(no subject)
May. 21st, 2013 11:36 pmSo I keep wondering why Enjolras expects Marius to show up and be helpful in the Barriere du Maine scene; after all, we're told that after the Great Napoleon Debacle, Marius essentially storms off in a huff and never goes back to revolutionland again. Also, he is Marius. Myself, I can think of about four reasons:
1. Unreliable/ambiguous narrator: Marius had been hanging out with the gang before Napoleongate way more than the text implies.
2. Marius has not been hanging out with the gang, but Courfeyrac trusts him enough that he asks him to run errands sometimes when it would be useful to have an unfamiliar face show up, which he does because of the debt he feels he owes Courfeyrac, and Enjolras interprets this as Marius being way more interested in revolution than he actually is. This would actually be an interesting fic-premise -- Marius Pontmercies his way through a revolutionary errand he knows nothing about; hijinks ensue!
3. Enjolras really is JUST THAT DESPERATE. Maybe all the redshirt revolutionaries have gone home for the summer holidays. Or are dying of cholera.
4. Enjolras is not actually talking about our Marius at all, but about a friend of his named Jean or Pierre or Guifford Marius. Jean Marius has been very lax about showing up to meetings recently and we are VERY DISAPPOINTED in him.
1. Unreliable/ambiguous narrator: Marius had been hanging out with the gang before Napoleongate way more than the text implies.
2. Marius has not been hanging out with the gang, but Courfeyrac trusts him enough that he asks him to run errands sometimes when it would be useful to have an unfamiliar face show up, which he does because of the debt he feels he owes Courfeyrac, and Enjolras interprets this as Marius being way more interested in revolution than he actually is. This would actually be an interesting fic-premise -- Marius Pontmercies his way through a revolutionary errand he knows nothing about; hijinks ensue!
3. Enjolras really is JUST THAT DESPERATE. Maybe all the redshirt revolutionaries have gone home for the summer holidays. Or are dying of cholera.
4. Enjolras is not actually talking about our Marius at all, but about a friend of his named Jean or Pierre or Guifford Marius. Jean Marius has been very lax about showing up to meetings recently and we are VERY DISAPPOINTED in him.
no subject
Date: 2013-05-22 05:55 pm (UTC)I could see Courfeyrac doing so once the guy is his roommate; you would think in that case that Marius would reciprocate, but Marius is an oblivious awkward turtle, so I find it plausible that he wouldn't think to. I could also see Marius tending to introduce himself with his first name and expect others to call him by it, because he didn't grow up having a lot of socialization with peers or watching young men interact with each other; he grew up as a kid alone with a lot of old people, so I can completely see him expecting to be called by his first name even in contexts where other people would find that odd. But I don't understand why all the others -- Enjolras, Courfeyrac, all the guys who call their canonical dearest friends by last name -- would do the same, unless Marius were flat-out insisting that he strongly preferred that or something. (And why would he?)
I can fanwank it in my brain as one of those things that just sticks that way, so that no one is totally sure why he's Marius and Jehan is Jean/Jehan Prouvaire (at least some of the time, or anyway at least that one time Enjolras is talking about a hostage trade) instead of just Prouvaire, he just is. But I would really love it if anyone can offer cultural context to make it make more sense.
no subject
Date: 2013-05-22 07:40 pm (UTC)no subject
Date: 2013-05-24 12:55 am (UTC)no subject
Date: 2013-05-24 12:54 am (UTC)Interesting point about how growing up as the only child in adult circles might be playing into this.