TrickleJest wrote: ↑Wed Dec 04, 2019 10:26 pm
Homestuck^1 (before chapter 1) is what I was referring to, sorry for the confusion.
desu i think you might need to link it for me but thank you for clarifying!
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MorganMustDie wrote: ↑Wed Dec 04, 2019 10:13 pm
I'm not saying a familiarity is necessary, but at least in the week between the content warnings' release and the story itself, they were very forthright about "everything in the content warnings is seriously something that will happen, so be ready for that."
The content warnings would only be a joke if they didn't appear in the story, and they do. You'd need to assume that Hussie is a legitimately cruel person to say "there's suicide in this" and then not put it in. If you read a content warning that says there is suicide in something, and that that is something that would trouble or harm you to read, then you shouldn't read it. I can't think of any kind of person who would a) require a content warning, and then b) READ a content warning and say "ah, they're probably only joking" and continue reading.
It's also not like it would come as a surprise, to reach the epilogues you actually need to have read homestuck, which contains a much more gruesome suicide scene actually displayed with visuals (dirk's teleport decapitation) than the epilogues contained
Familiarity with the authors' social media posts a week before the Epilogues is also something I don't really think should be necessary to know, but
I'm not sure it makes sense to define them as jokes only if they don't appear in the story, because you can make jokes about things that do actually happen ? It feels silly to me to look at CWs for Rapping and The Economy and Early 20th Century Dance Movements and say "these are serious content warnings for serious content, and are not written in jest." Which is what I'm talking about when I say it's reasonable to look at that, and look at the CWs for actual sensitive content, and interpret them less seriously than you would if they were not presented in such a lighthearted context.
I'm not someone who was personally upset by any of the CW-worthy Epilogues content, but I've spoken to people who
were, and who did not think the content warnings were sufficient -- and I agree with them that I don't think they were successful as content warnings. I don't think any of the authors were malicious here, or that there was any ill intent, but I do think they could have done a better job at getting across that, yeah, this stuff happens in detail. I would've been satisfied with an additional sentence in the summary with something like "This story contains descriptions of yadda yadda yadda," or really just a separation between tags and content warnings (a distinction that AO3
does make). Like, it's not the end of the world, and honestly probably isn't worth the amount of words we've dedicated to it, but I do think it could've been improved.
I also don't think visuals = upsetting re: Dirk's suicide in Homestuck. Because suicide is something that generally starts with more internal ruminating than external action, words and written descriptions of suicide and suicidal ideation have the potential to be more upsetting than a kinda cartoony visual. I don't think they're the same.