Dream Muttman wrote: ↑Sat Dec 14, 2019 8:38 pm
I wrote a whole rant and I kind of regret it now. Feels like harshing people's mellow, but it's what pops into my head whenever I see people seriously getting into arguments about classpects. I'll leave it below for whoever's interested in reading it, but feel free to treat it as non-canon if you dislike the content.
Classpects are a giant trap for human pareidolia and apophenia. Pattern-seeking for its own sake without a solid working approach or enough substance to sift through. The strongest evidence for the meaning of Aspects is not symbolic but instead always literal and expositional, contrary to big classpect theorist beliefs.
John can do the Windy thing.
All of his other feats and ideas can't be proven to have anything to do with Breath as an Aspect or Heir as a Class, or even with Prospit as a Lunar Sway, nor with the Jack Noir effigy in his dream room or his Ultimate Self waiting in the wings.
There might even be some other form of influence that's never taken into account. Hussie as the narrator could color things, or there could be some other fictional layer full of levers and switches that move John Egbert we've never heard about or seen, like the one that makes random characters write down parts of the First Guardian code, which seemingly contradicts all arguments of Titles being built on agency or being universal to a character's role, because there's no pattern to who gets randomly picked to do that job. But the fact of the matter is John Egbert has Breath as an Aspect and this is proven by his super powers and nothing else. A character that doesn't have an Aspect-coded superpower may as well have no Class or Aspect.
People like to talk about symbolism and hyperflexible mythology, but Homestuck doesn't live up those claims. It's never managed to show even a sliver of the implications that follow from accepting Classpects as a fully realized system. It's always going to be half-baked because it was left that way, first unintentionally and now purposefully.
I mean....you aren't WRONG. It IS just kinda dumb pattern-seeking without any real substance to it. xD And I do love a lot of theories people get up to, especially oD's, but 90% of it is built on not very much at all. That doesn't mean it can't be more than just fun, though, or that trying to examine and theorize about it is just a whole lot of puffing hot air. New meaning DOES come out of both Homestuck as a text, any other fictional text, even your own understanding of stories or even reality, when you try and view it through a classpecty lens. With or without solid, iron-clad evidence to back it up.
Since it isn't really about drawing clear conclusions, or answering questions, or solving problems. It's just about putting things into a different perspective, or a different frame of reference, from which new ideas or connections can be drawn. Sometimes those new ideas or connections are really just kind of useless and pointlessly obscure or specific. Sometimes they may actively distract from or contradict the more broad, and more important, ideas in the text or in life. So yeah, seeing that is kind of frustrating. But sometimes--fairly frequently, which is why it's so popular--they can be genuinely profound, leading you down an entirely new train of thought that in fact serves to better support or lead you to those bigger, more important ideas.
For example. Thinking about Dirk Strider as a Prince of Heart beyond just his fancy outfit or his apparent ability to rip souls out of bodies is genuinely helpful towards understanding him as a character. He's a destroyer of souls, sure, but also can be rephrased as a destroyer of the self, or of literal heart. It sort of literally makes his hero title "Self-Destruction Dude". Heart can be interpreted as the soul, the self, one's personality, or their feelings, emotions, and motivations. Dirk's both tries to destroy or suppress his own emotions through his dumb coolguy persona, and in turn his emotions which he can't control end up being destructive to both himself and the people around him. Dirk self-sabotages in the more traditional sense, but also, his soul literally is more prone to fracturing or splintering. And his soul is so self-destructive that those splinters literally are constantly getting in his own way, also impairing his ability to make genuine emotional connections with others. Etc etc.
There's also the moment where brobot, a dirk splinter in the form of a gift Dirk made for Jake that he literally and figuratively put a lot of himself into as a gesture of how much he cares, rips out the uranium that works as its heart and smashes it against a rock, just to give Jake something he needs. This is a parallel to something Aradiabot (a Maid of Time) did earlier, so sure, trying to attribute this action solely to the whole Prince of Heart thing is fairly bullshit. I could also point out that the bot body was specifically made by Equius, who obviously has a lot of really deliberate parallels to Dirk, and he's an Heir of Void. What does THAT mean?? The classpect shit has gotten so muddled, instantly! No CLEAR conclusions can be drawn. But it doesn't change the fact that thinking about the action through this lens ANYWAY leads to an understanding of a fundamental truth about Dirk: which is how he is a person who will destroy himself with the intensity of his feelings, often under the guise of doing it for other people's sake. Which is something that can easily be applied to multiple other things we see Dirk do over the course of Homestuck: the comic, and even potentially.......other things that Shall Not Be Named......but which still support the idea anyway. We were able to come to an understanding of something that was Not Bullshit by looking at it through this lens. There may be other ways to come to understand it, sure, but this is still one of them, and it's useful! And also fun!