Can Horikoshi address discrimination in a mature and respectable way without having the conclusion feel like a copout?
I doubt it. But don’t get me wrong. I WANT Horikoshi to get this right. Heteromorph discrimination in the My Hero world has popped up several times and every time it left me wanting more. From the racist group (Creature Rejection Clan) the League of Villains killed to Deku not directly addressing a mob trying to kill a heteromoph (Giant Fox Woman) simply because of her looks, I’ve wanted more scenes focused on this issue. Unfortunately, I’m let down almost every time.
Let me back up a bit. I loved the LoV fighting the Creature Rejection Clan, but looking back, it was a total copout. Horikoshi didn’t address the discrimination issue. It was simply used to show the League killing people the audience wouldn’t feel bad about dying.
And Deku… I will never get over the main character of My Hero Academia not giving those mob meatheads a verbal dressing down for assaulting someone based on their looks.
Koda. Shoji. We’re only now having heteromorph heroes address discrimination? Sure, Koda grew up in the city, so he probably didn’t experience that crap. But, Shoji? We’re waiting until the final arc for him to talk about it? For any hero to talk about this? When Giant Fox Woman mentioned getting turned away from a shelter based on her looks, where were the heroes’ reactions? We got nothing. Even a panel of Shoji looking sad or upset would’ve been something. It all comes down to my lack of faith in Horikoshi successfully addressing this issue.
So what happens now? Horikoshi has kept all his heroic characters from addressing this enormous problem in their society until this very moment. Is Shoji gonna Talk No Jutsu his way out of this mess? Is he just gonna spew some “Hey! I’m been there. But I’m sure things will work out because we want it to.” garbage? Society in My Hero Academia has to change. And not just with “hope” and “friendship”. There needs to be real societal movement in the right direction? How? I don’t know. But Horikoshi’s got one hell of a job trying to convey that in a way that doesn’t seem cheap.
This was a good chapter! I’ve got no problems where the story is going, just with how it may not be resolved in a satisfying way. Discrimination is a hard subject to get “right” in fiction, depending on the author. And I’m not sure someone who may not have firsthand experience can do it justice. Guess we’ll just have to see.
Oh! And All For One pumped Spinner full of quirks. He’s gonna die and become a martyr. Elton John’s already set to play Candle In The Wind (Spinner Edition) at his enviable funeral.



2 replies on “Heteromorph Lives Matter [My Hero Academia 370]”
Yeah, he may have been holding back on it for that exact reason. Whatever the reason- Editorial interference, “Imposter Syndrome,” Fatigue, or just in general an inability to handle a long story(as he’s said in the past that he has trouble wrapping up longer arcs)- He’s been off his game. And whoever dares to tackle this topic needs to worker harder than ever to pull it off.
I can’t say whether or not he can do it; he’s only “dipped his toe” into the topic in comparison to something like “One Piece.” Ultimately, the story needed more time to do this topic justice- time that he doesn’t have and Horikoshi doesn’t seem like he’s going to put in. We’re getting a MAIN CHARACTER’S Backstory when the final battle is going on elsewhere.
Yeah, I don’t care about Spinner’s quirks either; it just seems like they’re making him Machia 2.0- personality and all. So you can assume a similar power set, plus what we saw. You know, unless he’s actually planning to make him a bomb like he did Nagant.
I’m sorry, but “Jeda Purge?” “Incident 6/6?” That wasn’t even funny.
LikeLiked by 1 person
I find Spinner’s story compelling. He really seems like a good guy who went down the wrong path. It’d be tragic if he died a pawn in AFO’s plan.
I love the Jeda Purge (Jedi) reference. The 6/6… Well, I don’t have much of a problem with it, but I figured some wouldn’t like it (assuming it’s a reference to 9/11). And I wasn’t willing to die on that hill, so I didn’t mention it.
LikeLiked by 1 person