The Hunchback & the Grishaverse: [Fantasy] Fiction is Anti-Romani | Sfarda L. Gül

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  • Опубликовано: 23 окт 2024

Комментарии • 30

  • @AnarchyOnPage
    @AnarchyOnPage  2 месяца назад +9

    I must’ve had my microphone closer to my face than usual while recording this because the amount of inhaling I had to edit out was unprecedented-that was probably why the editing took so long at all.
    *Read the recent [as of commenting] community post:*
    ruclips.net/user/postUgkxPv_aLBjMOfcCUN51M9vIkTEP5fm6BumQ

  • @wreathedriver2856
    @wreathedriver2856 2 месяца назад +13

    I haven't read or watched any Grishaverse but it doesn't surprise me that any Romani-inspired people in a fantasy story aren't portrayed great; it's sadly way too common. There were also definitely details in your recounting of the history that I wasn't aware of even if I knew its broad strokes. Definitely something I wish more people were more aware of

  • @a.c.1839
    @a.c.1839 2 месяца назад +4

    I don't know what kind of divine miracle landed this video on my home page, but thank you so much for making this 🙏 I'm a big fan of Florian's videos and I'm always on the lookout for more informative videos on Romani history and especially on depictions of Romani people in literature. Keep up the good work!

  • @U1R1M0M
    @U1R1M0M 2 месяца назад +5

    one of the best videos ive ever seen. since the first book id ever read from her, i’ve seen l. bardugo criticized for her lack of care/research/time/concern regarding the cultures of the people she’s writing about, but being non-european, didn’t pick up on the specific anti-romani stereotypes. good on you for not continuing in this series, as even before this video, i thought the treatment of zoya and her half-romani heritage, was really poorly done. incredible amount of time and research put into this. just an incredible effort all around.

  • @TheVoidIsBees
    @TheVoidIsBees 2 месяца назад +4

    Once again a great video from you, commenting to boost it to the wider youtube populace. I was aware of a majority of the facts you presented on Romale oppression but I never even knew that my own home country had banned our Roma population from speaking their own language.

  • @baochi456
    @baochi456 2 месяца назад +7

    We will have Elizabeth Olsen’s head with this one 🗣️🗣️‼️‼️

  • @lucikka3674
    @lucikka3674 2 месяца назад +3

    commenting for the algorithm!! Amazing work as always Sfar and thank you for making the anglophone writing world a better place.

  • @samunurai569
    @samunurai569 2 месяца назад +5

    Насколько обидно и несправедливо что люди веками подвергающиеся ужасающей дискриминации включая рабство и холокост до сих пор по большей части не воспринимаются людьми как люди. То как часто я слышу про опасных колдунов и воров про похитителей детей ужасает. Я уже молчу про слюр. Большинство знать не знают что это слюр. И как же бесит что новый прижившийся термин для всяких коучей мошенников это инфо ц*слюр

  • @Ayluy
    @Ayluy 2 месяца назад +3

    this is very interesting and i like the way you structured the video :)

  • @NaritaZaraki
    @NaritaZaraki 2 месяца назад +4

    Okay wow this was dense and FANTASTIC and I'll definitely be coming back for a rewatch (and perhaps to make a proper comment that engages the subject matter) but in the mean time, here is my humble offering for the ever mysterious algorithm! ^_^

  • @TiffWaffles
    @TiffWaffles 2 месяца назад +6

    With the exception of the whole Romanis stealing children trope and the ridiculously long chapter in which Hugo places forth his opinion on Gothic architecture, I thought that Notre-Dame de Paris was a good book... I mean that it was great for a historical novel of its time. Could have done without everyone literally obsessing about Esmeralda, though. Throughout that novel, you really see people sexualizing Esmeralda. Like she had no other character besides being someone's sexual fantasy, including Phoebus.
    I suspect that the reason for why Hugo revealed that Esmeralda was a French woman that had been stolen as a young child was largely to elicit sympathy for the character. As though being forcibly married, kidnapped (at least twice), arrested and tortured, nearly sexually assaulted (by Don Claude Frollo), before finally being murdered in retaliation by some man who refused to take no for an answer wasn't enough to garner sympathy from readers- including female readers who may have experienced this kind of gender related violence.
    Anyway, didn't know that Grishaverse was possibly anti-Romani. When I first read the first and second book, I was just focused on how poorly developed Alina's character was more than anything else. The writer doesn't know how to depict strong women characters if they were to slap her across the face.
    Thank you for posting this video!

  • @a_typical_hipster6206
    @a_typical_hipster6206 2 месяца назад +6

    As a Slav who's family moved to the US when i was a child, i found myself drawn to the Grishaverse because of the Russian coded fantasy world. It definitely felt like it had a lot of loose stereotyping but the Sunni being Romane people is something i didn't realize - partly i think because of kind of the mixed references that could be thrown in, and partly because i didn't realize to what extent Romane people are so generalized in fantasy. I didn't have enough historical knowledge. I also have enjoyed some very bad fantasy because i get so caught up in my imagination of the stories and characters - i definitely need to pay more attention sometimes 😂
    I look forward to checking out some of your other videos especially the Russia in fantasy one and am curious if you have any recommendations for Russian & Russian inspired fantasy you do recommend. Thank you!

  • @micheledix2616
    @micheledix2616 2 месяца назад +1

    Thank you so much for your insightful and most helpful thesis. Well done and will hopeful change the' on the fence' minds of many

  • @AlexRide-z7g
    @AlexRide-z7g 2 месяца назад +13

    Thanks for this video, anti-roma stuff in fantasy is all too commen so it's important to have these conversations. Your research is also deeply appreciated. As an English speaking non-Roma I'm always looking for new information on these topics (I had heard about the chattle slavery in Romania but never in any detail for example)

  • @mariadeiuliis4643
    @mariadeiuliis4643 2 месяца назад +2

    extremely good and well informed video essay

  • @ellisvan
    @ellisvan 2 месяца назад +10

    this was both incredibly enlightening (glad i never bothered with L. Bard), and so fucking depressing (in part because of the most racist descriptions 'historians' and 'scientists' use to describe a massively diverse group, but also how blatantly exploited Romale are even in current work). how are we not past this level of erasure??

  • @koscheib5199
    @koscheib5199 2 месяца назад +9

    It is truly disheartening how prevasive anti-Romale sentiment is. Growing up in Russia in this day and age (with a part Jewish family no less!) I've heard all the stereotypes as a child without any sort of reflection of how similar some of them are to antisemitic ones and how clearly offensive they had to be. Was also under the impression that the g-word was a word for a profession not people, which is just all kinds of yikes. It took me until I was in university in the states to really reflect on any of that.
    Most of what I knew of persecution of Romale were the stereotypes I learned as a child and the Holocaust. But I also happened to have some excellent history teachers and professors who took care to point out that Romale were as much persecuted as Jews, and that it weren't even only Ashkenazi Jews from Europe to be affected, but also Sephardi and other Jews from the Ottoman Empire. People who were clearly highly knowledgeable on the subject. All of this should be part of every history curriculum. But that might be very optimistic of me considering that not even asnisemitim is for all it is more talked about in the modern world.

  • @FudgeYeahAmerica
    @FudgeYeahAmerica 2 месяца назад +2

    I dont read the books this was about, but im so glad it got on my feed, bc while i know enough to see cultural violence, this video helped me see some of the extra nuances that aren't widely discussed. Especially in the western lense! Thank you!

  • @samunurai569
    @samunurai569 2 месяца назад +4

    О господи Гришаверс и все его абсурдные базовые ошибки. Мне так обидно, потому что потенциал ведь есть, но он потрачен в никуда. Россия страна большая. Российская империя (главное вроде как вдохновение Равки) еще больше. Столько национальностей, столько аллегорий можно было построить на дискриминации меньшинств. В итоге в Равке только около русские (написанные тоже с минимальным смешным рисерчем) и сули (рома, к сожалению как обычно сведённые к стереотипам), да шуханцы (странная смесь где тоже напутано все) . А я ведь очень радовалась тому что они дали Алине азиатские корни в сериале. Однако и это было написано поверхностно и честно для русского региона логичнее было бы будь ее азиатская сторона центрально-азиатской. Ну а что мне простой казашке, которая хотела наконец-то интересное фэнтези, вдохновленное русскоговорящими регионами, но с этническим разнообразием

  • @JustClaude13
    @JustClaude13 Месяц назад

    i have read the book, but I mostly remember The Hunchback of Notre Dame from the Charles Laughten movie.

  • @podobnozycietakiejest
    @podobnozycietakiejest 2 месяца назад +2

    How do you know Xaladitka?! I didn't understand, it is actually not only thing I'm interested. But I wonder how do you communicate with Roma, you studied together or what? I again act dumb but being minority from Russia as well I didn't experience something like that.
    A few words after video, it is the great work. Thank you!

    • @AnarchyOnPage
      @AnarchyOnPage  2 месяца назад +3

      I used to play with Romani children when I was a child (I was not allowed to do this, but I still did).

    • @podobnozycietakiejest
      @podobnozycietakiejest 2 месяца назад

      @@AnarchyOnPage I ask probably very personal questions, sorry if I bother you. Can I ask last stupid one? You say you are polyglot so what languages do you speak fluently or pretty well and learn?

    • @AnarchyOnPage
      @AnarchyOnPage  2 месяца назад +2

      @@podobnozycietakiejest That’s okay. I speak Russian and English fluently, Greek conversationally, Japanese enough to comfortably survive (lol), and Turkish at its basic. Also lots of passive language knowledge like different Slavic languages, especially Bulgarian and Serbian-I can very easily understand written text especially. I am working on a couple others too like Italian and Armenian, hopefully to get them to the same competency level as Japanese but at least to basic like with Turkish.

    • @podobnozycietakiejest
      @podobnozycietakiejest 2 месяца назад +2

      @@AnarchyOnPage You're amazing!Ευχαριστώ! I'm learning Greek :)