The story of a Game of Thrones has become the mythological cannon of our collective generation. Func
The story of a Game of Thrones has become the mythological cannon of our collective generation. Functioning in the same capacity as world mythologies like classic India epics or even the bible, the story provides a framework of numerous individual stories each with its own metaphorical merit. We live in an era of effortless consumption, so it only makes sense that our collective myth would come through the form of television that does not require much participation on our part; we have a talking box to pass this story onto us rather than the oral traditions of our ancestors. The potency of the story can be found, at least partially, in its divergence from the typical arc of the hero’s journey; characters that we come to love and connect with don’t always survive to complete their personal story. These abrupt endings echo our own realities and reveal the inevitability of the sometimes painful unexpected. However, the samsaric nature of this world is shown to build and strengthen each character in various capacities rather than solely functioning as a detrimental circumstance. As readers and watchers, we can relate to and connect with this ideal because we have each experienced similar events that have no rhyme or reason, but have expanded the depth of our character. The story not only parallels our own personal circumstances in terms of entropy, but also in societal circumstance. I believe that on a more subconscious level, we relate to a Game of Thrones because the world within the story teeters on the precipice between utter destruction and renaissance. While still contained within a fantastical framework that allows us to look at the whole picture metaphorically rather than literally, the foreboding sense of great chance and change is a taste that lingers in our own mouths. -- source link
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