this post was submitted on 28 Mar 2024
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I think a lot of people are being overly harsh on this article, which I think is a completely fair and competently written piece of criticism.
The central thesis of the criticism is that demons are portrayed without much in the way of moral complexity so that it can be used as a plot device to better highlight the changing and more relatable main character. I don't disagree with this, but I also don't disagree with many of the comments in this thread about how this serves the story very well and that creating moral complexity in this case is unnecessary. Both of these can be true at the same time.
Creative works always exist within the context of their creation. Without the fantasy works that came before it, Frieren would have to do tons of dry world building to establish the setting because the readers wouldn't have any preconceived idea of what an elf, dwarf, demon, etc. is. In Frieren's case, there is the added context of the Japanese media landscape in which poorly done plotlines sharing similar veneers of morally gray demons are all too common. This makes Frieren, an excellent story which smartly uses a straight evil portrayal of demons to feel like a subversion (Himmel being unambiguously good is a similar situation). However, just because Frieren is subverting badly written versions of morally gray demons, doesn't change the fact that the demons in Frieren lack the moral complexity like the author is discussing.
In any case, this was an interesting read and helped me stay awake on the train this morning. Thanks for sharing!
Sure, but the author frames it as a negative thing, when it isn't. Giving the demons more humanlike morals won't improve the story imo. The fact that the demons look and act so human, but aren't is what makes for interesting subplots. Like what happened in the Graf Granat's domain or the story of that demon child. This is explored more later on in the manga too. Just because the demons don't have humanlike complexity, doesn't mean they aren't complex.