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by antihipocrat
1249 days ago
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I lean toward giving the author the benefit of the doubt here. In the context of the societies being portrayed by the books, these behaviours may be normalized. The same goes for within the context of the personality of particular characters. It doesn't necessarily mean that the author agrees with them. Personally I'd prefer that authors in general be free to write fiction without having their creativity diminished by worrying about whether a reader is going to think that the author holds the same view. |
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Another classic trope of his is the "hyper-competent" man, who is incredibly self-assured, is smarter and can do everything better than the average person. Hard to say exactly what drives this, but my guess is it's either a superiority (I'm better than these fools) or inferiority (I wish I was better than these people) complex.