What do you make of "Faction Before Blood"?
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Re: What do you make of "Faction Before Blood"?
I believe that "Faction before blood" is real in our society, in the form of religion.Scott wrote:The following discussion question was included in some copies of the June book of the month, Divergent by Veronica Roth.
How does the idea of “faction before blood” come into play throughout the book? Do you think this idea has a place in today’s society, or is it contrary to what most people believe? In our society, what ideas and beliefs are people loyal to in the way Tris’s society is loyal to the concept of the factions?
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Faction before blood probably also caused a lot of young people to make the wrong decision for themselves about which faction to choose because they did not want to leave their families, because they didn't want to disappoint their families, or because they wanted to get away from their families.
- Apogea
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I think it is a great control technique for factions, since if everyone that was a transfer went right back to their families all the time, the faction they are currently in would never get anything accomplished itself.
In our society, family comes before friends, so it is fairly opposite of faction before blood.
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That one simple statement brings up an array of feelings for me.
First... NO!!!! As a parent I cannot imagine the pain the parents went through while abiding by faction change rules.
Second..... Why not? As a child of a fairly disfunctional family and broken home I yearned to flee and grow up and choose my own path. I created a clan of renaissance reenactors of 50+ people who I, most of the time, consider more family than I the one I was born into. So I agree with making a hard choice and making my own family and feeling loyalty from "faction" more than blood.
It seems the Divergent society is emotionless. They try and take the humanity (emotions) out of decision making. And while that is noble in the interest of a newly reformed city after devastation, it isn't practical.
It's good in theory, but it fails in a society as 100% of society does not agree with it. This leads to the characters feeling restrained, which naturally leads to rebellion.
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I think it's also important to note that some families are not blood and are equally supportive and powerful. Tris opens up to people in her faction who become like family. She doesn't forget her family - she doesn't put them lower than her faction. She runs to her brother when she's struggling with her own faction. She tries to save her family, her mother visits her and warns her of things to come. Even with the idea of "faction before blood" the characters made decisions based on who they cared about and what was most important in the moment. It's not always clear-cut.
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