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hysyartmaskstudio:

This part of the chapter is interesting, because its a consequence for Kaneki working and fighting for the CCG for years, and we’ve seen precious little of those. For three years Kaneki was one of the CCG’s top killers. Even if it was at someone else’s bidding, he still fought and killed hundreds of ghouls for them.

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Now he’s acting like he’s the champion of ghoul kind but he has never actually been called out for how many ghoul lives he took. He’s never been asked to confront what he did, the orphans and mourners he created, and apologize. 

And here’s Hajime, showing up as an obvious shadow. He outright tells Kaneki that he was inspired by him and his violence, violence he used for the CCG.

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This entire situation also smacks of another parallel with Kaneki’s other father figure, Yoshimura. For most of his narrative the focus of Yoshimura is a tale of his victimhood with V, of how V took both his mother and threatened to take his daughter from him, before ultimately closing in on his own life. However, it’s important to remember that V was originally a job offered to Yoshimura and not a life he was born into. 

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There are of course, sympathetic circumstances that pushed him towards this decision. As Yoshimura himself said, he did not kill out of malice, but rather out of a sense of self preservation. Alone, all he could think of was extending his own life and ensuring for himself. 

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Kaneki even says so to himself, the primary reason he is hunting ghouls is not because he thinks it’s the right thing to do or out of hatred towards him, his main reason is his own self preservation. He compares himself to Donato, a tool that has to continue to make himself useful to the CCG or else he will be disposed of. 

Kaneki takes it a step further though, he says Donato is not merely acting out of survival instinct. He’s also trying to find some self value, to prove himself to those above him. Despite the grisly work he was doing, in a way he gained what he was looking for, validation for his actions, a place of belonging, continued survival. 

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When we’re introduced to Haise he’s precisely at the point where Kuzen would have reached before he met Ukina. Finally after all the struggle in the world, he was provided for both food, clothing, housing and shelter and no longer had to worry about those things. Even though he had a place to belong though, he still finds himself lonely. 

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Perhaps Haise did make friends among the CCG but his time their was plagued by constant worrying about his own existence, and fear that he might lose his place. All fears which eventually prove to be true as the CCG obviously wasn’t enough of a home to make Kaneki stay once he remembered who he really was. 

Perhaps it’s fitting then the chapter after 8: Agent, where we see Haise’s first real insecurities manifest about his place of belonging in the CCG and also Haise attempt to resolve himself by reassuring that everything will be fine, others will take care of it for him that Haise finally encounters Touka. Which is of course, an encounter with a waitress whose more than meets the eye and has an agenda besides Kaneki’s own, yet an interestin in Kaneki all the same, the clear parallel with Ukina. 

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This is of course the reminder that rather than a life that is just comfortable enough for them to survive, there could be another life, with a more deeper connections. One that is also fraught with inherent risk, s in order to be with Touka and Ukina, Kaneki and Kuzen had to sever all ties with their previous life behind. This is of course the point where both of them stalled.

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Kaneki and Kuzen however, hesitate with this. Kaneki right now is unable to truly raise a hand against the CCG and still pities them as if he were one of them. Kuzen waits too long and fails to stand up against V in any significant way, and the end result is him being backed into a wall and believing he has no other choice but to kill Ukina with his own hands. 

This is all pretty clear stuff, but I outlined it because after making these initial mistakes both Kaneki and Yoshimura also fail entirely to try to face themselves and what they’ve done. They are both people who killed many, and not entirely for good reasons, sometimes they were selfish reasons. It’s a difficult quesiton of morality, about if it’s okay to kill hundreds even if there is a gun directly pointed at your head. One life can’t possibly equate to a hundred right? It’s not one I intend to answer either, but it’s one the manager and Kaneki definitely had to face. 

Yoshimura’s actions afterwards, heavily parallel the same mistakes that Kaneki makes no. After all, Yoshimura while saying that he wanted to totally protect his daughter, also while becoming the one eyed owl’s substitute specifically chose not to kill any more investigators. Which led to a distinction eventually and the suspicion that there were two owls, the oririnal “one eyed owl” and the second “No kill owl.”

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The point is obviously, if Yoshimura’s goal was purely to recreate Eto’s appearance perfectly so that nobody would suspect her than he probably should have killed investigators. Otherwise there’s a clear behavior distinction between the two owls. Of course Yoshimura didn’t, and he refused to kill not really out of a greater scheme but rather his own reasons. His belief that he simply could retire, that he could walk away from his life as a cleaner, live in peace from now on and that would be enough. 

Of course, as I’ve said before every single character in this manga is a several times over murderer and not always for the right reasons either, so it’s hard to say whether or not a character deserves justice for trying to continue to live after all of those lives they took previously. However, I think simply ignoring who you were in the past and pretending to be somebody else entirely is not the way to go about it. 

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Kaneki sees himself in Yoshimura. His decision to jump into the Anteiku raid was perhaps a suicide attempt, but I also think Kaneki’s conscious decision to sympathize with Yoshimura and want to see him brought to a happy ending and a reunion with his daughter. Kaneki saw himself in Yoshimura, and he saw that Yoshimura was lonely still despite giving love to everyone around him and being loved by everyone in return, but he couldn’t quite piece together why.

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Perhaps this is why, the same reason for Yoshimura’s loneliness is now being reflected in Kaneki. He was lonely because he couldn’t live with himself, and therefore couldn’t open himself up to everybody around him. Most importantly though, he couldn’t open himself up to his daughter, or truly face her in any significant way. 

All he could do was find half measures in order to keep living. “I want to hold my daughter in my arms so much, but V won’t let me”, and “One person alone isn’t enough to fight V, so it’s not worth trying.” Those kinds of thoughts were the ones that held him back. His fear that he couldn’t, that he’d fall short, so it wasn’t really even worth trying to begin with. “If only, If only” is a thing you can say an infinite amount of times to come up with an infinite amount of reasons not to do something. 

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I think it’s important too in this parallel when Yoshimura brings up Eto again, that Renji stops and falters, and finally says the reason he won’t face Touka and Ayato is because he himself is afraid of what he’s done in the past, and therefore doesn’t think he can help guide them. It’s his own deficiency that stops him from guiding others. 

So Kaneki and Yoshimura are pushed into corners by these parallel situations, first there is V pressing up against them restricting their freedom, Kaneki is hunted on the surface and pushed down into the 24th ward where his options become even narrower and narrower by the moment. At the same time though, there is their own self that they do not want to face. Kaneki has ties in the CCG that he doesn’t want to acknowledge that he abandoned especially in the Q’s, he has a career of killing ghouls willingly for his own survival, even those among his inner circle of friends especially Tsukiyama. Yoshimura was a cleaner who killed many for V and helped spread their power and did so basically for a place to live and food to eat. They have reasons, things they did in the past, that drag on them and also make them doubt themselves. Their self doubt then pushes them to make them feel helpless in their situation, or to be afraid of choices they make for the ever lasting fear that every choice might lead them to the wrong choice, to losing even more. Therefore it is better just not to choose at all, and spare themselves from having to be the one to decide.

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Yoshimura sees the same thing when he’s backed into a corner by V, he’s told to “Choose” and the choice he makes is so horrific he never wants to choose again. Kaneki also shows signs of buckling under the extreme pressure he’s put himself under, to feel as if there’s nothing he can do against the entirety of V when he is one single person. 

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There is something else that this great self doubt does though, that makes it so Yoshimura and Kaneki are not just harming themselves by their actions and hesitance. By eternally being stuck in their own head, their own lament, they grow more and more detached from others. To the point where Kaneki sees Eto, who he knows her entire story and her similiarities to himself, who the manager who was somebody he cared about specifically said values her more than his own life and asked Kaneki to save her, and he says this to her.

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He refuses to save her. No really, he can’t save her. The reason he can’t of course is what’s listed above, Kaneki can barely look past his own pain at the moment. He’s so self involved that the struggles of others, the value of lives that others lead, just can’t occur to him. 

Yet, he is positioning himself as a savior to others. What that results in, and what that resulted in with Yoshimura too is that he’s unable to actually be of any help to the people he needs to save the most, when he needs to save them the most. 

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If he were to find some way to live with himself, to grab some of his own agency, then perhaps he would have been able to. To act more decisively, rather than stumble like a chicken with it’s head cut off, into these situations where his back is pressed up against the wall. 

Touka asks Yomo why it is that Yoshimura and the others have to die when the time for the Anteiku raid comes along, and Yomo answers simply it’s because time has run out for them. 

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They’ve spent far too long, living while running away from their crimes and unable to truly deal with the guilt in their heart, and when the time came they decided that the best way to resolve it was to simply die for it finally. 

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However, Touka is young and not yet plagued by guilt so horrid that it’s rendered her non-motile. There is still a future for her, because she could still possibly find some way to live with herself. 

That’s what Kaneki needs to do to, not to simply try to live on without the guilt, or to die by it, but rather to truly face himself and try to come to some reconciliation between his disparate parts. Telomeres or not, the reason Kaneki acts like he’s slowly dying from a thematic standpoint is because he has still yet to answer the question of how he is supposed to live with himself. The fact that he can live, that there is a future for both him, Touka and the Baby is something he should fight for. As long as he doesn’t give up on that possibility, there’s still a chance. Kaneki himself isn’t doomed to tragedy, an ending where all three of them lives is still a possibility.  

Perhaps that is what those who’ve had their hands drenched in blood by the world can do to redeem themselves, some way other than death. To continually fight for a better world, so the circumstances that led to Kaneki and Yoshimura’s own tragedies will not repeat themselves. 

Furuta and the three wise monkeys

tokyoghoul96:

Ok so on my Fourth time reading through the latest chapter I noticed something strange about Furuta’s gestures other than him just being his natural Furuta self, the gestures had reminded me of something I had seen before. And I’m sure many others have seen,

the three wise monkeys


See no evil

Speak no evil

Hear no evil

In the latest chapter Furuta actually does all three gestures to see no evil, speak no evil, hear no evil. I understood that the origin of the three wise monkeys is Japan so I was sure it wasn’t a coincidence. At first I had a hard time determining what it could all mean outside of it’s literally meaning so I had a talk with @therabbitoracle and @smol-kitten-furuta to discuss in hopes of getting a better understanding.

@therabbitoracle said this:

Just as there is disagreement about the origin of the phrase, there are differing explanations of the meaning of “see no evil, hear no evil, speak no evil.”

In Buddhist tradition, the tenets of the proverb are about not dwelling on evil thoughts.

In the Western world both the proverb and the image are often used to refer to a lack of moral responsibility on the part of people who refuse to acknowledge impropriety, looking the other way or feigning ignorance.

It may also signify a code of silence in gangs, or organized crime.

I believe this was a good explaination for why Ishida would make Furuta make these gestures especially the part about lack of moral responsibility, refuses to acknowledge impropriety, looking the other way and feigning ignorance. This is something we see Furuta do A LOT. You could say it’s a major part of his characterization but he displays all these traits in the latest chapter back to back.

lack of moral responsibility.

(Setting back and letting Eto kill off all the V members)

Refuses to acknowledge impropriety.

(The last remaining V member begs him to fight he choices to run away instead)

Looking the other way and feigning ignorance (need I explain).

And another interesting part is the Buddhist traditional meaning of it not dwelling on bad thoughts.

(And yet is seems Furuta struggles with that this chapter with some of his strange lines.)

(When he thinks why am I always alone while running.)

When he complains about having to fight.

It is strange but those scenes did not feel like the Furuta we are use to. Through all his acting and clowning these parts felt somewhat genuine (which made me feel a little uneasy.He sounds like a small child or something.)

And then lastly his word to Eto vs his actual thoughts “let’s solve this peacefully.”

vs. “let’s slaughter them like animals”

Everything he’s doing strongly resonates with the three wise monkeys. He fits the western definition perfectly but when it comes to the Buddhist teaching Furuta tries to have this mindset with his “Shake off the past and dash.” gimmick. But can not help but to dwell on it every now and again. I think the fight with Eto might’ve made some things re-emerge especially being told to fight by members of V. 

Still it was a nice reference for Ishida to throw in since everything the three wise monkeys stands for connects well with Furuta actions this chapter.

The Juxtaposition of Tooru Mutsuki

amonmahboi:

Lately I’ve been looking into how the Tokyo Ghoul fandom views its characters. What stands out the most to me at this point in time, is the intriguing change of perspective towards Tooru Mutsuki.

Of course, we all know that Mutsuki has polarized the fandom ever since her introduction, but I’m more so interested in how things have changed from the Rushima arc onwards.

Before the Rushima arc, Mutsuki was quite the blank slate of a character with a few hints and parallels sprinkled along the way. However, after the inevitable torture and “whitening of the hair”, along with a continuing descent into madness, many readers of Tokyo Ghoul have went from “Mutsuki is precious and must be protected” to (and most ironically) “Mutsuki needs to die”. This has only made me wonder what has specifically brought about this drastic change of perspective in the first place.

Of course the blatant assumption for the sudden loss of hope towards Mutsuki is merely because she now seeks to ruin the lives of Kaneki and Touka. A fair assumption to make considering that the readers are “supposed” to want the best for Kaneki and Touka since they are now very much the central couple in the series, along with a potential child on the way.

I have a differing opinion on this though. I don’t think people (or at least most) suddenly want Mutsuki to die just because she wants vengeance, since vengeance may as well be the goddamn title of this series. I believe that people have become hateful of Mutsuki not because of her actions, but rather where she now stands as a character.

That is, unlike the myriad of brutal and cruel characters in this series including Kaneki himself, Mutsuki has no sense of self-awareness or concept of reality. She is trapped in her little bubble of delusions, chaos and dissociation that she is no longer capable of understanding anything.

For comparison I’d like to bring up two blatantly sadistic and cruel characters who also happen to be two of the most loved and impactful characters in the series. I’m sure at least some of you have already guessed who I’m talking about before I even stated who they are. Those two characters are Furuta and Eto.

Why is it that these two are percieved as captivating and enticing while Mutsuki is “horrible and repulsive”. Well let’s look at the differences from a mental standpoint. Furuta and Eto, while both being equally cruel and hateful, were by no means lacking in self-awareness or understanding. Both of them knew exactly what they were doing and they also know what they stand for despite the fact that they also view their own lives as worthless.

I believe the reason that people have given up hope on Mutsuki is simply because she has nothing to stand for as a character, and thus in the eyes of several readers, serves as an inconvenience to all the other characters in the series.

Damn do I feel sorry for Urie.

So… basically ableism. Mutsuki is psychologically incapable of understanding his actions, so people want him to die. Which is pretty disturbing from a basic standpoint of human compassion, but I also think it’s a spot-on observation. (Ironically, maybe this is because I used to work as a counselor, but his inability to understand his actions is exactly why I feel more hope for him than I do for characters like Furuta and Eto; though, I do understand it makes him confusing from a narrative standpoint and that, of course, can frustrate readers.)

(Also, whether Mutsuki will live or die I don’t know, but I do think that his delusions are going to break soon, and if he dies it will be after that. Letting him die in this state doesn’t seem to fit with the themes of the series.)