Thread #25063659 | Image & Video Expansion | Click to Play
File: MyStupidIntentions.jpg (34.6 KB)
34.6 KB JPG
The fox was an allegory for kikes, wasn't?
5 RepliesView Thread
>>
File: IMG_7416.gif (1.1 MB)
1.1 MB GIF
>>25063659
yes, its always kikes.
https://m.youtube.com/watch?v=gujPXF1WLKI
>>
>>
>>25063659
I liked this book a lot. Being confronted with such a monumental idea that you can't help but be changed by it, even if for the worse, that there's no going back from knowledge, is interesting. Truth or even just ideas of transcendence undermine life but are powerful because they promise something greater than life. Makes me think of the Golem by Meyrink, though I can hardly remember that novel.
The framing as a quasi-fable is also very cool, and I think makes the subject far more approachable.
>>
>>25067051
I saw it also for a comparison for the italian mentality.
>The various animals species represent the various clicks of ex city states in the italian penisula that are semi loyal to their own at best
>The fox and his two slaves (the protagonist and the dog) represent the local mafioso (or kike loaner)
>The animals that are living in the forest are also with the mentality of how mych i can take this time for now, witch works quite like the italian or general south europe/Mediterranean opportunism and whatever to you can get in one day.
>>
>>25067813
Sure, the setting clearly borrows from Italy since that's where the author is from, but I don't think the point of the novel is that or meant to critique it. To me it's interesting how the novel manages to switch between the very literal presentations of the animals and the archaic human countryside; you get both very human encounters and ones that are clearly between animals, and I think that accentuates the concept of being cut off from one's former self after gaining certain forms of knowledge: the main character and his mentor gain only a limited degree of humanity, but they're also not permitted to be animals anymore. The mentor tries to deny his animal nature, but he still dies an animal, and it's by trying to deny humanity to others that he attempts to lift himself up; his pride and vanity form a paradox wherein he wishes to share the knowledge he's gained but he tries to deny others the sort of transmutation it allows in order to keep his special position.
The setting is not the point. Think of it as a vehicle for the greater concept being played with by the author.