Saiyuki vol 7 : Gojyo and Sanzo
May. 9th, 2005 09:32 pmI keep looking at one particular bit of volume 7. Opinions welcomed, please.
Images under the cut:

Sanzo hits Gojyo and Gojyo just takes it because he thinks he deserves it.

His submission to Sanzo is very compelling (shut up) because on the surface it's very un-Gojyo-like. But there's more than just surface, because his ashamed, head down reaction to Sanzo's anger is an uncanny echo of his childhood, which we are shown only a few frames previously.

It's as though some deeply ingrained response has kicked in when Sanzo hits him, combined with the awful guilt from thinking he's responsible for Hakkai and Goku's death. If you take the parallel further, then, alarmingly, this moment puts Sanzo in the place of Gojyo's mother,

who hits him

and leaves him feeling guilty and desolate.
I don't really know what to draw from this, but I love the layers. I think this makes their relationship even more interesting, because Sanzo has some measure of authority over Gojyo as leader of the group, which Gojyo tacitly acknowledges by never challenging it. Sanzo is also, technically, a holy person. Even though both Sanzo and Gojyo are as far from holy as you can get, Sanzo still represents something unattainable to Gojyo. Perhaps in a spiritual sense, although I think Gojyo becomes more self-reflective as the story goes on, but more in Sanzo's sense of privilege and higher social standing and power. We know that Gojyo was constantly ashamed as a child and felt terrible guilt. His adult bravado is partly a reaction to that and partly to being an outsider.
Images under the cut:

Sanzo hits Gojyo and Gojyo just takes it because he thinks he deserves it.

His submission to Sanzo is very compelling (shut up) because on the surface it's very un-Gojyo-like. But there's more than just surface, because his ashamed, head down reaction to Sanzo's anger is an uncanny echo of his childhood, which we are shown only a few frames previously.

It's as though some deeply ingrained response has kicked in when Sanzo hits him, combined with the awful guilt from thinking he's responsible for Hakkai and Goku's death. If you take the parallel further, then, alarmingly, this moment puts Sanzo in the place of Gojyo's mother,

who hits him

and leaves him feeling guilty and desolate.
I don't really know what to draw from this, but I love the layers. I think this makes their relationship even more interesting, because Sanzo has some measure of authority over Gojyo as leader of the group, which Gojyo tacitly acknowledges by never challenging it. Sanzo is also, technically, a holy person. Even though both Sanzo and Gojyo are as far from holy as you can get, Sanzo still represents something unattainable to Gojyo. Perhaps in a spiritual sense, although I think Gojyo becomes more self-reflective as the story goes on, but more in Sanzo's sense of privilege and higher social standing and power. We know that Gojyo was constantly ashamed as a child and felt terrible guilt. His adult bravado is partly a reaction to that and partly to being an outsider.
no subject
Date: 2005-05-11 12:51 pm (UTC)Have you read
no subject
Date: 2005-05-11 08:49 pm (UTC)no subject
Date: 2005-05-12 10:27 am (UTC)no subject
Date: 2005-05-12 01:38 am (UTC)And, yeah, the "we're weaker w/o Gojyo" thing is total BS. Or, more precisely, it is Hakkai trying to persuade Sanzo to change his mind by appealing to what Sanzo claims is most important--the success of the mission. And of course it doesn't work, because Sanzo is a genius when it comes to discerning the true motivations of anybody but himself, and he sees right through Hakkai's attempts at manipulating him.
no subject
Date: 2005-05-12 10:35 am (UTC)Oh, yes, brilliant! I love this insight.
Yes, that 'mentally unstable' comment sticks in the mind, because we don't know if Gojyo means all the time or just now. If he means all the time, then that paints a *very* different picture of Hakkai than the one we've seen up til then.
no subject
Date: 2005-05-12 12:21 pm (UTC)no subject
Date: 2005-05-12 12:20 pm (UTC)I think that's absolutely right-- I don't think he would've let Gojyo go otherwise. I think he knows s important to Gojyo, so he lets him go, but I don't think he realizes how devastating the consequences will be to all of them.