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Generation of Chaos · review

★
Top reader Jul 31, 2022 · 2 min read
↓ Not recommended
2 /10

Spoiler warning

This review may discuss plot details.

Wagwan! Alexandre desu. This prologue is divided into two parts, where the story of the first has nothing to do with the story of the second. Imagine that Ash Ketchum enrols in a "pokemon" championship, but finds out that by reaching the "adult" age of 14, he loses the ability to speak and train the "pokemons". Philosophically speaking, the author's main idea was to show the inevitable fate of maturation for all humans and that, clinging to illusions created by our childhood, lead to isolation and loss of connection of each of us to society or, he just thought it was cool the idea of companionanimals with the possibility of collecting them, in a giant world to discover and decided to make a remake.

In the second part, we have "the story" of a professional carpet maker who falls asleep and dreams of her and her sister's murder by crucifixion. Again, philosophically speaking, I think the author's idea would be to demonstrate the racism that still exists in our society today, using obvious comparisons to the KKK, with the use of mostly white groups and crosses of Christ and that, despite there being various attempts for inclusion of these minorities, there will always be acts of ethnocentrism around a superior race. Or, the author only used two neurons and tried to create the most basic story of revenge and character development.

Considering the works created before, I believe more in the second options, and hence the grade being so bad.

Mark
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