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Aug 23 22 tweets 16 min read
Nameless Soldiers & Collateral Damage

Thread on how and why AoT leverages the purposefully unnamed and minor characters to convey the weight of choices

#aotmangaspoilers
One of my favorite chapters is #80: "The Nameless Soldiers"

While it is often remembered for the amazing speech a beloved character gives (Erwin) or the heart-wrenching interaction of a dynamic we're invested in (Levi & Erwin), it's named after the nameless soldiers for a reason
In this chapter, two moments draw the reader's attention to the characters we're not invested in, and the importance of their lives:

1. Levi's apology, purposefully directed to recruits he's not close to

2.Erwin's words on the meaning of the mostly nameless recruits' lives
Next chapter, we see the charge is led by Erwin until he's hit, then led by Marlowe until he falls too

Ultimately, despite Zeke assuming he wiped them all out, we see 3 soldiers still charging despite watching all that death with no leader to spur them on anymore

Who are they?
These young, new recruits had reason to falter: there were only 3 & had witnessed so much death, with time to think on their own

We don't know them, but given the timing, had they chosen to stop, maybe Levi wouldn't have reached Zeke, maybe something would've changed
It's kind of like a callback to the Female Titan arc where Eren see nameless soldiers cut down by Annie as she tries to reach them, anguished over each death

After, when Erwin attempts to thank Levi, he says it's only due to those nameless soldiers' lives that they lured Annie
The real impact of those nameless lives is shown by what these nameless sacrifices did, what the characters couldn't have done without them

But also "The Nameless Soldiers" and the charge serves as a precursor Floch's speeches during Midnight Sun and later at the awards ceremony
Isayama discussed this in interviews, he wanted to leverage Floch to avoid a protagonist-only POV here, call out the world is bigger than just our main cast and there are others suffering even though the reader is inclined to care only for characters we know (like Armin & Erwin)
These aren't the only times he's done this

One example is Annie's capture in Stohess. Significant emphasis is given to the civilians affected, with panels devoted to them, the MPs' reactions, Erwin being questioned over it, and Hitch bringing it up to Marlowe and Levi & co.
Many stories don't dwell on collateral damage and impact to nameless civilians and they don't spend much time highlighting the unnamed "red shirt" soldiers who exist more or less to be killed off while preserving the main characters because it can prompt uncomfortable thoughts
By that, I mean- Hitch calling out the Survey Corps draws attention to the fact that innocents died, which makes the reader wonder things about the Scouts' actions- was it heroic, worth it?

Is Eren and Mikasa's fight for their friend admirable, or prioritizing only their wants?
These types of questions are naturally upsetting to the reader because we're invested in the Survey Corps and want to root for them over characters we know nothing about

And we've spent time with EMA and feel their bond over Floch's suffering from Sandra & Gordon's loss
But AoT routinely forces the reader to remember collateral damage, losses not as obviously felt, and that lives exist outside of our characters- lives that are impacted by their actions

From Armin's transformation in Liberio to Eren walking the Marleyan streets observing people
And in situations like the port battle, the nameless Yeagerists show iemotion, and instead of having Connie & Armin face someone random, it's Samuel & Daz from the 104th, to make them feel more real, like they have lives outside of these pages

This is a purposeful choice
Isayama also has a habit of building up characters right before they die, giving them emphasis, personality, and/or dynamics

So when characters like Nifa or Varis (who had been depicted by Levi for chapters) die and we see Levi's horrified reaction, it resonates more
Then there's Levi's character interacting with this as a "man of the people", speaking for starving mothers and children of the forsaken district of Trost & the people who can't eat within the Walls, reminding us of the value & struggle of their lives
All of this is 100x with the Rumbling. Arguably the amount of time AoT spends on nameless or mostly unknown characters can be seen as too much- pages upon pages of people impacted

Even within Paradis, attention is drawn to how the Walls falling killed civilians

It's inescapable
While that's obviously to draw attention to the magnitude & horror of the Rumbling, I think this overall trend serves another purpose

Isayama has discussed multiple times that he doesn't want to tell the reader what's right so much as honestly & understandably portray conflicts
"Show, don't tell" is an often cited adage to writers because telling a reader what is and what to feel doesn't have the same impact as illustrating the event and letting the weight of the circumstances land through empathy, emotion, and experience
If AoT told us "there were significant consequences to the Rumbling" or "others died in RtS", we'd understand that rationally but it may not feel as real or important as moments like Eren's desperation to save Armin
Showing Ramzi die hurts more than a footnote saying 1M kids died
That's why AoT emphases the "nameless soldiers", has Levi apologize to them & Erwin say their lives had meaning imo

Focusing on Zofia, Udo, Varis, Nifa, the people Hitch pulls from the rumble, the congregation Annie falls on, & the last 3 soldiers left in the charge
To me, it's to remind of the weight of choices & consequences

Amidst Erwin's sacrifice, the vow, Zeke's actions, all characters & dynamics we have reason to care about, in addition to our main cast, there were ~100 nameless soldiers affected and the story wants you to feel that

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More from @whofavoredfire

Aug 10
It's apparently the anniversary of "Midnight Sun" so quick thoughts on why this chapter is one of my favorites -

#aotmangaspoilers Image
"Midnight Sun" is by far one of my faves because it does so much for the series as a whole (foreshadowing, developments, motifs, etc.) while also being largely character-driven

Specifically Mikasa, Eren, Levi - and also Floch, Erwin, Hange, and Armin's characters Image
The conflict between Eren, Mikasa, Levi, Hange & Floch over who should be saved tell us a lot about these characters, their values & future developments

And despite being pitched as a "strategic" debate, it quickly becomes personal, emotional, even by those claiming otherwise Image
Read 19 tweets
Jul 5
Levi Ackerman: Living For the Fallen

Thread analyzing Levi's core character motivation of finding meaning in the sacrifices of the fallen Survey Corps members and how it ties his entire arc together, from his introduction to the final chapter

#aotmangaspoilers
Levi's intro is crucial to understanding his character- we immediately learn what matters to him, how he lives with all the death surrounding him, and how he chooses to live his life.

This character motivation established in his intro permeates his story & culminates in his end
His Intro: "Captain Levi"

First, we see Levi go to save a nameless comrade who finds hope in Levi's strength- this soldier in the face of death explicitly ties humanity's survival to Levi's existence, with emphasis on his teary-eyed expression looking to Levi as he swoops in
Read 25 tweets
Jul 4
A detail I love is how only Levi really wears the cape of the old uniform in Liberio, but as the Alliance forms, more of the others start wearing them too- visually distinguishing the OG Survey Corps vs. the Yeagerists and furthering the return to their roots feel of the last arc
I had seen speculation on how Levi's refusal to "get with the times" represented by clinging to the old uniform was indicative of his future death or becoming outdated

Instead it ties to the back-to-their-roots return for the characters, like with the Scouting mission to Liberio
The post-Uprising Survey Corps recruits were noted as different, less skilled and joining for different reasons, under different circumstances; the Yeagerist faction further diverges from the core mission of the OG Scouts- becomes an entirely different org with different values
Read 4 tweets
Jun 17
Quick thoughts on why I like the No Regrets manga way more than the OVA and why people should read it if they've only watched the anime -
1. The Characters -

The characters have more consistency, nuance, and depth in the manga imo

Furlan & Isobel are more fleshed out & seem like more than sacrificial lambs for Levi's angst- like we get hints of their backgrounds and see their last moments- & their bonds
Flagon has far more characterization; he feels like an idealistic Survey Corps vet devoted to the mission rather than just some judgmental obstacle for Levi- he even is shown dying to save Furlan and passionately defending the need for scouting missions
Read 22 tweets
May 6
Levi Ackerman & "Street Smarts"

Spoiler-less thread on the mental skill set Levi uses to win fights, how he connects with others, and how it all foils the characters around him in a deconstruction of brawn vs. brain dynamics
You can't pull off Levi's feats against impossible odds with just strength; brute strength and speed alone aren't much if you aren't perceptive & strategic about how it's used

And he couldn't be a leader who is given so many responsibilities with just physical skills to rely on
That's why we see his mental skill set too-

1. He has a good read on people; he's actually often used as a story mouthpiece for a wide range of characters, ranging from those he's known for a while to people he's recently met (Erwin, Zeke, Hange, EMA, Dimo Reeves, etc.)
Read 21 tweets
Feb 20
Erwin vs. Eren's Dreams | Levi & Mikasa's Choices [Manga Spoilers]

Thread analyzing the parallels- and subsequent diverging paths- of Erwin and Eren through the childhood dreams driving them and Levi and Mikasa's choices in response
Both Erwin & Eren had a defining moment in their childhood where they were inspired by someone important to them (Erwin's father & Armin) to basically question the status quo, think of life beyond the walls and all the limits they'd been told to accept their whole lives
But both of these childhood dreams quickly lose their innocence and childish joy as Erwin's excitement indirectly leads to his father's death and the dream Eren shares with Armin makes him realize how trapped and not truly free he truly is
Read 25 tweets

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