So, about Jingrui
Jun. 20th, 2017 05:44 pm![[personal profile]](https://www.dreamwidth.org/img/silk/identity/user.png)
And here’s where I run into problems with anything that moves Jingrui’s relationships to somewhere they are not currently: Jingrui takes things at face value. He’s not dumb or unsophisticated; on the contrary, he observes quite accurately that, for example, Su Zhe does not particularly like (or suit) working for Prince Yu. But it’s Yujin, not Jingrui, who spots that maybe Su /isn’t/. Jingrui is trusting to an alarming extent, considering his family.
This suggests to me that both sides of his family, and in fact everyone else of his acquaintance, have deliberately kept him out of Serious Business concerns, and have probably done so from day one. It further suggests that, despite that, he’s gotten regular confirmation that he’s valued and loved. Watching the way he interacts with everyone except the Marquis, even while things are falling apart and blowing up, I think we can bet on this–there’s been a feedback loop there, his whole life, in which Jingrui is open hearted and is therefore cherished by his family, and therefore keeps being open hearted and trusting, and is therefore sheltered, and so on.
Which means that Jingrui probably also has a tendency to go with the flow and trust that everything will turn out, until or unless he’s whacked over the head with something that is clearly Wrong in some way. (Jingrui inspires me to use capitals, too.) So shifting his relationship with Yujin, especially if we assume Yujin has been taking some trouble to be a bit misdirecting thanks to his fear to screwing things up, is… going to take some work, let’s put it that way.
I do find it interesting that Jingrui apparently idolized Lin Shu (at least, Yujin says he was the one always running after Lin Shu, and dragging Yujin along), and keeps idolizing him, even in disguise. Jingrui might not /do/ the incisive insight thing, but he does seem to /respect/ it, very highly. (One possibility here: that he notices this characteristic as it comes out more strongly in Yujin.) I suspect part of Jingrui’s youthful cousin-crush was also that Lin Shu was already in the military. Jingrui gets the warrior thing from both sides of his family, both the in-system and out-system versions. I suspect the military is genuinely Jingrui’s career goal, insofar as he has one; the camaraderie of soldiers, as presented in the story, seems very like what Jingrui values in his relationships, and it’s what he’s been raised to. (Alternate possibility: Jingrui and Yujin’s squads can’t take the pining any longer and set them up.)
So, if Yujin is currently Prince Ji’s understudy, I kind of think Jingrui is Meng’s. The trick will be moving them both toward a little conjoint personal development when both characters have so much inertia built up in their current positions.
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This suggests to me that both sides of his family, and in fact everyone else of his acquaintance, have deliberately kept him out of Serious Business concerns, and have probably done so from day one. It further suggests that, despite that, he’s gotten regular confirmation that he’s valued and loved. Watching the way he interacts with everyone except the Marquis, even while things are falling apart and blowing up, I think we can bet on this–there’s been a feedback loop there, his whole life, in which Jingrui is open hearted and is therefore cherished by his family, and therefore keeps being open hearted and trusting, and is therefore sheltered, and so on.
Which means that Jingrui probably also has a tendency to go with the flow and trust that everything will turn out, until or unless he’s whacked over the head with something that is clearly Wrong in some way. (Jingrui inspires me to use capitals, too.) So shifting his relationship with Yujin, especially if we assume Yujin has been taking some trouble to be a bit misdirecting thanks to his fear to screwing things up, is… going to take some work, let’s put it that way.
I do find it interesting that Jingrui apparently idolized Lin Shu (at least, Yujin says he was the one always running after Lin Shu, and dragging Yujin along), and keeps idolizing him, even in disguise. Jingrui might not /do/ the incisive insight thing, but he does seem to /respect/ it, very highly. (One possibility here: that he notices this characteristic as it comes out more strongly in Yujin.) I suspect part of Jingrui’s youthful cousin-crush was also that Lin Shu was already in the military. Jingrui gets the warrior thing from both sides of his family, both the in-system and out-system versions. I suspect the military is genuinely Jingrui’s career goal, insofar as he has one; the camaraderie of soldiers, as presented in the story, seems very like what Jingrui values in his relationships, and it’s what he’s been raised to. (Alternate possibility: Jingrui and Yujin’s squads can’t take the pining any longer and set them up.)
So, if Yujin is currently Prince Ji’s understudy, I kind of think Jingrui is Meng’s. The trick will be moving them both toward a little conjoint personal development when both characters have so much inertia built up in their current positions.
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no subject
Date: 2017-06-22 12:59 am (UTC)The structure of the military in the show is a fascinating mess, a weird combination of bureaucratic and feudal. The border armies are clearly feudal, to judge by the examples of the Mu army and the Chiyan army, with inherited authority over that particular army, an emphasis on loyalty to its commander, and often some relationship (younger bio son, adoptive, marital, fictive, etc.) to the imperial family. The internal armies, like the one that Xu Anmo got put in charge of or the one that Jingyan summoned, though, seem like much more bureaucratic creatures. It's a neat allusion to the classic idea of Tang armies, whereby great magnates were set to guard the borders, while the connection between commanders and men in the internal garrisons was more tenuous. Or, really, it's an idealization of the Han military that lots of other dynasties try to reproduce until they discover that those great border armies make lovely bases from which to foment coups and try to centralize. (Yes, I'm a geek.) Point being that the tension between loyalty to the state or the commander is kind of baked into the system. I doubt Jingrui would be able to serve unless he trusted his entire chain of command, so the number of people under whom he could serve is...limited. Meng, Lin Shu, or Nihuang, pretty much. :-)
You're definitely right that Jingrui's attitude toward freedom changes over the course of the show. Does he really decide that he doesn't want it, though? Or does he just come to a better understanding of its price? When he goes to Chu, Niannian wants to get him there in hopes that he'll stay, but he explicitly goes with a plan to return. Then once he comes back, he tells his mother that he won't judge her choices but refuses to tell her that he would do the same. To me, that suggests a more conscious sense of where he fits within society, combined with a choice not to let his position (or any individual) dictate his choices.
no subject
Date: 2017-06-22 02:09 am (UTC)And, seriously. I have banged my head against this /incredible/ historical mish-mash for /weeks/ now. It's the political map of Spring and Autumn juxtaposed with the bureaucratic and military systems/gear of Three Kingdoms, costumed by Tang, with the part of Qin being played by the city-state of Da Liang. *eyes are still crossing* (And Mu is referenced with all the titles and words for a vassal state, so, yes, exactly.) I would totally put the boys under Meng, not least because he's still got command holes that need to be filled by people he knows are loyal.
no subject
Date: 2017-06-22 04:30 pm (UTC)That's actually one of my favorite things about the show, is how good her sense of where she can bend history and where she can't. Much more of a Guy Gavriel Kay medieval than a Robert Jordan one.
I look forward to seeing Meng and Jingrui interact!