- Pronouns
- He/him
- MarioWiki
- Hooded Pitohui
Presumably, if you're on this website, you have some level of investment in fiction, in its characters, worlds, and stories. I should doubt you arrived here without some interest in Super Mario, though I wouldn't so confidently say folks here always stay fans of the plumber and his series.
This, however, is not a universal experience. There are folks out there who would dismiss fiction and art, in all of its forms, as nothing more than mere fantasy that one ought not to trifle with. There are folks out there who dismiss fiction out of hand, as something that's not worth thought or investment of time and energy. Oftentimes, you'll hear arguments that try to paint fiction and everything tied up with out as unproductive distractions, work and investment that produces nothing of value and only gets in the way of one's personal ambitions. Songs, videogames, stageplays, films, shows, books, roleplays, anything of this sort is dismissed as undeserving of any significant amounts of attention.
I, ah, vehemently disagree with such an assessment. To me, the appeal of fiction is its role as a mirror. Fiction reflects the human condition, and by investing ourselves in its characters, worlds, and stories, we better understand ourselves, the others we share our time living with, and the world around us. You can take a character and break down their struggles, their flaws, their histories and how it has shaped their personalities and habits, and, through that process, make discoveries about your own flaws and virtues, your own fears and aspirations. Likewise, stories can be... for lack of a better phrase, empathy tools. Understanding these fictional worlds and situations provides the insights you need to step into someone else's shoes and see from their perspective, understand anxieties and dreams you would never encounter and would struggle to comprehend in a multi-dimensional way otherwise.
Mostly, I'm rambling in a general sense now, though I could provide any number of specific examples. The point I mean to make is that the appeal of fiction, to me, is the role it serves as a mirror. To get invested in fiction, in art, in everything wrapped up in those, is to actively work at better understanding the world and your own place in it, and fiction itself provides the different perspectives, multiple angles, and variables one needs to really do that.
But, if I wanted to talk about this non-stop, I'd write a blog. I want to ask, to the Boards in general:
What is the appeal of fiction to you? What is its value? Why do you choose to invest your time, energy, and emotion into it? How do you engage with fiction and art, and why is it important to you?
This, however, is not a universal experience. There are folks out there who would dismiss fiction and art, in all of its forms, as nothing more than mere fantasy that one ought not to trifle with. There are folks out there who dismiss fiction out of hand, as something that's not worth thought or investment of time and energy. Oftentimes, you'll hear arguments that try to paint fiction and everything tied up with out as unproductive distractions, work and investment that produces nothing of value and only gets in the way of one's personal ambitions. Songs, videogames, stageplays, films, shows, books, roleplays, anything of this sort is dismissed as undeserving of any significant amounts of attention.
I, ah, vehemently disagree with such an assessment. To me, the appeal of fiction is its role as a mirror. Fiction reflects the human condition, and by investing ourselves in its characters, worlds, and stories, we better understand ourselves, the others we share our time living with, and the world around us. You can take a character and break down their struggles, their flaws, their histories and how it has shaped their personalities and habits, and, through that process, make discoveries about your own flaws and virtues, your own fears and aspirations. Likewise, stories can be... for lack of a better phrase, empathy tools. Understanding these fictional worlds and situations provides the insights you need to step into someone else's shoes and see from their perspective, understand anxieties and dreams you would never encounter and would struggle to comprehend in a multi-dimensional way otherwise.
Mostly, I'm rambling in a general sense now, though I could provide any number of specific examples. The point I mean to make is that the appeal of fiction, to me, is the role it serves as a mirror. To get invested in fiction, in art, in everything wrapped up in those, is to actively work at better understanding the world and your own place in it, and fiction itself provides the different perspectives, multiple angles, and variables one needs to really do that.
But, if I wanted to talk about this non-stop, I'd write a blog. I want to ask, to the Boards in general:
What is the appeal of fiction to you? What is its value? Why do you choose to invest your time, energy, and emotion into it? How do you engage with fiction and art, and why is it important to you?