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  • 21 minutes ago
Autor: Erick Valverde
Wattpad: @LectorErick

Resources:
NotebookLM.google.com

Bibliography:
Agabey, G. (2021). Satire as a form of expression in Azerbaijan. Revista Universidad y Sociedad, 13(5), 431–438. Universidad de Cienfuegos. ISSN 2218-3620. http://scielo.sld.cu/scielo.php?script=sci_abstract&pid=S2218-36202021000500431

Magnifico, A. M., & Jones, K. (2025). Theorizing fanfiction: The importance of remixed social genres composed on the internet. Computers and Composition, 75, 102916. https://www.sciencedirect.com/science/article/pii/S8755461525000039
Transcript
00:00Okay, let's dive right into this. We're going to be talking about a work that is, well, it's
00:04provocative, it's complex, and it's a theological satirical fan fiction that pushes just about every
00:11boundary you can think of. And it does it to ask some really profound questions about power,
00:16freedom, and what we even consider to be sacred. And this is where it all kicks off. Right here.
00:22This is the moment of divine confrontation that sets the stage for everything that follows.
00:27I mean, it's crude, it's absolutely shocking, and it's the spark that lights the fire in a story
00:33that uses vulgarity as a really high-concept artistic tool. So this is the big question we're
00:38going to be exploring today. Is this whole thing just meant to shock us? Or is there something more
00:43going on? How does a text like this use really transgressive themes, you know, eroticism, blasphemy,
00:49humor, not just for the sake of it, but as these precise tools for a philosophical critique?
00:54A critique of power structures we don't even think to question. To get that, we've got to look at where
00:59this story even comes from. To really analyze this text properly, we can't just treat it like any other
01:05book. No way. We have to understand the entire framework it's playing in, and that is the world
01:11of fan fiction. Now, what's so interesting about this definition is how it frames fan fiction.
01:17It's not just some cheap copy, right? According to scholars Magnifico and Jones,
01:21it's a powerful act of transformation. It's where readers become authors themselves to kind of
01:27reclaim and rewrite the big stories that shape our world. They take a story everyone knows,
01:32the canon, and they ask that powerful little question, what if? And wow, this table right here
01:39really shows you just how radical that what if can be. This fanfic doesn't just, you know, tweak the
01:45source material a little bit. It flips the entire thing on its head. A cosmic battle between good and
01:51evil? Nope. Here, it becomes an intimate story of queer love. The central conflict isn't divine
01:56versus demonic anymore. It's a struggle for personal freedom against an authoritarian parent.
02:01In Jesus, he's not a savior for humanity. He's a liberator of himself. It's a powerful way to
02:06question our most foundational stories. And boom, there it is. This is basically his declaration of
02:13independence. It's the moment Jesus just completely rejects his pre-written role,
02:18his divine mission, and his father's ownership over him. He chooses personal love over some
02:23grand, predetermined destiny. And that's a central act of defiance in these kinds of
02:28transformative stories. But here's the thing. This transformation isn't just dramatic. It's also
02:33really, really funny. So how does the text build on that fanfiction foundation? Well, that's only half
02:40the equation, right? The other critical tool that's at play here is satire.
02:44You know, as Gulshan Agabe's research points out, satire isn't just about making you laugh.
02:50It's like a moral and cultural mirror. It uses humor, it uses ridicule to make us look critically
02:56at the power structures and the beliefs that we hold totally sacred. It's exactly why political
03:01cartoons or late night comedy can feel so sharp. They use laughter to speak truth to power.
03:06And this right here is where the text gets both really clever and, yeah, really vulgar. By giving
03:14Jesus this moment of just deep, almost teenage insecurity about his own body, the story completely
03:20strips away all that divine mystique. Suddenly he's not this untouchable icon. He's just a guy. A guy
03:28with an ego, with pride, and with some very, very earthly concerns. And that's the whole point of the
03:34satire here. It's all about humanizing the divine. When you give these all-powerful,
03:39sacred figures these very mortal flaws and vulgar anxieties, you make them fallible. And if they're
03:44fallible, well, then their absolute authority suddenly becomes questionable, doesn't it?
03:48And this isn't just about theology either. It's a commentary on any kind of unquestioned authority.
03:53It's suggesting that to really understand power, you've got to peel back the curtain and see the
03:57flawed, sometimes even petty motivations behind it all.
04:00So the key takeaway here is that these moments aren't just random shock value. The image of
04:07God as this flustered dad who keeps barging into his kid's room, that slapstick moment of God grabbing
04:13Satan, these are all very deliberate satirical choices. They show you just how absurd traditional
04:19power dynamics can be by putting them in this very domestic, almost trivial light.
04:24Okay, so we've got fanfiction remixing the sacred on one side and satire critiquing it on the other.
04:30Now, let's look at how those two things fuse together to create something even more powerful,
04:35an entire aesthetic where obscenity itself becomes a tool for liberation.
04:40Yeah, I know it's crude, but this line right here, it perfectly captures the story's ultimate goal for
04:45its main character. It's not about piety. It's not about salvation in the traditional sense.
04:49It's about self-actualization. This is where Jesus's journey ends up, a total transformation
04:54from this obedient son into a fiercely autonomous being who completely owns his identity and his
05:00desires all on his own terms. And when you look at it broken down like this, you can see it's not
05:05random at all. It's a calculated strategy, a kind of repeatable model for resisting a narrative.
05:11First, you shatter the biggest taboos to break the old rules. Second, you demystify the ultimate
05:17authority figure to show that, hey, power can be resisted. Third, the protagonist has to actively
05:22reclaim their own agency. And finally, the ultimate fanfiction move, you just escape the
05:28original story entirely to create a brand new universe. So after all that, what's the takeaway?
05:36What do we get from this scandalous, vulgar, and let's be honest, surprisingly philosophical piece
05:41of writing? Let's go back to our original question. What this text is really arguing is that true
05:48freedom often means you have to break the most sacred rules. By using fanfiction to remix the
05:54divine story and satire to critique its authority, this work turns an act of transgression into an
06:00engine of transformation. It's a really bold claim, right? That sometimes the only way to find a
06:06new truth is to completely shatter an old one. So in the end, this whole thing is about redefining
06:12boundaries. The sacred is no longer some distant, untouchable idea. It's deeply personal, and it can
06:17be rewritten. The erotic isn't just about pleasure. It becomes a political act of defiance against a
06:23repressive authority. And in this world, blasphemy isn't just an insult. It's a revelation, a new way of
06:30seeing things. And art, especially fanfiction, becomes this revolutionary tool for building whole
06:36new worlds. And all of that leaves us with one final provocative thought. This work really forces
06:44us to confront a much bigger question, not just for art, but maybe for life itself. Where exactly is
06:52that line between reverence and resistance? And when does challenging the sacred become a sacred act in its own
06:58right?
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