
by Calladan » Thu Nov 17, 2016 4:53 am

by Benuty » Thu Nov 17, 2016 6:40 am

by Calladan » Thu Nov 17, 2016 8:33 am


by Benuty » Thu Nov 17, 2016 8:56 am
Calladan wrote:Except that doesn't entirely explain it, because Tom Paris, Stephen Franklin, Jethro Gibbs, Ben Sisko, Luke Skywalker, Tony McGee, Angel, Sherlock Holmes, Tony Dinozzo, Wesley Wyndham Price, Jed Bartlett and the rest can hardly be described as villains.
Good guys have problems with their fathers. Bad guys have problems with their fathers.
Write a list of twenty American male fictional characters - good or bad - and odds are at least five of them will have had problems with their father, one way or another.
I was just curious

by New haven america » Thu Nov 17, 2016 2:57 pm

by The first Galactic Republic » Thu Nov 17, 2016 3:23 pm

by Forsher » Thu Nov 17, 2016 9:57 pm

by Giovenith » Thu Nov 17, 2016 11:27 pm

by Calladan » Wed Nov 23, 2016 6:27 am
Forsher wrote:On the other hand, US Television shows have one over-riding message about being (a) a cop/detective/agent/whatever and (b) in relationships... it doesn't work. So, they can't have kids, they're not allowed to, but they still have to have families and, therefore, family drama** so the characters (in their thirties or forties) must be defined as children. The British mind seems to not care about this message so they lack this problem. As the ultimate proof, if there is a child they vanish and hardly ever appear (or less so than they should, Bones, at least when we still watched that, being a particularly blatant offender).
Giovenith wrote:Pretty simple: The struggle for identity.
It's not so much father and son specifically at play as it is simply parent and child. All children are, to some degree, reflections of their parents, and so are tasked with figuring out how much of their parents's own nature do they want to embrace and how much do they want to deny. Some people have amazing parents, and the drive to emulate them can inspire both pride and frustration, either from a security in being a piece of a grand legacy or the anxiety of being unable to match that legacy. Some have not so great parents, and thus the struggle of the child to prove that their parents's nature does not define their own, and of the parent in dealing with that child's rejection. Sometimes it's a bit of both, with child struggling to emulate the good and rise above the bad, and sometimes the parent having different ideas as to just what aspects of themselves are good and bad.
The reason this story is primarily told through fathers and sons though, I believe, is because for a long time women were not generally considered much as individuals. Women's lives and roles were rarely touched upon through any angle other than their relationships with men they knew, whom they were basically expected to base their entire lives around. Whereas men had to go through the journey of fashioning their own identities, women's identities were predestined for them, as support systems for whatever their husbands or fathers decided to do. A man could be a baker, a pilot, an engineer... A woman could be a baker's wife, a pilot's wife, an engineer's wife, etc. Women's identities were expected to be nothing more than reflections of their men's identities, and so the process by which they try to forge their own identity by considering their mother was just assumed to be nonexistent. All women are automatically wives, so they don't need to have a struggle to determine if they want to be like their mothers, because they just will be, right?
As gender equality grows, this has changed though. We've made great strides in realizing that a woman's personhood is not simply determined by what her men do, that there are things about herself she must figure out on her own terms. Disney's "Brave" and "Frozen" are great examples of women forging identity with respect to other women. Not just that though, but the relationships with which we use to tell stories of identity are becoming more diverse as well, with father/daughter, mother/son, brother/sister, etc. all becoming more common. The father/son dynamic is still around, but it's becoming less common than it was as we realize that humans are much more complex than we used to give them credit and can gain insight into their identities from a variety of sources outside of just direct descendence.

by USS Monitor » Wed Nov 23, 2016 10:30 am
New haven america wrote:Because people have trouble coming up with decent character conflicts.
If you think the US is bad at this, you should check out Japan (Apparently in anime, if you don't grow up with a father, or have a father that's not really involved, you will become a shitty parent 90% of the time).
Calladan wrote:Forsher wrote:On the other hand, US Television shows have one over-riding message about being (a) a cop/detective/agent/whatever and (b) in relationships... it doesn't work. So, they can't have kids, they're not allowed to, but they still have to have families and, therefore, family drama** so the characters (in their thirties or forties) must be defined as children. The British mind seems to not care about this message so they lack this problem. As the ultimate proof, if there is a child they vanish and hardly ever appear (or less so than they should, Bones, at least when we still watched that, being a particularly blatant offender).
But it's not just US tv shows. The entire canon of US fiction (books, films, plays etc) appears to have this obsession as well, stretching way back to before TV was around.

by Giovenith » Wed Nov 23, 2016 11:57 am
Calladan wrote:This does make more sense - there are more shows recently about mother/daughter relations (and father/daughter or mother/son relations) but I suppose up until recently it was the father that was the (for want of a better phrase) primary "adult figure" that a child had to live up to, and daughters were probably not expected to grow up to be the "man of the house" in the way that boys were.
But still - I do wonder why America embraced this trope so readily and why other nations (the UK for example) seems happy enough to have left it alone. I am not saying there aren't stories of father/son conflict in UK fiction, but if the sheer number that fill the US canon is..... overwhelming.

by USS Monitor » Wed Nov 23, 2016 11:59 pm
Giovenith wrote:Calladan wrote:This does make more sense - there are more shows recently about mother/daughter relations (and father/daughter or mother/son relations) but I suppose up until recently it was the father that was the (for want of a better phrase) primary "adult figure" that a child had to live up to, and daughters were probably not expected to grow up to be the "man of the house" in the way that boys were.
But still - I do wonder why America embraced this trope so readily and why other nations (the UK for example) seems happy enough to have left it alone. I am not saying there aren't stories of father/son conflict in UK fiction, but if the sheer number that fill the US canon is..... overwhelming.
If I had to take a shot in the dark, I'd say it's because America is an incredibly young country with not as much history or culture backing it as other lands. In the newborn years of a country, national structure is only just starting to be built, and so families and local communities wind up having to rely on themselves more than ever in order to get by. While England already had sprawling cities and respectable towns with well-established political and police forces taking the run of the place, Americans largely lived in just-barely-settled wilderness and had to put up with experimental forms of local government in the absence of nobility. Smaller, younger, less structurally established communities inevitably rely heavily on family because not only does your family make up a sizeable portion of the population, but it's really the only structure you can truly rely on in a world where the villagers might decide the next day that John the Leader was shit at fighting off those beavers and maybe we should start listening to Carl instead.
Because this cultural experience with experimental local government ultimately lead to what would become our democracy, the cultural memory of the importance of family remained with us for some time too. As the United States grew and became a more established nation not only in it's inner workings but on the international platform, more people found themselves willing or sometimes even forced to break away from familial obligation in order to find their place in the newfound clockwork of a quickly complicating nation. America really just found it's current mark on the world during the World Wars, a very recent era of history in which families were ripped apart and their individual members were forced to make do on their own, and the nation had to move on from looking inward to thinking about what role it wanted to play to the rest of the planet. So the time in which family was important was not that long ago and our culture still clings to it in some regard, but it's falling away as the times change and as America changes.

by Forsher » Thu Nov 24, 2016 2:27 am
Calladan wrote:Forsher wrote:On the other hand, US Television shows have one over-riding message about being (a) a cop/detective/agent/whatever and (b) in relationships... it doesn't work. So, they can't have kids, they're not allowed to, but they still have to have families and, therefore, family drama** so the characters (in their thirties or forties) must be defined as children. The British mind seems to not care about this message so they lack this problem. As the ultimate proof, if there is a child they vanish and hardly ever appear (or less so than they should, Bones, at least when we still watched that, being a particularly blatant offender).
But it's not just US tv shows. The entire canon of US fiction (books, films, plays etc) appears to have this obsession as well, stretching way back to before TV was around.
Giovenith wrote:If I had to take a shot in the dark, I'd say it's because America is an incredibly young country with not as much history or culture backing it as other lands.

by Hirota » Thu Nov 24, 2016 2:56 am
Wait, wait.Calladan wrote:Babylon 5

by Giovenith » Thu Nov 24, 2016 10:38 am
Forsher wrote:Giovenith wrote:If I had to take a shot in the dark, I'd say it's because America is an incredibly young country with not as much history or culture backing it as other lands.
I spluttered.
Parts of the US aren't particularly old. However, you ever heard of this thing called the 4th of July? That's where the entire country pretends for a day that more than the Eastern coast is particularly old.

by The Serbian Empire » Thu Nov 24, 2016 10:44 am
Calladan wrote:Except that doesn't entirely explain it, because Tom Paris, Stephen Franklin, Jethro Gibbs, Ben Sisko, Luke Skywalker, Tony McGee, Angel, Sherlock Holmes, Tony Dinozzo, Wesley Wyndham Price, Jed Bartlett and the rest can hardly be described as villains.
Good guys have problems with their fathers. Bad guys have problems with their fathers.
Write a list of twenty American male fictional characters - good or bad - and odds are at least five of them will have had problems with their father, one way or another.
I was just curious

by Giovenith » Thu Nov 24, 2016 10:47 am
The Serbian Empire wrote:Calladan wrote:Except that doesn't entirely explain it, because Tom Paris, Stephen Franklin, Jethro Gibbs, Ben Sisko, Luke Skywalker, Tony McGee, Angel, Sherlock Holmes, Tony Dinozzo, Wesley Wyndham Price, Jed Bartlett and the rest can hardly be described as villains.
Good guys have problems with their fathers. Bad guys have problems with their fathers.
Write a list of twenty American male fictional characters - good or bad - and odds are at least five of them will have had problems with their father, one way or another.
I was just curious
In fact, ask twenty guys and you'll probably find four or more who have issues with their fathers. Art replicates life.

by The Serbian Empire » Thu Nov 24, 2016 10:49 am

by The Serbian Empire » Thu Nov 24, 2016 10:53 am
Forsher wrote:Calladan wrote:
But it's not just US tv shows. The entire canon of US fiction (books, films, plays etc) appears to have this obsession as well, stretching way back to before TV was around.
Let's put it this way, I* didn't notice any particular father/son thing with Joad in The Grapes of Wrath... there, I'm done with my review of American literature.
The more interesting point is that I do have a bit more familiarity with what I'll call the British fictional tradition which, as I said, positions people as orphans or parents, and that this is probably why it stands out (the father/son thing).
*This doesn't necessarily mean much.Giovenith wrote:If I had to take a shot in the dark, I'd say it's because America is an incredibly young country with not as much history or culture backing it as other lands.
I spluttered.
Parts of the US aren't particularly old. However, you ever heard of this thing called the 4th of July? That's where the entire country pretends for a day that more than the Eastern coast is particularly old.

by Giovenith » Thu Nov 24, 2016 11:05 am

by Forsher » Thu Nov 24, 2016 9:06 pm
The Serbian Empire wrote:Sections further in such as Sault Sainte Marie, Albuquerque, and New Orleans are almost as old, but between those spots is a lot of nothing.

by The Grande Republic 0f Arcadia » Thu Nov 24, 2016 9:09 pm
Calladan wrote:So, as someone who lives in the UK but gets exposed to a lot of American fiction (in books, films and tv) I have to ask - what is the obsession with fathers and sons?
Star Wars, The Godfather, Death of a Salesman, Babylon 5, The West Wing. You can barely get through an episode of NCIS without someone whining about their father (and this spread into NCIS LA, where Deeks has Daddy issues and NCIS NO where Pride also has Daddy issues), and even Star Trek has various characters who have issues with their father.
This obsession took a truly disturbing turn when Elementary took the unbelievable turn of INVENTING a father for Sherlock Holmes just so he could have a trouble relationship with him. (As far as I know he doesn't have a father in any of the books).
So - what is it with fathers and sons in America? Why are so many American writers obsessed with it, and have been for so long?

by Venerable Bede » Thu Nov 24, 2016 10:06 pm

by USS Monitor » Mon Dec 05, 2016 12:29 am
Giovenith wrote:Forsher wrote:
I spluttered.
Parts of the US aren't particularly old. However, you ever heard of this thing called the 4th of July? That's where the entire country pretends for a day that more than the Eastern coast is particularly old.
Ah yes, the fourth of July, the day when we celebrate the parts that are less than 300 years old, as opposed to most other nations that were already older than that by the time we were "born."
I don't see what you're spluttering about. You don't seem to have contradicted anything I said.
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