot webcomic by cherrvak
Reblog of oneshot webcomic by foolfortune about the Tumblr pornbot plague
Reblog and reaction to SMBC page
Reblog of webcomic by sighcomics
Reblog of oneshot webcomic fanfiction by mandiminimojo of D&D module Curse of Strahd
Reblog of gifset memeification of this webcomic page by foxes in love
Reblog of commentary and memes about a webcomic page by shen
Reblog of oneshot webcomic by va-draws about the Tumblr pornbot plague
Reblog of webcomic by secondlina
Reblog of webcomic by shubbabang
Reblog of a “There’s an xkcd about anything!”
Reblog of oneshot webcomic by niteween
Reblog and comment on reaction by thewebcomicsreview to a page of Dumbing of Age
Reblog and comment on webcomic fanfiction by kim-poce of online novel Time To Orbit: Unknown by Derin
Page reaction of Questionable Content
Reblog of page from akimbo comics
Reblog of a “There’s an xkcd about anything!”
Reblog of oneshot webcomic by everchased about the Tumblr pornbot plague
Reblog of webcomic page by Mesut Kaya
Reblog of oneshot webcomic by hisclockworkservants
Reblog with comment of oneshot webcomic by emett-sidecast
Reblog of oneshot webcomic by mixmioart
Reblog of oneshot fanfic webcomic by chell-sea-art based on SF novel series Murderbot Diaries by Martha Wells
Comment on poll about webcomic Aurora
Reblog of prokopetz answering a question about Questionable Content
Reblog of thewebcomicsreview answering an ask about Questionable Content
Reblog of oneshot webcomic by thechekhov
Page reaction of Questionable Content
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Guess reading isn't for everyone, like I have a friend who claims that after reading a page he retains zero information on it.
I'm similar, but not quite that extreme. I think it might be related to ADHD.
I've talked about it before, but when I was a kid, I had multiple teachers try to pin it on me and my Mom refused to believe them. As I've grown older, I've begun to realize maybe those teachers were right. What my mom protested was the "classic interpretation" of ADD, which was for kids that were uncontrollably loud, and fidgety, and impulsive. I was never those things. But since then, understanding of ADHD has grown to include the type of person I am.
As I'm reading, sometimes what I'm imagining in my head will cause my mind to wander. My eyes will keep scanning the page on autopilot but my brain will have fully checked out in to doing something else.
Then comes the realization of "wait, I haven't been paying attention to what I'm reading at all" and having to backtrack to the last thing I remember, which in itself isn't easy because my focus drifted in and out. So I remember bits and pieces of things and I have to try and figure out the source of what caused my mind to wander.
The more I became aware of that happening, the harder it's been to read, because now it's like I'm paranoid about it happening. And it wasn't easy to get me to read before anyway!
Reading comic books helps, I think. I mentioned before, but a couple years ago, I managed to read all the way through the original Dragon Ball -- 16 volumes! Sure, it took me more than a year, but each volume is over a hundred pages.
Having images to go along with the dialog helps prevent my mind from wandering, I guess. Instead of my imagination running away with itself and my brain tuning out to the actual words, I stay focused knowing exactly what I'm looking at.
But even then, I don't read tons of comics. I'm like five or six issues behind on IDW Sonic right now, maybe more, and really, that's kind of the only thing on my active reading list outside of webcomics, and the amount of webcomics I read has been slowly dwindling as more and more end or succumb to hiatus.
Like, if you want to know my active reading list for webcomics, it's:
Gunnerkrigg Court, which is very clearly closing in on an ending sometime in the next year or two.
Flipside, which for the last 2-3 years has been SO EXTREMELY SLOW that I've nearly given up on it, but sunk cost fallacy has kept me checking it. At least things finally seem to be happening again lately.
Barbarous, which if I'm being honest has completely lost me in the last couple chapters as character development leapfrogged my understanding of these characters and now I feel like I don't know what's going on anymore.
Prequel, which has fallen in to the Homestuck trap of short bursts of activity punctuated by long, long, long long long long periods of preparing for playable games or videos or whatever, meaning months or sometimes even years between posts, something I'm sure is very stimulating for the creator but not so much for me as a reader.
Awkward Zombie, which thankfully doesn't have plotlines or anything long-term, so it's low commitment and a breezy read.
Three Panel Soul, which like Awkward Zombie is basically two friends making new comics just because they feel like it.
Oglaf (NSFW), which is consistently just very funny.
Irritability/Maze of Death, which is something I've been reading since I was in high school. Author has a very strange sense of humor that can be hit-or-miss but it shaped me a lot when I was a teenager. I wish he'd update the site, though, it's basically impossible to properly read the archives anymore.
Dolmistaska, which I only just started reading less than a year ago and fell deeply in love with. Nothing but good things to say about this.
And then there's two comics I was working my way through the archives of and haven't caught up with yet:
Rock Cocks (NSFW), I don't specifically remember how or why I started reading this, but I've read close to 500 pages of it so far. It's about a exhibitionist rock band in a world where sex and music are like the most important things on earth. Almost has sort of a Scott Pilgrim feel with regards to how the world feels tuned to its characters. But it's also absolutely not for anyone under 18, given it is very explicit. There is nudity and sex constantly, but there's always a story reason for it. But the author is never shy and it is presented in full detail. So, you have to be down with that. It strangely never feels pervy, or at least I don't think so.
Kill Six Billion Demons, which triggered something new: pages are so dense with detail and narrative that a weekly update schedule wasn't good enough because I started forgetting plot threads. Characters would turn up that, in the narrative of the comic, were "just" introduced in the previous chapter. But when you're reading it as it gets posted, that previous chapter might have been three months ago. It just reads better more as a traditional comic, where you digest entire chapters all at once. I stopped reading in 2018 and have been trying to get back to it, since there's a big backlog to dig in to now (I'm at the start of book 4, and book 6 just started).
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TEN DIFFERENT FAVORITE CHARACTERS FROM TEN DIFFERENT FANDOMS
Nanno - Girl From Nowhere
Waymond Wang - Everything Everywhere All At Once
Nausicaä - Nausicaä
Hobie Brown - Across the Spiderverse
Michelle - 10 Cloverfield Lane
Sailor Pluto - Sailor Moon
Theo Cain - Haunting of Hill House
Pryde Royale Ivy - The Most Heretical Last Boss Queen Who Will Become the Source of Tragedy Will Devote Herself for the Sake of the People
Clawdeen Wolf - Monster High
Coyote - Gunnerkrigg Court
+ icons i made for nanno, pryde, and coyote for no reason
tagged by: @mutatedangels tagging: steal it from me ヽ(* ˃ ωゞ
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Things We’ve Yelled About This Episode #3.7
The Raven Tower, Ann Leckie
The Song of Achilles, Madeleine Miller
Small Gods, Terry Pratchett
You won’t like them when they’re angry - a catchphrase of the Incredible Hulk, Marvel
Ancillary Justice, Ann Leckie
The Raven Tower audiobook and narrator Adjoa Andoh (imdb)
How To Get Filthy Rich In Rising Asia, Mohsin Hamid
How To Get Filthy Rich In Rising Asia audiobook
The Broken Earth, N. K. Jemisin (spoilers for)
A Story About You, Welcome To Night Vale (Spotify)
Hamlet, William Shakespeare
Something is rotten in the state of Denmark, Hamlet, Act I Scene 4
American Gods, Neil Gaiman
Ents, Middle Earth, J. R. R. Tolkien (wiki)
Cabin in the Woods (2011)
Eragon, Christopher Paolini
Gunnerkrigg Court (website)
Xkcd (website)
Girls with Slingshots (website)
Coyote, Gunnerkrigg Court (wiki)
Tulpa (wiki)
Jones, Gunnerkrigg Court (wiki)
This panel is the one that makes M think of Strength and Patience
I only am escaped alone to tell thee - Job I.15, 16, 17
Murderbot Diaries, Martha Wells
Mansplain Manipulate Malewife/Gaslight Gatekeep Girlboss (meme)
I support gay rights and also gay wrongs (an internet saying I can find no sources for)
Cat Rating
7/10
What Else Are We Reading?
Blue Period, Tsubasa Yamaguchi
Dredge
To Be Or Not To Be, Ryan North
Macbeth, William Shakespeare
D&D: Honor Among Thieves (2023)
Next Time On Teaching My Cat To Read
A mini episode, this time on our beloved Temeraire!
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Eugenides: Costis and I spent most of our time together…It was nice.
Attolia: Didn’t he almost kill you at one point?
Eugenides: So did my father.
Eugenides: And you.
Eugenides: And Relius.
Eugenides: Maybe I just bring that out in people.
#eugenides#attolia#queen's thief#megan whalen turner#qtq#source: gunnerkrigg court#submission#submission: anonymous#p sure tumblr is still messing up anon submissions. apologies again :(
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Jim: We have seen stranger. Remember that cursed teapot?
Toby: Yeah but that was
Toby: ...I don't even know what that was about
#source: gunnerkrigg court#such an iconic quote#jim lake jr#toby domzalski#trollhunters#beans rambles
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Eleven: Hendrik and I spent most of our time together in silence. It was...nice.
Erik: Didn't he try to kill you at one point?
Eleven: So did Krystalinda.
Eleven: And King Carnelian.
Eleven: Maybe I just bring that out in people.
Erik: Well, I don't want to kill you.
Eleven: Thank you, Erik.
#dragon quest#dragon quest xi#dragon quest 11#incorrect quotes#source: gunnerkrigg court#he's not wrong#dq11#dqxi#incorrect dragon quest xi quotes#incorrect dqxi quotes#spoilers
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Revan: *walking in with bloody clothes* Hello, I'm back!
Carth: Revan! What happened?!
Revan: Oh, don't worry, don't worry. It's not MY blood.
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Oh, that's why Gunnerkrigg has looked so weird the past couple weeks, he's inverted the usual shading pattern: Loup goes to flat shading when he's in the ether but is shaded in the real world. Annie is usually flat-shaded in the real world, but we're not in her perspective, we're with Loup.
#gunnerkrigg court#gunnerkrigg#webcomics#Tom's multi point light source shading is a little rough huh
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A Personal Reflection On Gunnerkrigg Court (by @kestrelknight)
I started reading Gunnerkrigg Court at least by the time of Chapter 20. I was in elementary school, and obsessed with a number of webcomics. Gunnerkrigg Court was among the two that I persisted in reading up into college. It has been a foundational piece of media for me; it was one of my models for good visual storytelling, for pacing, for mystery and atmosphere, for kitchen-sink fantasy. I even made a single page of a comic in middle school, heavily based on the "spooky magic girl in abandoned industrial setting" concept. I loved it.
I wouldn't care about Gunnerkrigg Court so much if I hadn't loved it for so long. I wouldn't be this frustrated, and hurt by the comic, if I hadn't loved it for so long, so much.
There were always a few little bits that made me uncomfortable in the comic, though I had difficulty articulating it- mostly the way young girls wound up being sexualized, or having romantic teases with older men (humans or magic wolves). None of it ever really impacted my enjoyment of the comic; I tried not to dwell on it. While I was frustrated by Annie's perpetual tolerance for her father's neglect, I assumed this was just the beginning of her character arc- that the point would be her coming to process and reckon with the fact that he had not treated her well, and that she was allowed to be angry about it.
The point at which I started having misgivings came at the same place as for many people: The Tree. This chapter hit me very hard, and very personally. I've never been in a situation similar to Annie's. I have been in situations similar to Kat. I was so affected by each individual update, I read more than the top comments- and was deeply disturbed by how many people tried to justify Tony's behavior, especially as comeuppance for Annie for cheating. From that point on, the comic was a source of stress and worry for me. I bore with it, because I loved it, and had faith that Tom would deliver catharsis at some point- that there was a point to all this, that he had something to say about the nature of neglectful and abusive parental relationships. He was writing one, after all.
Annie and the Fire meant so much to me, as someone who's struggled with anger, and a desire to please and placate others, to the point of struggling deeply with dissociation for years. It resonated with me to the point of being hard to read; but I kept with it, and accepted that Annie's journey wasn't done yet. Tony's remorse did very little for me, but it didn't kill my hope in Annie's development. Just because Tony feels bad doesn't negate what he's done, and what he's failed to do. That's obvious. I waited longer.
The moment where Kat suddenly turned face and decided Tony wasn't so bad a guy after all caught me completely off-guard. It felt like a betrayal- and I thought that was the point, that Annie's astonishment at this character change was the point. That now, Annie couldn't offload her own resentment onto Kat- she could no longer rely on someone else to get mad on her behalf. I hoped she would try to convince Kat, even indirectly, of why she should still be mad at Tony, and so come to realize she herself was still angry at him. Something. It didn't happen- but I was willing to wait. Tom had unfolded an incredible, dynamic slow-burn of a story for years and years. I had faith in him.
The second point came with Loup's arrival. Ysengrim and Coyote were some of the best characters in the comic, characters that had defined the dually humorous and sinister tone of the world. To have them both killed off, and replaced by a worse-designed, boring, Chaotic Stupid deviantart wolf without even the honesty of a glitter and rainbow color scheme? Yeah, hated it. The way the plot bucked and heaved, gaining and shedding momentum just as fast did not do it any favors.
I think I stopped reading during the Two Annies arc. I've never been a fan of stories that introduce time-travel or multiple universes late in the story, so it was never going to be to my taste. Combined with Loup, it just felt like the comic was off the rails. And since the plot was all over the place, there was little motivation for me to keep. waiting. To keep putting myself through this constant anxiety, reading every individual update- waiting to see if Annie's relationship with her dad would ever have the pay-off I wanted.
I was nervous it wouldn't come. I really couldn't tell, at this point, what Tom's intent was. But I didn't want to make assumptions prematurely. This was a story told a page at a time; it would be silly to get upset over a narrative resolution that wasn't even going to happen! But I realized that it was doing me no good to keep waiting around for the story to end, one way or another. I stopped reading sometime around 2019, having read for maybe a decade.
There was another layer to my discomfort with the comic, one more related to real life events and relationships. To put it bluntly, the main other GC reader I knew IRL agreed with Tom's framing: Annie was immature, headstrong, and was facing the just repercussions for her actions. Not in those exact words, but close enough in sentiment. I didn't have anyone else in my life to discuss the comic with. I was getting old enough that while I could see how Annie had made mistakes, and was a flawed, messy person- she was also a child, surrounded by uncaring or passive adults, in an uncaring system, constantly reprimanded for taking matters into her own hands while also burdened with immense responsibility. She was treated like a kid while being expected to act like an adult. There were very few adults in Gunnerkrigg Court that I could even like anymore. Even the kind ones frustrated me by their inaction. Obviously, you don't need to like the characters in a story to enjoy the story, but it did stop me from enjoying GC. I realize now that it was because the framing was leaning more and more into Annie being the problem, not the system and adults around her. Which, is horsepiss.
Every now and then I came back, and read several chapters in one go. It was a disappointment pretty much every time. Something felt off, and the parts of the comic I cared about weren't really the main focus. I dropped it again, picked it up, dropped it. There are still whole chapters of the comic I've not read, or only skimmed through. My family owns the first four volumes of the comic, some of which are coming loose at the binding for being handled so often. I've barely reread anything past The Tree.
Some point a few months ago, I was stewing over the comic again, and wanted to see if people on tumblr were talking about it at all. I found some fanart, and one or two critical posts that validated my feelings. I kept coming back to the tag, looking for more of both- and eventually came across gunnerkriggcourtcritical. I've gone through the backlog of this blog multiple times- every time my memories of the comic frustrate and upset me. It's comforting to know that other people feel the same way, underwent the same disappointment, even betrayal, reading this comic.
And finally, it was closure for Tony and Annie's arc. Not the closure I wanted- but at least I know now what Tom was planning. I don't regret giving him the benefit of the doubt. Now I know for certain what the point of it all was. I was disgusted by The Mind Cage.
I've been in Kat's situation: watching my best friend be ridiculed in a public place by their parent, helpless to do anything to help them. Listening to another friend make constant excuses for their parent, idolizing their worst aspects, wanting to be more like them, so they can feel in control. I've been like Annie, so horrified by my own anger, so unable to process my emotions, that I just cut them out and sent them to another country. I've washed my face in that mirror, the restroom unrecognizable around me.
Annie deserved better. There are no heroes or villains in Gunnerkrigg Court; there are abusive parents, and neglected children. There are no readers who keep up with the comic, just to complain and hate it for the sake of hating; there are readers who saw themselves in Annie, in Kat, and who are still trying to process what the hell happened.
Authorial intent does matter- but a good author understands that readers will always get the last word. Stories are a reciprocal process, especially episodic ones like webcomics. Tom had all the opportunities in the world to observe reader responses, and adapt his story to be both consistent with what he had already written, and sensitive to what dynamic he was portraying.
I still love Gunnerkrigg Court. I'll probably reread those volumes again, sometime. It's still what I point to, when I want to give an example of how simplified style can be more effective in comics. It was my model of a beautiful, effective webcomic, both in story and artwork. I'll never forget how Gunnerkrigg Court shaped my art and my stories.
I'll also keep thinking about how it ultimately failed to recognize the story it was telling, and turned to mean digs at its audience rather than reflect on its own content. I'll keep thinking about what a wretched message it is, to imply that being neurodivergence is the cause of child neglect, to point at Annie doing all the work in her relationship with her father and say: that's fine, and you're stupid for thinking that isn't fine. I'll keep dunking on Loup/Jerrek, because he sucks.
I'll never forget how Gunnerkrigg Court let me down.
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Pre-Alvarez War
Natsu: Future Rogue and I spent most of our time together in silence. It was... nice.
Gray: Didn't he try to kill you once?
Natsu: So did Jellal.
Natsu: And Ultear.
Natsu: Maybe I just bring that out in people.
Gray: (not realizing Natsu is END) WEll I don't want to kill you..
Natsu: Thanks, Gray!
#Natsu Dragneel#Gray Fullbuster#Fairy Tail#source: gunnerkrigg court#fairy tail spoilers#ft spoilers
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Requested by Anonymous
Chrom: Walhart and I spent most of our time together in silence. It was…nice. Robin: Didn’t he try to kill you at one point? Chrom: So did Gangrel. And Aversa. Maybe I just bring that out in people. Robin: Well, I don’t want to kill you. Chrom: Thank you, Robin.
#fire emblem awakening#fea#robin#m!robin#chrom#incorrectfeaquotes#source: gunnerkrigg court#submission#request
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Maya: Nick, why do you let Edgeworth talk to you like he does? Phoenix: Hm... I guess mainly because I think he is hotter than hell.
submitted by @knight-of-skyloft
#ace attorney#maya fey#phoenix wright#wrightworth cw#source: gunnerkrigg court#misinformation#mod miles#that's right! i'm back!#it was tumblr's fault i was gone#it told me i wasnt a part of ths blog???#and wouldnt let me post#anyway thanks for submitting a gunnerkrigg court quote#i love gkc
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Geddy : Alphonse, why do you let Dirk talk to you like he does?
Alphonse : Hm… I guess mainly because I think he is hotter than hell.
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