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submitted 1 year ago by sculd@beehaw.org to c/lgbtq_plus@beehaw.org

Amazing video produced by Jessie Gender along with a group of creators whom many of them are from the ** LGBTIAQ+ community** .

I knew from my anthropology class many years ago that George Lucas borrowed concept from the The Hero with a Thousand Faces.

What I did not know is that the author, Joseph Campbell is:

  1. A misogynist
  2. An antisemite
  3. Didn't research properly

This explains why the hero must be a (white) men.

Carl Jung's theory about collective unconsciousness and archetypes are also outdated and discarded by psychology.

The archetypes reduce women to "mother", "Goddess". etc. but never the hero.

Also, since Jung's theory categories people neatly into archetypes, those who does not fit social norm (LGBTQIA+ people) were never represented.

When the creation is based on such shaky foundations, no wonder the Star Wars fandom turns out to be racist and misogynist.

Btw, do you know who else's book borrows heavily from Jung? Jordan Peterson.

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[-] ArumiOrnaught@kbin.social 2 points 1 year ago

This isn't an attack on you, but a personal belief. I don't care what the authors intentions are. They can shed light on something but once it's out, the media is out of their hands. Great example is the book "starship troopers" and the movie.

Another thing I dislike is the 'natural' fallacy. Because force is described as 'natural'. What's natural is death, life, decay, growth, order, disorder. What the Jedi were shown to be is a weird sex cult that prevented people from getting in unless you had a 'birth right'.

If grey Jedi is what all jedi were supposed to be, then that is one thing. But that isn't what was shown.

[-] IcedCoffeeBitch@beehaw.org 1 points 1 year ago

Yeah, The Force involves life and death. The Force's will is actually to embrace a balance of both. But Dark Side users go against the will of the Force, for the sake of power or even for the sake of extending their own life or others.

I would argue that Luke and Ahsoka are great examples of gray Jedi (especially if we don't count sequel material). In Luke's case, in the OT it could be argued that his love for his friends, when he leaves Yoda to save them, and his belief that there was still good inside his father, made him a better Jedi than all before him. To me, he rejected tradition to do what was right. And that is what makes a great Jedi.

this post was submitted on 22 Dec 2023
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