Subject: Yeah, it's about finding middle ground...
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Posted on: 2022-04-22 21:54:55 UTC

...between "this thing has flaws so we have to shun it forever" and "we need to ignore all the flaws because critiquing things is bad". Like, I personally don't question why people enjoy books like Twilight. I have students who do! And that makes me happy because that means they're interested in something in English and we can talk about it! If I can gently tell them about some of the issues in the books, I would like to do it in a way that doesn't stop them from enjoying it.

Similarly, I've come to detest Martin Freeman as a person because his brand of humour seems to be offending people for fun and giggles (and he once called Lucy Liu a dog, so eww), but I can still acknowledge that he's a phenomenal actor, and I still enjoy how he portrayed Bilbo in the Hobbit films. Similarly similarly, The Author Who Must Not Be Named is a dumpster fire terrible person, but there's no dodging the impact her books have had on fandom as a whole, and I still have some nostalgia for that world even though I love pointing out its flaws now.

It's really about being balanced and nuanced in media consumption, but lots of social networking sites (read: Twitter) don't give you the character space to do that.

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