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	<title>Game of Thrones &#8211; Precision Background Screening</title>
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		<title>House of the Dragon</title>
		<link>https://precisionbackgroundscreening.com/house-of-the-dragon/</link>
				<pubDate>Tue, 06 Sep 2022 08:01:20 +0000</pubDate>
		<dc:creator><![CDATA[Precision Background Screening]]></dc:creator>
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		<category><![CDATA[Game of Thrones]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[House of the Dragon]]></category>
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				<description><![CDATA[<p>When “House of the Dragon” premiered on HBO, there was little doubt in the minds of “Game of Thrones” fans that the show would be just as bloody, ruthless, and violent. “House of the Dragon” debuted with its metaphorical medieval</p>
<p>The post <a rel="nofollow" href="https://precisionbackgroundscreening.com/house-of-the-dragon/">House of the Dragon</a> appeared first on <a rel="nofollow" href="https://precisionbackgroundscreening.com">Precision Background Screening</a>.</p>
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<figure class="wp-block-image size-large"><img src="https://precisionbackgroundscreening.com/wp-content/uploads/2022/09/House-of-the-Dragon.png" alt="Targaryen sigil from House of the Dragon" class="wp-image-1900" srcset="https://precisionbackgroundscreening.com/wp-content/uploads/2022/09/House-of-the-Dragon.png 1024w, https://precisionbackgroundscreening.com/wp-content/uploads/2022/09/House-of-the-Dragon-300x180.png 300w, https://precisionbackgroundscreening.com/wp-content/uploads/2022/09/House-of-the-Dragon-768x461.png 768w" sizes="(max-width: 1024px) 100vw, 1024px" /></figure>



<p>When “House of the Dragon” premiered on HBO, there was little doubt in the minds of “Game of Thrones” fans that the show would be just as bloody, ruthless, and violent.</p>



<p>“House of the
Dragon” debuted with its metaphorical <a href="https://www.merriam-webster.com/dictionary/medieval">medieval</a> guns akimbo, with a
graphic C-section, jousting tournament, and a scene in which criminals are
dismembered as punishment. The latest episode, “Second of His Name,” again
includes images of soldiers being eaten alive by crabs, culminating in the
defeat of the “Crab Feeder” (Daniel Scott Smith) at the hands of Daemon
Targaryen (Matt Smith), who arrives on the battlefield dragging a severed
torso, innards trailing behind it.</p>



<p>Content
warning or not (the episode contained a warning for graphic violence, among
others), “House of the Dragon” is clearly trying to outdo its predecessor and
itself with graphic spectacle. <a href="https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/George_R._R._Martin">George R.R. Martin’s</a> “Fire &amp; Blood”
quickly lays out events from this chapter of Westerosi history, but adapting
that for the screen means depicting scenes often described in a few words or
sentences, like Daemon’s justice, or adding new elements, like the crabs. The
show’s graphic content and glorified violence is a choice — and not always a
historically accurate one. At this point, the violence in TV fantasy like
“House of the Dragon” is more emblematic of “Thrones” itself than of the actual
Medieval era.</p>



<p>HBO
and the showrunners have faced recent backlash for comments about the show’s
alleged realism — that it not only reflects but is obligated to represent the
violence and misogyny of the Medieval era as described in George R.R. Martin’s
texts. But Martin’s work itself is not some bastion of Medieval verisimilitude,
not least because, you know, dragons. Claims of accuracy in a fantasy world are
conscious choices about what is and isn’t believable enough for the audience
and creators. Martin and HBO’s imaginings of the <a href="https://www.history.com/topics/middle-ages/middle-ages">Middle Ages</a> differ from reality
and from each other.</p>



<p>“’Game
of Thrones’ and ‘House of the Dragon’ are set in an imaginary world,”
medievalist and early modernist Dr. Kavita Mudan Finn told IndieWire. “That
world needs to have internal logic and that is part of where this misconception
happens. The universe that these stories are set in is so dense and immersive
and fascinating that it’s very easy to let that slippage happen, and to fall
into the trap of thinking it reflects some kind of reality it doesn’t.”</p>



<p>According
to Dr. Shiloh Carroll, author of “Medievalism in A Song of Ice and Fire and
Game of Thrones,” the problem with any generalization about the Middle Ages is
that the era covers an immense range of time and geography. The era includes
around a thousand years of history and multiple continents, particularly
Europe, parts of Northern Africa, and parts of the Middle East. Even the exact
years can be disputed depending on region.</p>



<p>“When
we say this is how it was in the Middle Ages, where and when are we talking
about?” Carroll rhetorically asked. “Maybe what you’re saying is true about
England in 1250, but that doesn’t mean that it’s true about the <a href="https://www.britannica.com/place/Holy-Roman-Empire">Holy Roman Empire</a>.”</p>



<p>Something
like the tournament in Episode 1 of “House of the Dragon” is a prime example,
embellishing medieval jousting tournaments in which participants used blunted
weapons that couldn’t actually cause bodily harm. Finn said that sequence has
similarities with the early modern Henry VIII, who hosted multiple tournaments
that coincided with his wives giving birth, but never quite went as planned.</p>



<p>“The
study of the medieval period in Europe and a lot of our conceptions of the
medieval period in Europe are not in any way accurate,” Finn said. “They
actually come from the 19th century, and they have the hang ups of the 19th
century. They coincide with the rise of colonial power — various European
countries’ attempts to define their own heritage, partly because they want to
put that heritage in opposition to the people they are attempting to conquer.”</p>



<p>That
certainly pops up in “Thrones,” which was criticized from the start for
barbaric depictions of its only characters of color and their eventual
submission to a white leader, Daenerys Targaryen (Emilia Clarke). “House of the
Dragon” is more racially diverse from the outset, but the damage — and its thin
defense — remains. Medieval Europe was much more racially diverse than most
interpretations seem to think, a hub of trade and travel from various
countries. Even class and gender struggles, Finn says, were more nuanced than
they are often portrayed in pop culture.</p>



<p>Yet
violence pervades on-screen depictions of anything reminiscent of the Middle
Ages. “Rings of Power” may be off to a wholesome start on Prime Video, but even
Peter Jackson’s “Lord of the Rings” trilogy included a scene where Uruk-Hai eat
one of their own alive.&nbsp;Seeing and internalizing the same depictions over
and over, says Carroll, creates a concerning feedback loop.</p>



<p>“Each
person’s individual idea of what the Middle Ages were like, they can find
something in fiction that reinforces that,” she said. “They see that specific
fiction as historically accurate because it already represents what they
believed about the Middle Ages.”</p>



<p>Caroll
finds the violence in “House of the Dragon” — at least the premiere episode —
to be far more plot-driven than on “Thrones,” leaning more than ever into the
body horror. Finn agreed.</p>



<p>“We
were very firmly in [Aemma’s] perspective for a good portion of the scene,” she
said of Episode 1’s C-section sequence. “It was partly there for shock, but it
also really brought home her situation and set a theme going forward about
women’s autonomy and the kinds of battles that they were going to have to
face.”</p>



<p>Though
criticized as gratuitous, Aemma’s C-section is actually one of the more
accurate if visceral scenes. Carroll also says the Crabfeeder’s end checks out
with Medieval punishments like hanging and quartering, even if it was doled out
on the battlefield by a Rogue Prince and not the law. For most viewers, the
distinction between accuracy and exaggeration is not only blurry, but perhaps
even irrelevant — but it also creates a false distance between this so-called
backward Medieval fantasy and the world we ourselves occupy.</p>



<p>“Perhaps
our fascination with barbaric medievalism lets us offload our own social
problems onto a time period so far behind us that it’s practically alien,” Carroll
wrote after “Thrones” ended. “We can feel superior to those dirty, backwards
medieval people.”</p>



<p>“It
comes from this desire to feel like we’re better than people in the Middle
Ages,” Finn echoed. “We know better, we’re more progressive, we’re more
advanced — when in fact it turns out we’re not, and we have a lot of the same
problems that they did.”</p>



<p><em>“House
of the Dragon” </em>airs Sundays at 9 p.m. ET on HBO.</p>



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