College student wants class' graphic novels "eradicated from the system"

Recommended Videos

happyninja42

Elite Member
Legacy
May 13, 2010
8,577
2,990
118
Callate said:
"At least get a warning on the books. At most I would like the books eradicated from the system. I don?t want them taught anymore. I don?t want anyone else to have to read this garbage."
And I want idiots like her smacked upside the head on a daily basis, and their ability to sire children revoked. As well as their right to interact with children revoked, so they can't spread their stupid to other people, thus making sure it dies out eventually. But hey, we can't always get what we want. I guess if I can't have my wish, she can't have hers, we'll both somehow find a way to soldier on in this cruel, cruel reality. *rolls eyes*
 

freaper

snuggere mongool
Apr 3, 2010
1,198
0
0
You start a course on arts and literature and don't expect this kind of material? Well, on your way out, don't let the door hit you where the good Lord split you.
 

Frission

Until I get thrown out.
May 16, 2011
865
0
21
Persepolis is a classic though! A study of an Iranian women during a time in history that many in the West are ignorant of.

What a bunch of oversensitive prudes.
 

Queen Michael

has read 4,010 manga books
Jun 9, 2009
10,400
0
0
What a fucking idiot. If she thought it was gonna be Batman and Robin, that's just proof she's an idiot.
 

RaikuFA

New member
Jun 12, 2009
4,370
0
0
cleric of the order said:
>porn.
I've only read the last man of those listed series but I know it ain't porne.
unless you think the amazons count as snuff but otherwise no.
the only one I could imagine being close would be fun home because I know noting about it.

This person is a philistine plain and simple.
Persepolis isn't either. It's about a girl in Iran
 

cleric of the order

New member
Sep 13, 2010
546
0
0
RaikuFA said:
cleric of the order said:
>porn.
I've only read the last man of those listed series but I know it ain't porne.
unless you think the amazons count as snuff but otherwise no.
the only one I could imagine being close would be fun home because I know noting about it.

This person is a philistine plain and simple.
Persepolis isn't either. It's about a girl in Iran
I know, I know.
Saw it a buncha times and never really thought of it much.
Though, one of my profs is Iranian/arab, think I'm going to ask him what he think about it, if he read it or anything.
 

Fox12

AccursedT- see you space cowboy
Jun 6, 2013
4,828
0
0
My, I hope she never reads To Kill a Mockingbird, Grapes of Wrath, or, horror of horrors, the odyssey. Those poorly written pornographic manuscripts should also be banned.

My, my. She should consider herself lucky. There are... more graphic options available.
 

renegade7

New member
Feb 9, 2011
2,046
0
0
Zykon TheLich said:
"What's that lone family and a few friends? You don't like our choice of reading material...uh...that's nice...uh...anything else? No? Bye."

Also Persepolis? Not read it but IIRC it's a highly regarded GN about a young girl growing up in revolutionary Iran. There's "pornographic" material in that?
There are a couple of implied rape scenes if my memory of the first book serves.

I don't get why all of these "This college class might traumatize me!" people are humanities majors. I'd like a few of them to sit through second semester calculus or differential equations, and then I'll be willing to listen to you talk about how you were traumatized by your course materials.

An implied rape in a comic book is what sets them off, while I still have nightmares about my first brush with Hilbert spaces.
 

FalloutJack

Bah weep grah nah neep ninny bom
Nov 20, 2008
15,489
0
0
Callate said:
Persepolis, Fun Home, Y: The Last ManVol. 1, and The Sandman Vol. 2: The Doll's House.
She's an idiot. Don't worry about it. I especially laugh at her digging on Sandman. Really? Messing with Neil? That's just a joke. That's 'Laugh you out of the room' comedy. Pay no attention to the dumb cluck in her cave, facing the cave wall away from the light. Maybe a little Plato will set her straight, but I doubt it.
 

Thyunda

New member
May 4, 2009
2,955
0
0
renegade7 said:
Zykon TheLich said:
"What's that lone family and a few friends? You don't like our choice of reading material...uh...that's nice...uh...anything else? No? Bye."

Also Persepolis? Not read it but IIRC it's a highly regarded GN about a young girl growing up in revolutionary Iran. There's "pornographic" material in that?
There are a couple of implied rape scenes if my memory of the first book serves.

I don't get why all of these "This college class might traumatize me!" people are humanities majors. I'd like a few of them to sit through second semester calculus or differential equations, and then I'll be willing to listen to you talk about how you were traumatized by your course materials.

An implied rape in a comic book is what sets them off, while I still have nightmares about my first brush with Hilbert spaces.
There's a fair few texts you might come across as a humanities major that might traumatise you. Writers and artists sometimes decide to put very disturbing things on paper and somehow this earns respect and attention, and so, yeah, you might wind up reading something that affects you on a deep, emotional level.
When that happens, it's customary to close the book, say "I can't read this," and let everyone else get on with it while you settle the issue in private with a tutor. They'll give you an alternative text to work on, and no more needs to be said.

Complaining like this is ridiculous, but then so is the idea that maths is traumatising. No, mate. Maths is hard. It's not going to trigger any uncomfortable memories, and it's not going to cause any PTSD (as being a private investigator can do - immersing yourself in graphic or disturbing descriptions or images for too long causes the same symptoms in people as more overt causes of the disorder do) so if you want to know why it's always humanities majors who worry about getting traumatised, it's because they're the ones who might have to read somebody's personal account of having horrible shit done to them.
 

Smooth Operator

New member
Oct 5, 2010
8,162
0
0
A lot of people want a lot of things, why the fuck was this given the time of day?
We could just as well talk about another guy wishing for a bacon sandwich, now that is news worthy... it's not really, but it's about as news worthy as this nonsense.
 

SecondPrize

New member
Mar 12, 2012
1,436
0
0
Ah, the perils of raising a generation of book burners. Thank Buddha that Transmetropolitan wasn't on the syllabus.

Smooth Operator said:
A lot of people want a lot of things, why the fuck was this given the time of day?
We could just as well talk about another guy wishing for a bacon sandwich, now that is news worthy... it's not really, but it's about as news worthy as this nonsense.
Hadn't you heard? Colleges are safe spaces now where you never have to be challenged on your beliefs in any way or exposed to any material that you'd rather not see. Hopefully the administration grows a freaking spine and backs up the professor on this one but if that were to happen it'd be the first time.
 

major_chaos

Ruining videogames
Feb 3, 2011
1,314
0
0
renegade7 said:
I don't get why all of these "This college class might traumatize me!" people are humanities majors. I'd like a few of them to sit through second semester calculus or differential equations, and then I'll be willing to listen to you talk about how you were traumatized by your course materials.
That's what makes this both funny and infuriating to me. I'm a computer forensics major, which means I need to take a bunch of investigation/criminal justice courses. Ever seen a closeup of a guy who ate the business end of a shotgun before? Ever seen the horrifically burned body of a murder victim who's killer tried to torch the evidence? I have shit like that in every third textbook. I have had people stumble out of class gagging and this silly sheltered girl is offended by Persepolis? And her father is going to pull "THINK OF THE HORROR CHILDREN MIGHT STUMBLE ON TO!!!" on goddamn Sandman? These are clearly two people who need a major dose of "grow the fuck up".
 

happyninja42

Elite Member
Legacy
May 13, 2010
8,577
2,990
118
major_chaos said:
renegade7 said:
I don't get why all of these "This college class might traumatize me!" people are humanities majors. I'd like a few of them to sit through second semester calculus or differential equations, and then I'll be willing to listen to you talk about how you were traumatized by your course materials.
That's what makes this both funny and infuriating to me. I'm a computer forensics major, which means I need to take a bunch of investigation/criminal justice courses. Ever seen a closeup of a guy who ate the business end of a shotgun before? Ever seen the horrifically burned body of a murder victim who's killer tried to torch the evidence? I have shit like that in every third textbook. I have had people stumble out of class gagging and this silly sheltered girl is offended by Persepolis? And her father is going to pull "THINK OF THE HORROR CHILDREN MIGHT STUMBLE ON TO!!!" on goddamn Sandman? These are clearly two people who need a major dose of "grow the fuck up".
Not to mention she's in a voluntary education program. She's not required to be there taking those classes, she decided to take that major. The major doesn't have any obligation to accommodate her delicate sensibilities. She doesn't like the course subject, she can fucking transfer her major and take something soft and fluffy that won't upset her.
 

briankoontz

New member
May 17, 2010
656
0
0
Hairless Mammoth said:
That line also makes me think the whole family is far too sheltered. Maybe she should read about some of the more horrifying realities of others' lives and be thankful she is only reading about them.
Or at least realize that the more totalitarian and "secure" the lives of anyone becomes, the more they turn to virtual violence (such as fiction within television, cinema, and video games) to remind them of what they no longer have the ability to receive, while continuing to impose violence through proxies such as the military in order to maintain their bubble.

Collectively, this is known as "happiness". Individually, called The Sopranos, Deadwood, Game of Thrones, Grand Theft Auto...
 

Arqus_Zed

New member
Aug 12, 2009
1,181
0
0
Somebody should give this overly prude ninny Alan Moore's Lost Girls for Christmas.

I wanna see if it would make her head explode.
 

Pseudonym

Regular Member
Legacy
Feb 26, 2014
802
8
13
Country
Nederland
renegade7 said:
I don't get why all of these "This college class might traumatize me!" people are humanities majors. I'd like a few of them to sit through second semester calculus or differential equations, and then I'll be willing to listen to you talk about how you were traumatized by your course materials.

An implied rape in a comic book is what sets them off, while I still have nightmares about my first brush with Hilbert spaces.
What I find weird in this regard is that humanities aren't exactly clean studies. In fact, if you want to avoid all the talk of nasty things a study in mathematics or computer science seems like a much better choice than the humanities. Art is filled with violence and nastyness aplenty as seen in the works of Jeroen Bosch, Shakespearre and Tolkien. If you study history you are quite likely to walk into some class on the holocaust, the inquisition, the thirty years war or other pleasant episodes in history when people were being tortured to death left and right. Even if you go for a philosophy bachelor you are likely to read or discuss something unpleasant. I've been in a class where 'story of the eye' was discussed. It wasn't discussed for very long and I haven't read it but everything I have heard about it sounded extremely unpleasant. In a field like mathematics you can just study functional analysis or transfinite cardinals or some such highly abstract subject. I would recommend you study that, rather than the humanities if you haven't the stomach for rape and murder.
 

Batou667

New member
Oct 5, 2011
2,238
0
0
College: a place you go to have your existing opinions reaffirmed and to be sheltered from new material that may challenge your worldview or make you temporarily leave your comfort zone.

Wait, that doesn't sound entirely right, does it? What a sickeningly entitled generation we're raising.