Cura Te Ipsum – A Digital Comic by Neal Bailey and Dexter Wee



(188) De Oppresso Liber


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(188) De Oppresso Liber

by Neal Bailey on January 25, 2012 at 12:01 am
Chapter: Year Two
Characters: Hank, naked bibliophiles, Nerd
Location: library, Naked Planet, New York
└ Tags: hank, library, naked bibliophiles, naked planet, nerd, new york
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Discussion (16) ¬

  1. Kate
    January 25, 2012, 12:05 am | # | Reply

    Bettie Page Municipal Library? LOL!

    Best. Library. Ever.

    • NealBailey
      January 25, 2012, 4:55 pm | # | Reply

      Glad you dig it. Very glad. 🙂

  2. Alys1001
    January 25, 2012, 12:40 am | # | Reply

    Go Nerd, go!

  3. Justin Peniston
    January 25, 2012, 1:18 am | # | Reply

    This whole segment of the story is blowing me away. Be honest Neal, you promised Dexter that there would be some boobs in this story, didn’t you? This section of the story is to make up for a dearth of boobs in the earlier sections.

    • NealBailey
      January 25, 2012, 1:55 am | # | Reply

      Quite the opposite, actually. We were both rather shy about it. With me, I was worried about estranging or exploiting women, and I was afraid of scaring off everybody.

      But, the more I thought about it, the more I realized that the confrontation of the self involves looking at our bodies, and that without that, and without a suitably nutty and intriguing device to segue into that, it WOULD be exploitative. Believe me, I thought about it a LOT, and almost cut it a number of times, but no bravery equals no progress, in my book. (He said, snug in the position of not having had anyone hand him is ass for the storyline.)

      It also sets up a number of things for year three.

      To be fair, though, I wrote this over a year ago, so I’ve known for some time it was coming, and talked it over with Dex way before it came to pass. Right now I’m on page 51 of year three, heh.

  4. Ryan
    January 25, 2012, 2:42 pm | # | Reply

    Honestly, I don’t think you have to be too worried about the storyline itself being exploitative. That everybody is going in to these encounters happily and willfully ‘makes’ it okay.

    That said, everybody is mysteriously attractive, which could be construed as assigning worth, but I think that’s probably taking overanalysis too far.

    • NealBailey
      January 25, 2012, 4:52 pm | # | Reply

      That’s probably not overanalysis. We did talk about it. In the end I had to weigh the fact that people tend to go into things looking for idealized people as a standard against the fact that people (myself included) want reality in depiction where possible. We tried to strike a balance. There’s portly cop, but even he looks proportional, as often portly people do in comics or on TV, even. If I have the librarian Nerd gets with, for instance, be large, there is the fact that it will draw more attention to what I’m doing and perhaps assign intentions that aren’t there, pulling you out of the story, rather than if I go with the typical “everyone is beautiful!” facade and just lament it for what it is, but let the story move on.

      It’s a tough line to walk, and I’m frustrated that I have no real answers as to what should or should not be, but I feel okay in it being what it is, in that I’ve addressed and looked at that concern personally, and I know in my heart that my intention is not to say that beauty is the ideal and needs to be emphasized (nor does the story mean to say that), but more that I’m deferring to a trope so as not to pull people out of the narrative for my own personal soapbox, that being beautiful is not as important as substance. My duty to keeping you in the narrative outweighed the pratfall of idealizing bodies, which sadly is so customary it’s near rote.

      It’s like movies. You can, perhaps, cast a woman without makeup and a guy with a potbelly in main roles, and it will be more realistic to life, but the audience, so conditioned to idealistic plastic people, will be so distracted by the fact that it’s not Leo and Kate that they may be pulled out of the story. It’s damned if you do, damned if you don’t. But it is NOT, importantly, unconsidered.

      In case you can’t tell, I overthought this, heh.

      • Ryan
        January 25, 2012, 5:05 pm | # | Reply

        And it’s all the better for it, in my opinion.

  5. punx
    January 25, 2012, 11:18 pm | # | Reply

    Nerd said it correctly, but you misspelled it? LOL

    • NealBailey
      January 25, 2012, 11:56 pm | # | Reply

      Oh, man! GREAT catch! Fixing now.

  6. Rika
    January 26, 2012, 12:59 pm | # | Reply

    That’s a lady-person Hank’s with, right?
    So goes my theory of HankxLeo >_>

    • Neal Bailey
      January 26, 2012, 2:22 pm | # | Reply

      To quote Urkut from House of Cards (and I may be butchering that name spelling): You might say that, but I couldn’t POSSIBLY comment.

      There are surprises and twists aplenty coming.

      • Stephen H
        January 30, 2012, 6:47 pm | # | Reply

        I do love some House of Cards quoting.

        Also with you Neal I always expect a twist.

    • Kate
      January 26, 2012, 5:17 pm | # | Reply

      It’s okay Rika, if my “they’re all bisexual” theory holds, then Hank can make out with the random lady AND Leo.

      Let’s keep our fingers crossed–our ‘ship hasn’t sunk yet, lol.

      • Stephen H
        January 30, 2012, 6:48 pm | # | Reply

        I do love that Cura now has a fandom with shippers for relationships.

        • NealBailey
          January 30, 2012, 6:51 pm | # | Reply

          That makes two of us… especially since the relationships woven into the story will be complex and surprising, I hope.

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