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w00bie?
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I come back to the abuse thing: House is an abuse victim, and despite all of his personal quirks, characteristics and failings, he will be an abuse victim until the day he dies. Worse yet, he was a childhood abuse victim, and one that has not yet dealt with and moved past those issues (and I suspect never will). Since an abused child has no "out" of the abuse, they learn to live with it and feel trapped. That is why House will not actually end his association with Cuddy: she has him pretty much convinced that he "belongs there."
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All I'm saying is that when dealing specifically with Cuddy, I think a lot of his actions are reactions to her manipulations and unpredictable actions and due to his past background, he does not realize that he can leave.
This is really interesting. This particular view of an abusive relationship between House and Cuddy seems to have become popular after 'The Greater Good', wherein Cuddy forgot about social niceties and brought out her claws (and I say this recognising the assholeishness of House's behaviour in the previous episodes; I said everything I had to say about this here, and I stand by it). But what's really interesting is that such fannish views now tie up this episode to the Tritter arc and 'Detox', where Cuddy's (and Wilson's) actions, fall on the morally ambiguous terrain, precisely because on one hand they are manipulative and uncalled for, and on the other hand they serve to highlight House's possible misuse of a drug he is genuinely dependent on. And then they tie it up to House's relationship with his father, and whatever brand of harsh disciplining he underwent in his hands. Canon does not tell us the *degree* of 'abuse' House suffered, but for these fans, it is enough abuse to have permanently scarred
That said, if the Cult of House becomes anything like the Cult of Spike, I'm keeping my sporks handy.
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Some writers talked about dark!Wilson as an experiment: taking the character and seeing how far his characterization could be pushed. They saw it as an experiment in power, which is indeed interesting, even if it's not quite to my taste. However, I doubt that's what motivates most of the fans of dark!Wilson, where it's really more about w00bie!House and his martyrdom. I don't get the urge to w00bify, but this reminded me of the kind of w00bification that happens in ships like Spike/Buffy, Kara/Lee or even Michael/Nikita. Except that I've always had this hypothesis that most slashers have a more equal view of their ship, simply because they ship it out of choice and not compulsion (Michael loves Nikita, so I have no option but to pair them together...), but now I stand corrected? Or is it that the House/Wilson dynamic similarly *compels* some fen to pair them together (which makes sense, because they *are* brOTP forever), even though they disapprove of, or even dislike Wilson and his 'treatment' of House?
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