aphanon_meme ([personal profile] aphanon_meme) wrote2017-12-31 06:04 pm

part 367 bears and wolves oh my

YOU DID IT, I'M SO PROUD OF YOU. Well, it's been a year. I hope it was a good one for you--and that 2018 is even better! And maybe we'll finally get that fansub of even one of the musicals... just maybe.

Enjoy part 367!

Latest Page

View flat!

*There is a rules page here. Please read it before reading and posting.

*There is a contact post here. Please use it for contacting me privately.

*There is a meme calender you can use for tracking and listing meme events!

*Dreamwidth, unfortunately, no longer supports any type of anonymous image posting.

*If you would like the Dreamwidth layout to look more like Livejournal's, you can use this workaround for your browser

Note: All entries prior to Part 331 originated on Livejournal.
zeetee: accurate depiction of me (artist)

Re: there's going to be a Kabuki play of Naruto

[personal profile] zeetee 2018-04-18 03:00 am (UTC)(link)
Ehe, thanks, anon! ;u; I hope you like it!

Ooh, thanks!! /bookmarksss, Looks like they kept the mirror and those ridiculous cat outfits, but not the armbands, huh... oh wow, the characters casually making excuses for ignoring the nazi rise is chilling!

Yeah, I understand the various changes (the later introduction of LGBT themes is actually MORE canon than the 60s version, since the book it was based on had gay themes awkwardly stepped around in the first musical) (a subtle You, The Audience, Is Culpable In Your Passivity theme is not interesting or shocking the fifth time around, I guess, though I think the US could use another round of it these days) butttt I reserve the right to be v v biased towards the one with my nana in it, ahah
Edited 2018-04-18 03:04 (UTC)

Re: there's going to be a Kabuki play of Naruto

(Anonymous) 2018-04-18 03:24 am (UTC)(link)
Oh wow, what a difference! And what a wonderful performance. And your nana!! :) :)

(a subtle You, The Audience, Is Culpable In Your Passivity theme is not interesting or shocking the fifth time around, I guess, though I think the US could use another round of it these days)

I might just be reaching, but I wonder if the reason why the theme in the end was not subtle in the '93 London revival/98' Broadway revival is because of the passage of time.

In the 1960s, most of the audience would have had some sort of personal living memory of Nazi Germany/WW2, either as an adult or older teen or even a child. So the theme of turning it on the audience: your passivity makes you complicit, look to yourselves! was subtle but not so subtle that the audiences wouldn't recognize the message. Remember what we experienced--passivity helped it happen.

But by 1993, the bulk of the audience would not have had the personal living memory Nazi Germany/WW2. And their greatest exposure to WW2 would have likely been in relation to concentration camps--lots of books, survivor interviews, TV shows, movies, made in between the 60s and 1993 (and then 1998) made it the most visual symbol of the result of the Nazi rise to power. So instead of turning a mirror to the audience and reminding them of what passivity does, it's a reminder to the audience of what happened.

but that's just my interpretation!
zeetee: George Fox (quaker)

Re: there's going to be a Kabuki play of Naruto

[personal profile] zeetee 2018-04-18 03:35 am (UTC)(link)
Isn't it great? :D My mom's favorite part is everyone stomping at the end of the song, it jolts you and reminds you that there's something more going on behind the frivolity. Also she used to be running around downstairs as a little girl, so she could hear it above her.

I completely agree, that's a really thorough analysis! It makes a lot of historic sense that the changes happened when they did. I still think the passivity narrative is important, but it definitely dosn't mean the modern narratives aren't!