Pages don’t manipulate people, they just freak out and have no goddamn idea what to do when the going gets tough

This leaves me with so many thoughts…

1. I’ve never said that Pages categorically manipulate people. That said, anyone can be manipulative under the right circumstances, so its pretty preposterous to state that they categorically don’t.

2. “Freaking out and having no goddamn idea what to do” isn’t mutually exclusive with being manipulative, anyway.

3. This can only really be about Jake and/or Horrus since I don’t think I’ve ever accused Tavros of being particularly manipulative, in which case:

Lying to yourself and your friends for months~eons(depending on the character) to keep those friends treating you in ways you find particularly agreeable or convenient is manipulative, no matter how freaked out and confused you are. That’s the end of that, as far as I’m concerned.

A question about Pages, do they lack their aspect at the start?

hussianphilosopher:

revolutionaryduelist:

Maybe? I don’t really like jossing headcanons, but I’ve never really read a version of this idea that feels compelling to me, personally.

I think it’s more accurate to say Pages tend to either A) Attract the attention of  others who mean well, but can be unpredictable in how they go about “helping” the Page, or B) Serve themselves their Aspects in very selfish ways.

I don’t think Jake in particular reads as “lacking” Hope. Understanding the impact Jake has on Dirk when they’re 13, specifically through the vector of his Hope, is instrumental to understanding both their characters, imo.

@revolutionaryduelist

Well, I think that saying that Pages “lack” their aspect is very much oversimplifying it, and it’s worth noting that we never actually hear it stated this way in the text, not even from Calliope or anyone who gets info from Calliope. It is, however, present in patterns, just as it is for Princes – “lacking” the aspect is a signifier for them, too. Let’s review:

-Tavros is the simplest and most literal application of this signifier, and is probably where the concept originated because of it. He lacks freedom, both physical (due to his confinement in a wheelchair) and social/sexual (due to his constant victimization by Vriska). And this is not a failing on his part! Tavros is aware that freedom is something he does not have, and is not happy about it! Freedom sounds pretty good to him! Eventually, he gets it. Good for him.

-Jake, then, presents us with the other interpretation of this concept; that of having a bad relationship with one’s aspect, in which that part of one’s life is unhealthy. Taz can source this better than I can, but while Jake is very hopeful, he is naively so. Jake is a hopeless optimist, a person who thinks that if he just believes in something hard enough, it will eventually come true. If he believes that he’s a rugged, badass adventurer, he’ll become one! If he believes that his friends are all Good Pure People With No Issues who he can have Straightforward, Easy, Uncomplicated Relationships with, that’s what they’ll be! Everything will work out, you just gotta believe. Jake’s journey – one that as of Act 7 he has only just begun to make serious progress on – is that of understanding that hope is not enough, that in order to make the world the way you want it, you have to strive for it.

(Despite his other issues, I think we see the end of this road in Grandpa Harley – one does not become as accomplished in as many different fields as him by wishing in one hand and seeing how quickly it fills up!)

The concept holds up pretty well with the Princes, too – Eridan has hopes and dreams, but they all get smashed to pieces and his moment of greatest power and greatest impact on the story comes at his moment of utter hopelessness. Dirk certainly has a soul, he has emotions (indeed, Dirk’s biggest problem is arguably that he can’t stop feeling way too much, all the time, forever) – but, like his counterpart Rose, he’s very bad at dealing with them and processing them, and he’s constantly held back by difficulties placed in his way by his Self or versions of his Self (such as Hal) and by his own literal Self-hatred. Kurloz we don’t see too much of, but he’s a Rage player (anger, chaos, doubt, purifying truth) who is always 100% calm and collected, and dedicates himself to a god who cares nothing for him – hardly a righteous or truthful faith.

So there’s my counterpoint – I would say that yes, Pages do lack their aspect at the beginning of their journey, but that’s only one way that their difficulties can manifest, and interpreting that too literally is limiting and inaccurate. It might be better to say that early on Pages (and Princes) have a weakness corresponding to their aspect.

A solid add-on! I think I could still make an argument that Tavros’ issues stem from an unhealthy relationship with his Aspect, or a fundamental misunderstanding linked to it. But I agree on the broad points, and I think this is a pretty solid way of conceptualizing the parallels. 

A question about Pages, do they lack their aspect at the start?

Maybe? I don’t really like jossing headcanons, but I’ve never really read a version of this idea that feels compelling to me, personally.

I think it’s more accurate to say Pages tend to either A) Attract the attention of  others who mean well, but can be unpredictable in how they go about “helping” the Page, or B) Serve themselves their Aspects in very selfish ways.

I don’t think Jake in particular reads as “lacking” Hope. Understanding the impact Jake has on Dirk when they’re 13, specifically through the vector of his Hope, is instrumental to understanding both their characters, imo.

A thought occurs regarding Xefros’s Rage alignment. Could it be possible that Dammek’s behavior(general paranoia and a desire for destruction of authority/anarchy) is a result of Xefros’s Page of Rage status? Could it be that his desire to protect Xefros is so powerful, and that he is so saturated in Rage, that it has made him unstable and destructive?

magpiebridge:

Gotta trim this down a bit, and I’m not going to address every point,
because we seem to have a fundamentally different view of some of the
characters in a way extended discourse never seems to resolve, but…

Re:
Passive Page and ghost!Tavros’s last stand –  I don’t read his final
plot arc as being in any way, shape, or form for Vriska’s benefit.  I
think he did what he could to empower the ghosts he met with Breath, en
masse, in the form of agency and the freedom/opportunity to break the
holding pattern of EITHER ‘sit in a bubble and continue to do exactly the same
thing we’ve been doing all along as we slowly become caricatures of ourselves’, OR ‘be mind-controlled into doing this thing that’s going to get us all double-killed’.  He offered a wildcard option.  I also think it was inherently kind of a grand yet frivolous action, whether he knew it at the time or not–no number of ghosts was going to do anything to actually stop or defeat the unstoppable Lord English, any more than Vriska was, but boy would they have fun and make new friends in the attempt! (The Breath theme)  I agree that it was a final, fantastic ‘screw you’ to everything Vriska stood for to do the thing she obsessed about and tried and failed to do, because her own class is inherently self-oriented and she at least is really really bad at doing things that benefit others in an effective way, and then casually hand it off “control” to someone else in one more demonstration of how much it truly didn’t matter, because it was all just playing around.  It just wasn’t an act that was designed to directly benefit Tavros or motivate anyone to protect him in any way, whatever the side-effects.

Re: Dave, and basically everyone on the post-retcon meteor –  I don’t think a single one of them really got lasting resolution or felt happier or more empowered in any way.  Dave got one conversation, that talk with Dirk… that was a start, I guess.  But Vriska’s entire gameplan was designed (once again, shockingly) to deny everyone of importance and meaning by ‘stealing’ it for herself.  Karkat was reduced to meaningless frustration and apathy in virtual isolation except for Dave, Dave gave up doing anything at all with time travel and retreated into imagination games to avoid responsibility or conflict, Terezi was an anxious wreck of herself with no confidence left in her own abilities or decisions, Rose gave up finding any meaning in what she perceived, Kanaya didn’t even seem to find it worthwhile to push back amidst Vriska’s interference, and Gamzee was literally chained up and locked in an airless box with corpses until he could be tossed where the alpha timeline required him to be in order to complete Lord English’s causal loop.  None of that was justified or beneficial to those characters, short or long-term.

I also don’t really think class roleplaying is necessary to explain Dave’s Knight of Time behavior–he started out by obsessively trying to protect everyone he cared about all the time constantly with his Time abilities, usually at the expense of himself.  Dead Daves everywhere.  As an Active, not Passive player… his strengths were not really in that area.  Of course he wasn’t happy or motivated, and of course it left him further traumatized.  If he’d focused on himself and his own needs more, and becoming the best iteration of himself that he could be, it’s possible that he would have been able to take a much more effective role, fulfill the prophecy about himself, and be satisfied and self-confident as an Active Time player–but it would have been a completely different story, because Lord English wouldn’t have been able to complete his loop, so it’s sort of a moot point, and that’s jumping tracks from Watsonian to Doylist, anyway.

Trimmin was a good idea, thanks. As far as stuff where our differences in views are probably irreconciable, I’ll just say that I completely stand at odds with this:

revolutionaryduelist:

Maybe to some extent. I do think Dammek is in an unhealthy state of mind, for sure. We won’t be able to say for sure where he’s involved until Hauntswitch lets us get into his head, though, I think. 

“Dave, and basically everyone on the post-retcon meteor –  I don’t think a single one of them really got lasting resolution or felt happier or more empowered in any way… None of that was justified or beneficial to those characters, short or long-term.”

My basic position is that 

A) Everyone in the cast made meaningful progress towards enlightenment/self-actualization in the endgame (Rose and Jade have p much my favorite arcs in this section, personally), except 

B) Retcon Vriska, who strove to take ownership of the “Important Stuff” in the plot that literally nobody else cared about. The game and Lord English Do Not Matter to the characters in terms of personal growth as people. They just want to see their loved ones and live in peace, and the narrative considers that to be perfectly ok. They’re not characters, they’re just people. That’s my view. 

C) To the extent that arcs weren’t resolved satisfyingly, I view that as a result of the fact that this isn’t meant to be a resolution to anyone’s character arcs at all! I fundamentally do not view the story of Homestuck as “over”, and I don’t think there’s much reason to think of it that way. 

The epilogue is still coming, and Hussie said he had ideas for more Homestuck content after that. These characters are still around, and the story is still evolving. That’s p much always going to be the standpoint I assess the comic from.


As for Dave, I don’t think roleplaying describes everything or even most of what he does in his session, but it goes a long way in contextualizing some quirks (his habit of breaking stuff without knowing why), his messed up relationship with Bro, and a good amount of his early assholery. I go over my views on Dave’s roleplay briefly here. 


As for Tavros, that’s a pretty great reading of how he uses his Aspect, I think.
My only point of difference is that I find it more satisfying–and think it’s implied, given that he seemed to be looking for/expecting to find Ghost Vriska–that Tavros set up the ghost army for the express purpose of getting to Serve Vriska. Not in the sense of being helpful, but in the same sense of “get wrecked, scrub” that hovers over Jake’s defeat of Caliborn in the epilogue.

This is why I read Pages as Active. I think what they’re good at is gathering the wills of others around them and getting them to go along with their own goals. When a Page is honest about his goals and really thinking about how to achieve it, they tend to be all but unstoppable.

In other words, I think their unlimited potential comes about when they establish honest, healthy friendships with others and then consciously Exploit their aspect to get what they want, while being respectful of others’ desires and needs. 

So I think Tavros is being active here not because he’s inspiring more people to protect him, but because he’s discovered and embraced his ability to fight for himself, and owned Vriska hard in the process B)

I do think Pages have growing to do in terms of becoming more aware of others, but I don’t think it entails switching alignments or anything. I feel like it entails coming to understand and honestly face their own tendencies, and embracing their truth while finding the balance with the truths of those around them.

But it doesn’t seem to me like we meaningfully disagree on the fundamental nature of Tavros’ arc, just some nuances as to how we’re meant to contextualize his character. Which is totes fair. 

Which of the two is “correct” at this point depends on what exactly the narrative is going for, and how it weighs characters as Active vs. Passive. I’m hopeful we might learn more about this down the line, esp with Xefros. But both readings hold up right now, I think. 

A thought occurs regarding Xefros’s Rage alignment. Could it be possible that Dammek’s behavior(general paranoia and a desire for destruction of authority/anarchy) is a result of Xefros’s Page of Rage status? Could it be that his desire to protect Xefros is so powerful, and that he is so saturated in Rage, that it has made him unstable and destructive?

magpiebridge:

revolutionaryduelist:

magpiebridge:

I’m really… not a fan of this idea for two reasons.  One, it’s making some really uncomfortable suggestions that someone who has been coded as a victim in a number of ways is, at heart, responsible for/complicit in the behavior and choices of the person who is mistreating them. 

Two, yet again it’s treating Rage players as automatically ‘bad’ or ‘negative’ or ‘destructive’.  Neither of these things are, I think, true or helpful assumptions, and they’re assumptions I see bandied about a lot within the fandom, in regards to both victims of assorted horrific mistreatment and Rage players, in ways that tend to try to pivot the axis around until the people making terrible choices and doing terrible things are absolved of all responsibility for their behavior. 

I think this tendency is one of the reasons I disagree so strongly with certain reads of the Page role, that imply they unknowingly (or knowingly) encourage all of this mistreatment to “benefit” themselves. 

This is an important point, that I agree with. I’m sorry if it’s seemed otherwise.
I’m happy Xefros is a Rage player precisely because it’s such a positive depiction of the Aspect in Act 1. Xefros makes Joey feel by turns confused, frustrated, and protectively furious in the span of a couple of hours, causing her to champion on his behalf. 

And I don’t think Xefros CAUSES Dammek to be overly aggressive and controlling of him. That’s ultimately Dammek’s choice, and a fuck up on his end. But I’m just not interested in this “Dammek’s mean to Xefros because he’s BAD and CRUEL and A BAD PERSON” narrative. It’s just not very interesting?

You can be interested in characters that are bad people. It’s fine. And taking the time to understand their nuances leads to a better understanding of the text, and of the character’s dynamics. 

Here’s the thing about Pages: I regard their tendency to end up in abusive relationships as one of the like…potential dangers of the Class. This isn’t to say it’s their fault, any more than it’s Maids faults that they end up conscripted to their Aspect, or other seemingly Class-related challenges.

See, Pages are simply friendly and likable, and that’s kind of their superpower. They’re incredibly good at getting people to like them in some way, and so want to protect or empower them. But they can’t really control the people that get invested in them, and what someone else thinks is best isn’t always right for you.

Part of a Pages’ arc is about coming to face their reality and, in some cases, the imposed roles and identities others enforced on them. They reach their full potential when they come to be aware and honest about their true feelings and desires, and assert themselves bravely. That’s the basic Page arc, as far as I can tell. 

So I consider them active not because they manipulate people into abusing them or w.e, but because their fundamental story is about attracting the protective and sometimes dangerous wills of others to their lives and learning how to stand up for their own. 

But this toxic behavior always seems to be rooted in a genuine care for the Page. Vriska was cruel and awful to Tavros, yes. It’s also inarguable that she perceived herself as trying to help Tavros, and that the desire to make him stronger drove her behavior to some extent. She says so herself.

Dirk was outright in LOVE with Jake, and wasn’t a FRACTION as cold feeling towards him as people commonly think. All of the actual conflict and abuse came from AR/Hal, who was in an unimaginably toxic situation himself and was p much also abusing Dirk.

And Jake DID contribute significantly to his actual romantic problems with Dirk. Jake decides to lie to Jane (Roxy had told him explicitly Jane had feelings for him TWICE before that conversation) and decides to believe her when she lies about liking him. All of this because he had already chosen Dirk. 

Despite this, and despite KNOWING that his jokes about sexuality and Dirk being a girl probably hurt Dirk’s feelings/made Dirk think he was straight early in life (which turns out to be a major part of why Dirk is so tense and uncomfortable while they’re dating), he doesn’t talk to Dirk about it, because that would require conflict or admitting he did something wrong, and Jake is kind of a coward about that stuff! 

He’s non-confrontational to a fault, so Jake deals with problems by denying they exist or, at his worst, indulging escapism and outright running away from them. It’s exactly what Grandpa did to Joey and Jude, and the same potential for toxic behavior shows up in Jake, though he learns to grow out of it through his friends.

This is a HUGE THEME in Homestuck! Pretty much EVERY character has some potential for toxic/abusive behavior, and it’s only by connecting to each other and understanding the world though friendships that they rise above those inherent personal weaknesses. 

And it doesn’t mean Jake deserved his abuse but, once again:
Dirk didn’t abuse him. So their actual relationship was troubled because of AR’s influence, AND more sensible ways they were both fucking up. This is Jake’s side.

What I’m saying is, there’s room here to both understand Dammek as someone who is toxic to Xefros and understand him as having warm and even positive feelings about Xefros. Dammek might genuinely not realize anything is wrong, because he is a Prospit dreamer and  Xefros’ whole problem is being unable to see Dammek’s treatment as a problem, let alone communicate it. (Denial is a recurring motif for Pages, btw.)

None of this is necessarily what’s going on. And even if it is, Dammek could turn out to be considerably judgmental and critical of Xefros. All of this nuance might be true and Dammek would still be an asshole. 

Because people are nuanced, and assholery and abuse are behaviors regular people might come to engage in in all sorts of ambiguous ways. And Xefros and Dammek are both shaped by a society literally designed to make them as self-destructive and hateful as possible. 

I have noooo idea how Dammek’s character actually works, or how the story is going to handle them. All I’m saying is there’s room for nuance here, and I’m interested in exploring it.

I think I would disagree that the toxic behavior/abuse is necessarily rooted in any desire for the Page’s wellbeing, at all.  With Dirk and Jake? Maybe. I don’t have any opinion on them, beyond agreeing that AR was pulling a lot of the strings there.  With Dammek and Xefros?  We haven’t seen Dammek’s side of the story yet at all, to know what he actually thinks or feels, beyond sounding very very much like Vriska from the outside.  But with Vriska and Tavros?  She wasn’t looking out for him, regardless of what she said.  She had little to no ‘warm’ or ‘positive’ feelings about him–she was a manipulative bully, who saw him as a toy to play with, and to discard when she got bored with him.  She was the kind of person who would rather break a toy she wasn’t interested in, anymore, than let someone else handle it.  Her excuses were shallower than a coat of paint… she can’t have been completely out of touch with reality enough to believe that forcing him to jump off a cliff and break his back would somehow make him stronger.  It was a child’s petty act of aggression against someone who defied her will. She goes on to assault and mistreat him in more ways than one, repeatedly, in ways that demonstrably worsen his health and well-being, and the excuses she tosses out are primarily to keep him compliant/too discouraged to resist and to keep other people off her back. She presents the same kind of excuses any time anyone challenges her on her bad behavior.

I agree completely that reducing characters who do bad things to ‘oh, they did it because they’re Bad and Evil and Terrible’ is reductionist and unhelpful thinking.  But I think that painting characters and people who do bad things with the brush of ‘oh, well they meant well all along because they said so, so it must be true’ is also a rather damaging thing to imply, speaking from the standpoint of a survivor.  People are nuanced and complex creatures.  Relationships are also nuanced and complex–even relationships that turn toxic and absolutely harmful to one or both parties. Being able to say ‘this behavior, this mindset, this habitual treatment was abusive and unhealthy’ is still a helpful statement.  A lot of abusers will swear themselves hoarse that everything they’re doing is for the benefit of their victim. They may even have convinced themselves it’s true.  ‘This person said they were doing ___ for my own good, but they were lying’ can absolutely be a true statement. It doesn’t matter whether that person was lying to themselves, lying to the victim, or just lying to hear themselves lie.  And it doesn’t mean that the character can’t be explored, or discussed, or empathized with, or rehabilitated to grow into someone healthier.

My read on Pages is still that Knights are active and Pages are passive, primarily because I see them both as quite near the center of the active-passive scale, and I think that a lot of their journey is about traveling to the side they ‘belong’ on.  Knights start out constantly worried about what other people think of them, always trying to put others first in a very ineffective way while thinking of themselves very poorly, but in the end, I think they function more successfully and happily when they learn to focus more of that energy on themselves.  It gives them the boost to actually extend that protection to others as well, as a secondary effect.  Pages start out rather self-absorbed and oblivious, in many ways, but have the potential to learn to consider other people, and empower other people.  That empowerment can end up spilling back over to give them some secondary protection, as well.  I think a very strong trait of both Knights and Pages is endurance/persistence in the face of obstacles, though.

Mostly, I don’t like the idea of associating Pages with that abuse as a key tendency or danger of their class.  They’re hardly the only characters we see subjected to blatant on-screen (or implied off-screen) long-term, deliberate, and patterned abuse.  At various points in their lives and in different iterations: Dave, a Knight. Damara, a Witch. Mituna, an Heir. Gamzee, a Bard. Terezi, a Seer, and more. All of these characters are subjected to clear and recognizable abuse, in one form or another. It doesn’t make abuse a key risk of their classes… it might just mean that Hussie has a habit of writing about abuse dynamics, frequently in ways that get little to no satisfying resolution.

It seems we’re at fundamentally different readings of the comic in some ways, which is entirely fair. I don’t have much to say about your reading of Vriska, except that I agree wholeheartedly with this statement:

“A lot of abusers will swear themselves hoarse that everything they’re doing is for the benefit of their victim. They may even have convinced themselves it’s true.  ‘This person said they were doing ___ for my own good, but they were lying’ can absolutely be a true statement. It doesn’t matter whether that person was lying to themselves, lying to the victim, or just lying to hear themselves lie.”

Vriska is unambiguously an abuser. As is AR, as is Eridan, as is Gamzee, as is Equius–all to different degrees of severity and shaped by contextual nuance.
Tavros is fully in his rights to regard her words as lies–because the things she told him about himself were outright untrue, as were the things she said about herself.

revolutionaryduelist:

Maybe to some extent. I do think Dammek is in an unhealthy state of mind, for sure. We won’t be able to say for sure where he’s involved until Hauntswitch lets us get into his head, though, I think. 

Her excuses were shallower than a coat of paint… she can’t have been completely out of touch with reality enough to believe that forcing him to jump off a cliff and break his back would somehow make him stronger.

That said, I don’t think this is true, and I don’t think it logically follows from believing Tavros has a right to regard her as a liar/abuser. More, I think it’s canonical in the text that Vriska is indeed that self-deluded. 

She’s a thirteen year old girl that was raised in a fascist society built on racist in-fighting that systematically deludes its children. Vriska is a traumatized kid who dissasociates from her true feelings from birth in order to feed a giant spider? Her entire relationship with Tavros was based on her copying Mindfang, a Sylph, and she constantly tries to mimic a Sylph’s behavior by attempting to make Tavros stronger. 

And yes, that level of disassociation and desensitized brutality makes her a monster to Tavros, and pretty much everyone for most of her life. A good half of the Beta trolls are kind of fucking monsters, because they were raised by a fascist society. 

That was literally the deal the Alphas made with Echidna, who is literally The Mother Of Monsters. The new Trolls are powerful enough to win, but at the cost of becoming a kind of monster, making their game that much harder to win ideologically/philosophically–they can barely even understand it.

Vriska’s entire problem as a person pretty much boils down to being UNABLE to actually introspect and honestly understand herself! Look what happens when (Vriska) is made to think about how she truly comes off and pulls away from her imagined responsibilities! 

Meanwhile, Still Pretty Toxic Retcon Vriska is imagining herself as Responsible and Selfless the entire way to LE. She tears into (Vriska) for being selfish explicitly, in the text! That dissociative tension between Vriska’s true self and her mental self-image is part of the text, as far as my reading goes. 

RE: Pages and Knights, I think that’s the most compelling reading for Active Knights and Passive pages i’ve seen yet. I am genuinely unsure if the narrative actually goes that way, and I’m interested in finding out, so it’s cool to feel uncertain about that again.

I think I still disagree, though. I think the nuance is that I perceive Passive/Active behavior as intrinsic to these classes, and as mostly complicated by their self-image. 

Dave seems to behave very Actively in that he’s take-charge and exploiting Time during the Beta session, but he’s also roleplaying a Prince and not having a good time. He seems to be a lot happier when he invites/allows it, choosing not to deal in Time Travel himself. 

And he’s still focused on others for most of that time–he either falls apart psychologically with no outlet for his tension with Bro pre-retcon or finds better self-understanding by entering a relationship with Karkat.

Also, I don’t like what passive Page implies about Tavros. His last plot beat then becomes “he hands Vriska and army and fulfills his character arc by…becoming aware enough of her and others’ needs and being helpful!” which just doesn’t work for me. The “he ideologically slam dunks her and never thinks about her again” angle just feels more satisfying to me, so long as the canon ambiguity is still extended to us. 

also, I do think all the classes have toxic/abusive relationships. It seems to me there’s different recurring patterns and struggles going on for each class, not just Pages, and I think all of them are meaningfully and satisfyingly resolved. So I don’t agree with the “Homestuck doesn’t deliver” angle either.

A thought occurs regarding Xefros’s Rage alignment. Could it be possible that Dammek’s behavior(general paranoia and a desire for destruction of authority/anarchy) is a result of Xefros’s Page of Rage status? Could it be that his desire to protect Xefros is so powerful, and that he is so saturated in Rage, that it has made him unstable and destructive?

magpiebridge:

revolutionaryduelist:

Maybe to some extent. I do think Dammek is in an unhealthy state of mind, for sure. We won’t be able to say for sure where he’s involved until Hauntswitch lets us get into his head, though, I think. 

I’m really… not a fan of this idea for two reasons.  One, it’s making some really uncomfortable suggestions that someone who has been coded as a victim in a number of ways is, at heart, responsible for/complicit in the behavior and choices of the person who is mistreating them. 

Two, yet again it’s treating Rage players as automatically ‘bad’ or ‘negative’ or ‘destructive’.  Neither of these things are, I think, true or helpful assumptions, and they’re assumptions I see bandied about a lot within the fandom, in regards to both victims of assorted horrific mistreatment and Rage players, in ways that tend to try to pivot the axis around until the people making terrible choices and doing terrible things are absolved of all responsibility for their behavior. 

I think this tendency is one of the reasons I disagree so strongly with certain reads of the Page role, that imply they unknowingly (or knowingly) encourage all of this mistreatment to “benefit” themselves. 

This is an important point, that I agree with. I’m sorry if it’s seemed otherwise.
I’m happy Xefros is a Rage player precisely because it’s such a positive depiction of the Aspect in Act 1. Xefros makes Joey feel by turns confused, frustrated, and protectively furious in the span of a couple of hours, causing her to champion on his behalf. 

And I don’t think Xefros CAUSES Dammek to be overly aggressive and controlling of him. That’s ultimately Dammek’s choice, and a fuck up on his end. But I’m just not interested in this “Dammek’s mean to Xefros because he’s BAD and CRUEL and A BAD PERSON” narrative. It’s just not very interesting?

You can be interested in characters that are bad people. It’s fine. And taking the time to understand their nuances leads to a better understanding of the text, and of the character’s dynamics. 

Here’s the thing about Pages: I regard their tendency to end up in abusive relationships as one of the like…potential dangers of the Class. This isn’t to say it’s their fault, any more than it’s Maids faults that they end up conscripted to their Aspect, or other seemingly Class-related challenges.

See, Pages are simply friendly and likable, and that’s kind of their superpower. They’re incredibly good at getting people to like them in some way, and so want to protect or empower them. But they can’t really control the people that get invested in them, and what someone else thinks is best isn’t always right for you.

Part of a Pages’ arc is about coming to face their reality and, in some cases, the imposed roles and identities others enforced on them. They reach their full potential when they come to be aware and honest about their true feelings and desires, and assert themselves bravely. That’s the basic Page arc, as far as I can tell. 

So I consider them active not because they manipulate people into abusing them or w.e, but because their fundamental story is about attracting the protective and sometimes dangerous wills of others to their lives and learning how to stand up for their own. 

But this toxic behavior always seems to be rooted in a genuine care for the Page. Vriska was cruel and awful to Tavros, yes. It’s also inarguable that she perceived herself as trying to help Tavros, and that the desire to make him stronger drove her behavior to some extent. She says so herself.

Dirk was outright in LOVE with Jake, and wasn’t a FRACTION as cold feeling towards him as people commonly think. All of the actual conflict and abuse came from AR/Hal, who was in an unimaginably toxic situation himself and was p much also abusing Dirk.

And Jake DID contribute significantly to his actual romantic problems with Dirk. Jake decides to lie to Jane (Roxy had told him explicitly Jane had feelings for him TWICE before that conversation) and decides to believe her when she lies about liking him. All of this because he had already chosen Dirk. 

Despite this, and despite KNOWING that his jokes about sexuality and Dirk being a girl probably hurt Dirk’s feelings/made Dirk think he was straight early in life (which turns out to be a major part of why Dirk is so tense and uncomfortable while they’re dating), he doesn’t talk to Dirk about it, because that would require conflict or admitting he did something wrong, and Jake is kind of a coward about that stuff! 

He’s non-confrontational to a fault, so Jake deals with problems by denying they exist or, at his worst, indulging escapism and outright running away from them. It’s exactly what Grandpa did to Joey and Jude, and the same potential for toxic behavior shows up in Jake, though he learns to grow out of it through his friends.

This is a HUGE THEME in Homestuck! Pretty much EVERY character has some potential for toxic/abusive behavior, and it’s only by connecting to each other and understanding the world though friendships that they rise above those inherent personal weaknesses. 

And it doesn’t mean Jake deserved his abuse but, once again:
Dirk didn’t abuse him. So their actual relationship was troubled because of AR’s influence, AND more sensible ways they were both fucking up. This is Jake’s side.

What I’m saying is, there’s room here to both understand Dammek as someone who is toxic to Xefros and understand him as having warm and even positive feelings about Xefros. Dammek might genuinely not realize anything is wrong, because he is a Prospit dreamer and  Xefros’ whole problem is being unable to see Dammek’s treatment as a problem, let alone communicate it. (Denial is a recurring motif for Pages, btw.)

None of this is necessarily what’s going on. And even if it is, Dammek could turn out to be considerably judgmental and critical of Xefros. All of this nuance might be true and Dammek would still be an asshole. 

Because people are nuanced, and assholery and abuse are behaviors regular people might come to engage in in all sorts of ambiguous ways. And Xefros and Dammek are both shaped by a society literally designed to make them as self-destructive and hateful as possible. 

I have noooo idea how Dammek’s character actually works, or how the story is going to handle them. All I’m saying is there’s room for nuance here, and I’m interested in exploring it.

You’ve mentioned here and there that the common idea of Active Knight/Passive Page do a disservice to the characters or that it doesn’t give them the depth they should have (I think thats what you were trying to get at i’m bad with words). Could you elaborate on that a little bit? (not the justification for Active Page/Passive Knight, but rather the pitfalls of Active Knight/Passive Page that fandom falls into in terms of characterization). Sorry if this doesn’t make much sense.

Basically the Active Knight reading ignores the fact that, like Rose, Dave and Karkat START OFF trying to be intensely Active but gradually mellow out and grow happier as they adopt more passive/reactive roles and become more honest about their desire for attention and validation from others (for Rose, mainly Kanaya and Roxy. For Dave and Karkat, mainly each other, tho Dave also struggles with a desire for reconciliation/catharsis with Bro/Dirk on the side).

More importantly, it misses all the ways they allow/invite their Aspect (Karkat dropping Sollux down the stairs drawing Sollux’s Blood and leading to Sollux being happier is a clear example.) and pigeonholes our understanding of their behavior as being exclusively Exploitation focused because of that one quote of Aradia’s, despite the fact that every single Class both exploits and allows their Aspect–Calliope’s definition describes a tendency, not a limitation of their powersets. 

It also ignores how Knights’ greatest impacts tends to be how their efforts benefit and empower others. Karkat allows the troll session to function at all by keeping everyone bound to a common cause and leading them to victory instead of self-destruction through petty rivalries. Dave empowers Rose, Jade and John to do literally any of what they do in their session at all by making Grist cost a complete non-issue, allowing them to make whatever kinds of powerful weapons they want. Davesprite literally buffs John by giving him a hammer with Time powers!!! The Active reading of Knights misses all of that stuff. 

As for Passive Pages, I wouldn’t know where to start. Every shitty reading of Jake as a kind, patient soul cruelly Put Upon by his predatory gay friend.
Every dumbass take that Tavros is boring because he’s just a lame pushover, instead of an abused kid who resists and fights his abuser’s pressuring influence every step of the way, and who usually knows pretty well who to ask for help to stop her! 

All of them are grounded in this idea of the Page as a Passive wallflower nobody with zero impact on Homestucks’ plot to speak of, except of course for how they are mistreated by others. 

The powerset of a Page in development, if you listen to the Passive reading, seems to veer between ??? and “Nothing much”, since they’re regarded as p much a burden who must be carried through the game by everyone else until the day they finally reach their True Power, which is presumably buffing everyone else until the whole team is super saiyans. 

This is a day that never comes in canon, for any Page. Instead, we get Jake feeling sexually threatened and objectified and summoning a mental version of his boyfriend spouting quotes from a romantic comedy-adventure movie (which is way more Jake’s bag than Dirk’s). 

Not to mention BGD talks about Jake as his boyfriend while Dirk himself broke up with Jake and is simultaneously flying around in literal nowhere with no idea what’s going on. 

The Brain Ghost Dirk episode is about Jake benefiting HIMSELF with his Hope. Think about his level of power and the context surrounding it. 

Aranea wanted to use Jake’s Hope power to benefit herself, and he immediately summoned a warrior for the sole purpose of turning said power against her. 
His power is definitely not for her benefit.

It’s not for the benefit of anyone else in the session, either, because Jake doesn’t do jack shit about the Condesce as a threat despite having more than enough power to. Jake isn’t thinking about the good of the session or fixing everything so everyone is safe and conflict is resolved, all of which is stuff he could accomplish with a power level exceeding Jade’s.

Jake is only thinking about himself and wanting to feel safe, and Dirk is how he gets there. The fact that the fandom has missed that rests on the assumption of the Passive Page.

Ditto Tavros’ big moment–rallying the Ghost Army–being cast as a shitty moment where he character develops by getting to help his abuser instead of being a cathartic beat where he gets to own her as revenge because that’s all he wants–to prove her wrong definitively and get on with his life. Or ghost-life, or whatever. Homestuck is dumb, I love it.

I could make similar complaints about Karkat and how everyone thinks he got shafted because he never Got Tough and started fucking shit up with Blood-lasers or whatever. Karkat uses Blood constantly, all the time, and he’s extremely successful and effective at leveraging it. He just does most of it indirectly.

I have a lot of thoughts about this, as you can tell. All this said, it’s possible I’m just straight up wrong about what it means to be Active/Passive and canon will clarify once the Class test happens. Until then though, I’m gonna work with what I have, and it seems to me Homestuck as a work reads much better with one interpretation over the other. 

how do you suppose the general idea of page having a lot of potential fits in with selfish serving? vriska says it several times, and aradia too alluded to tavros’s class (flarp) as having the most powerful abilities being available much later on. the page class seems like a special case since i think its the only one explicitly described with criteria other than the “allow/exploit/etc __” phrase, so what do you think of this? (wow that was a mess of words oops)

The way I see it, it makes a lot of sense: Pages are inherently Self-Serving, and that’s both an intense weakness and a great strength. 

Why? Because in Homestuck, reality is made not just of what you want, but of what you’re willing to make happen. Willpower and thought are tangible, powerful things in Homestuck–things that shape the communal reality that all the characters share on their adventure. 

So what if you had a natural talent to give yourself whatever you want? What if you had a natural talent to make other people WANT to give you whatever you want? Once Pages understand this potential in themselves and exploit it to it’s fullest potential, you get–well, you get Gods uniquely skilled at achieving exactly the outcome they want. So you get Jake summoning Brain Ghost Dirk, which should be impossible. You get Tavros managing to somehow organize an entire army out of extremely self-absorbed troll ghosts so he can finally show Vriska up, just by being nice and talking to them all one by one.

Ultimately, Homestuck posits that happiness/fulfillment/success, in reality, is made by knowing how to traverse the boundaries between what exists, what you want, and what the people around you want. Pages’ key verb, by design, gives them the shortest path to getting there. Other classes might use their ability to Make or Steal or Destroy to get what they want, but Pages have the luxury of simply Serving it to themselves–partly by making other people genuinely want to give it to them, or by using their Aspect to serve their own desires directly instead. 

This makes them powerful vectors for organizing wills into a single goal, ie: Powerful leaders or warriors under the right circumstances. 

The reason this is such a double-edged sword is twofold. For one thing, Pages being self-serving also makes them inclined to be cowardly and conflict avoidant, even when conflict is necessary. They’re also prone to put their own interest ahead of the group’s. For another, they can inspire people to want to help them, but those people are also their own people with their own predilections and ideas about what serving someone else means, which leads to unpredictable results. One need look no further than Vriska to see how that can go wrong. 

And it’s worth noting that being self-serving is something society by and large strongly discourages, especially if you’re going to be asking people for help in accomplishing whatever you want to get done! It’s seen as a pretty Bad thing to be. So Pages perhaps more than most classes tend to be conditioned against embracing their innate skills.

This is a true mess of words. Hope it makes any damn sense but feel free to send me another ask if it doesn’t! And thanks a ton!