The only object inspiration to have officially been revealed by Toboso was Rudgerās/Rudgarās/Ihavenoideasorry Death Scythe, in her Tuna.be blog (post here)
She posted this photo:
So Rudgarās Death Scythe is modelled after Boschās Keo tool, with the exception that Toboso says she made Rudgarās bigger in the manga.
In the post, she also mentioned that she had decided on Saschaās Death Scythe, but time limitations kept her from including his in the manga, and that she hopes she can add it in later (well I sure hope as well; Saschaās my favorite character!)
2. Ronaldās Hat:
In the beginning of the Campania Arc/BotA arc, Ronald has this hat he wears when boarding the ship, and Toboso shows it in the next chapterās front page:
Turns out my dad bought a Taschen fashion advertisements calendar that showed ads for clothing/shoes/hats from the 20th Century⦠and I found these two ads that seemed oddly peculiar:
I donāt know if this company had anything to do with Tobosoās decision to give Ronald the last name of Knox, but it sure looks suspicious (but then maybe she found out after, and decided to use the hat out of funā¦)
I tweeted my discovery to Toboso, but she must be too busy/must receive too many tweets to have seen itā¦
3. Saschaās camera:
I wonāt hide that Iām proud of my discovery of this one:
I also sent a tweet to Toboso about this discovery as well, but she didnāt answer probably for the same reasons as before.
I originally wanted to look at the camera for a cosplay, and having found Ronaldās hat a while back, I decided to look for the camera as well:
After searching for folding cameras of Saschaās style, I came across a company that had very similar styles to the camera: Zeiss Ikon, a German camera company.
Two of the cameras looked almost exactly the same, but thanks to the difference in the top right square lens, I found the right model:
And judging from the look of the real thing, I think Iām going to be spending quite some fun time in flea markets, yard sales and antique stores this summer:
ITāS. SO. PRETTY.
(I just found out @abybweisse almost found this as well, but fell on the one that got me in a scramble (the one they found doesnāt have the right position for the top right square lens), oh and also an awesome fabric with the Super Ikont B printed on it (I WANT IT TOOOOO TTATT))
Things other people have found as well:
@abybweisse found several objects as well (respect, because damn, I know thatās not easy):
-Rudgarās shoes (I cannot find the original post, I found this on a copy website with no links to the original posts):
Grellās deathlist book (a Chanel, damn, thatās cool! expensive af, but cool)
Rudgarās watch (super expensive wtf)
Ronaldās watch (a Cartier?! super expensive too, WTF)
(Putting the links for more info if you like this kind of post:
Ahhh, please please please search my blog for āzeissā. I figured out Saschaās camera over a year ago. š But thereās way more to it. Zeiss is predominately a manufacturer of glass lenses⦠for cameras, eyeglasses, rifle scopes, binoculars, etc. They even advertise about eye exams:
Look familiar? It should! āThe Story of Will the Reaperā ova shows the reapers using an eye exam chart that is basically a combination of the left and middle charts above:
Haha!
I even found fabric with that camera in the pattern and had a dress made. Hereās some extra fabric I want to use for pillow covers or something:
But, yeah⦠Zeiss. Itās such a hugely important tech company in Germany.
On another note, though. I cannot take credit for figuring out Grelleās Chanel planner/agenda, Ronaldās planner/agenda, or Ronaldās travel trunk. Also, Yana-san shows us in the design drawings that Ronald has a menās Pasha de Cartier watch.
Um, what else did I figure out? Ludgarās watch appears to actually be a combination of two A. Lange & Sƶhne models ā The Minute Repeater:
And the Striking Time:
I also suggest searching my blog for ādeath scytheā and āhistorical referenceā. For example, Grelleās choice of death scythe modification (chainsaw) evolved from tools initially meant to aid in difficult childbearing cases; they just ended up leading to things that are better at sawing wood than bone or cartilageā¦.
Another example is that Ronald Knox is named after a real person. Check out my post āThe Historical Ronald Knox & The Ten Commandments of Detective Fictionāā¦.
I actually have an entire side blog devoted to general references used for the manga/anime @abybweissekurorefs and another for reaper references @abybweissekuroshinigami
Though I have to give you props for the hat ad discovery!!
About Sascha, yes I think we will see them again for two reasons:
the camera: I donāt know if itās a death scythe or not, but itās so out of place compared to what the Shinigamis usually bring around when they work that it automatically makes them stand out.
theĀ āShinigami vocationā: there again, between UT who deserted and others like Will or Rudgar who just donāt like their jobs (for obvious reasons, since itās more of a punishment than anything else), Sascha stands out byĀ āhaving much more fun than when I was alive and a humanā.
They look and sound younger than any other Shinigamis to me since weāre on the subject, so I wouldnāt be surprised if they became a ShinigamiĀ ārecentlyā (knowing the recently could mean a century for what we know lol).
I have no real idea whether theyāre a She or a He to be honest, could be either, even though we know that the majority of Shinigamis introduced so far (so the ones sent to collect the souls) are male (I know Grell sees themselves as a woman of course, but Iām thinking they might be considered as male by the Shinigami hierarchy when it comes to this job).Ā
Anyway, I believe Sascha standing out the moment they were introduced means that Yana has something precise in mind when it comes to their role in the plot, but what exactly, I think it might be too soon to tell.Ā
The only thoughts Iām having on the subject would be that Sascha could prove to be intrinsically linked to the sub-plot of the early WWI seemingly starting, since they apparently found that idea so very interesting in ch105:
So donāt worry about Saschaās character, they will definitely come back (when is the question now). š
Hope it answers your question, and enjoy the rest of your sunday!Ā
Iād like to thank @lost-shounen for providing me with this photo (back cover of Vol.22) so now I can mock myself for getting their hair color wrong xD
I canāt believe they are both brunettes I was hoping at least one of them had a less conventional hair color hahahahahhaha but anyway
[Iāll be discussing these ideas under the assumption that Shinigamis working for their āforgivenessā means that theyāre working to gain access into heaven, though this hasnāt been explicitly stated. Some of this is just theories on top of theories, I fully admit it, so Iām not stating any of this as a solid idea.]
I was talking about Undertaker being a deserter with @midnight-in-town and she pointed out how in chapter 105, Sascha said there are others who have seceded too:
But the fact that Sascha says āevery once in awhileā makes it seem not so common – especially considering the whole world would have Shinigamis, it could be centuries in between a single country having a āseceder.ā Still, this got me thinking whether or not thatās a giant flaw within in whole Grim Reaper system considering theyāre dealing with peopleās souls. It seems risky right? And where are the limits on these faults?
This is all just speculation, and some of this is really a shot in the dark, so if anybody else has an idea, feel free to sayā¦
The General Purpose of the Shinigami Dispatch
Letās first look at why the system is set up as it is in the first place for the Shinigamisā sake – not for the souls.
Individual Meaning
The fact that there are deserters shows that there is free will. The Shinigamis have kept this component of human nature even after death. The Dispatch is not some sort of collective mindset, though as a whole they seem to generally agree on what matters (the souls).
From what theyāve said and how Iāve taken it, being a Shinigami is basically a second chance for a person to not go to hell under the belief that suicide a mortal sin. The only difference between them and regular people, besides their new supernatural abilities, is that their āsecond lifeā is set up to basically force them to have to appreciate life. In our life, one learns that through friendships, helping others, supporting othersā¦for a Shinigami, theyāre left to learn this through witnessing other people. Itās hard for them – itās a punishment, after all. Itās not our traditional sense of improving as a person. But presumably itās effective.Ā
In my opinion, itās basically an alternative to hell or traditional purgatory – itās like a very specific purgatory for these people who took their own lives.
However, because it requires individual thought, they canāt rely on others to pull them through. Back to my initial statement, they still have to have free will so that they can individually make decisions and come to their personal enlightenment by their own terms. The horrible thing is that with free will, there are bound to be deserters. Iāll get to that in a bit though.
Collectively
Despite the individuality, I think they can help each other some, though. Just the next in the chapter, Sascha calls being a Shinigami a vocation:
Ā This is seen as odd for a lot of reasons. A vocation is, by definition:
In other words, itās your calling. Itās your purpose. And thatās a pretty grim purpose. The only reason I can think as a vocation – which would give it more reason than individual contemplation – is that they can at least be there to help motivate the others towards forgiveness.
So, if one does fail, that canāt settle well for any of them who knew that Shinigami. It might even make it more of a personal offense.Ā
TheĀ āSecedersā – So are they a Risk?
If people were perfect, the Dispatch as a pathway for redemption would work and theyād learn their lesson with no problem and presumably get to heaven (if thatās the purpose of the Shinigami Dispatch in the first place). Well, if people were perfect, they wouldnāt need this as a path in the first place. But the point is there: with having human qualities such as free will, there is room for mistake. Mild mistakes arenāt a big deal, but what about the big ones? Can these ādesertersā be forgiven?
Grell was forgiven. There was a punishment of course, but it wasnāt too long afterwards (especially for an immortal being) that they were back to their regular Shinigami post. Grellās not a complete deserter, though.
This leaves the question if Shinigamis have it easier than humans though on their path to salvation, because if theyāre supposedly immortal and can have second chances until they reach āenlightenmentā (we assume), then that means they canāt ever be sent to hell. This seems to give them an advantage over people in their āfirst life.ā Is this fair? I donāt know.
ā¦or certain offenses are considered unforgivable and Undertaker crossed that line. But what could be worse than murder, like Grell? Is it worse to just desert than to murder but not consider yourself different?
Grell may have murdered the physical body, but murder does not equate to ruining the soul.
So is it that Undertaker messes with souls? Some say he wants to revive those on the lockets, others argue that the bizarre doll soul-tampering in general is bad enoughā¦but Undertaker had already quit before he started doing this. At least, he must have because he says he hasnāt been an active Shinigami in 50+ years and we donāt know enough to say if he started tampering with souls earlier. Nothing says iirc.
That means the other option is that he thought his past actions couldnāt be forgiven, even if he could have, so he figured nothing mattered and went a step further to steal the souls and then it became unforgivable for real. Or maybe he didnāt care or want forgiveness, but now he doesnāt want to die and go to hell either so he hides out and works on his more taboo stuff because heās got nothing to lose so long as heās not caught.
In short: When UT deserted originally, maybe it wasnāt a āriskā but just regular personal rebellion from free will. Now heās messing with souls and like the impending WW1 plot, everything suddenly becomes a bigger deal for Shinigamis.
Sascha mentioned deserters, but never said that a deserter was somebody who messed with souls. Every Shinigami weāve seen except Undertaker have seen the souls as something not to mess with.Ā
So is this Dispatch Association actually a risky, flawed system?
In my opinion, as a whole, flaws are not necessarily a risk. āSecederā can mean a lot of things, and it could just mean Shinigamis trying to escape in general. Undertaker may be special (in a negative way), and thatās what makes the plot more interesting. Regular Shinigamis arenāt a threat, and deserters arenāt a threat necessarily if they live as people without trouble. Maybe Undertaker stands out as the first real threat to people. It could have been tried before, but the new technology of the 1800ā²s is actually making it worrisome because it could be possible.
I really like a lot of whatās mentioned here since thereās so much speculation going around about the Shinigami and their punishment.Ā Iād like to add Eric as an example from the musical though, since he was also tampering with soulsāor rather capturing them in attempts to use themĀ for Alanās recovery from the Thorns of Death.Ā Ā Furthermore, even though Shinigami are technicallyĀ immortals, they can still be killedĀ as proven by Ericās and Alanās deaths, at which their second chance ended.Ā For all their strengths theĀ ShinigamiĀ have their own perils to face, such a fighting against demons over souls.
Ā Even more than that, theyāre not immune to their own Death Scythes, so it’sĀ actually possible for them to attemptĀ commit suicide a second time if they tried.Ā (This, I personally believe, is the main reason Death Scythes have to be registered andĀ are kept under such rigid control by Dispatch.Ā In the OVA, āThe Tale of Will the Shinigami,ā we even see that Death Scythes basically have to be checked out of General Affairs before they can be used by the agents in Collections.)Ā Ā Ā Ā Ā
Weāve seen Shinigami die, but weāve never seen one we knew had been āforgiven.“Ā That leads to the question of what happens when theyĀ are forgiven?Ā Do they simply disappear and move on?Ā And what about someone likeĀ Alan, who contracted the Thorns of Death and perhaps possibly never learned before the diseaseĀ took his life?Ā What happens for those who are made to faceĀ their death a second time?Ā What if itās onlyĀ after their second death that they are judged for Heaven or Hell?Ā Ā Ā Ā Ā
In a video I watched a few months ago about suicide victims that had jumped off the Golden Gate Bridge, it said that out of theĀ 1% of survivors, every one of them said they regretted their decision instantly.Ā The victim they were interviewing, Kevin Hines,Ā (who is now an author btw) said that, "The millisecond my hands left the rail,Ā it was an instant regretā and thatĀ he remembered thinking, āNo oneās gonna know that I didnāt want to die."Ā Ā Taking that information and putting it intoĀ perspective for the Shinigami, I see many of them holding that same regret and seceders stemming more so from a loss of hope in the endlessness of their situationĀ or a case of desperation.Ā
I like both your thoughts a lot and I just wanted to contribute on a few things š
About the Undertaker
Here comes the rambling part but UT is an extremely interesting character to analyze. To sum up: I think that when he went back to the human world after deserting becauseĀ āhe got curiousā it wasnāt a crime in itself since, as wondrouswatchdog pointed out with Grell, Iām pretty sure he would have been forgiven at that time (because deserters are a thing).
No one expects the Shinigami job to be easy, except maybe for Sascha because itās theirĀ āvocationā, since itās to be taken as a long punishment in the first place, until the Shinigamis learn their lessons about giving up on their own life.Ā
So back to UT, I agree that he probably became a threat from the moment he started messing with souls and death but, and thatās where it becomes interesting for me, you were wondering whether he cared or not and I actually donāt think he gives a single care about his actions.
Whoever those seven guys were and no matter how they got along with him, theyāre the reason he probablyĀ āforgotā he wasnāt really a living human until death came by for them and he found himself all alone once again. UT is a character made of contradictions but the main thing is that, while every reader surely thought he was just funny in the head with probable sociopathic tendencies for a long time, ch105 was the first proof that heās in reality becoming totally desperate, hence the impossible BD project and many other crazy things (like sacrificing a big amount of people on the Campania for his experiments).
(You can see it pretty well actually: UT in the Campania arc with Ryan is just beyond ruthless with his words even though heās also responsible for all the dead people, while he became very emotional after just seeing a picture of Vincent in his younger days. It wouldnāt be an understatement to say that he might be losing it for real)
I think seceders/deserters in general are just guys who canāt put up with the job anymore and itās understandable because redemption after a sin like suicide would certainly never be so easy to reach (so they probably have to work for a looong time), but while UT probably started as aĀ ānormal secederā (he had enough of his job + curiosity), things escalated when those seven guys died.
We have no idea about his previous life and how long he worked as a Shinigami, but we can guess he might have forgotten there was a time limit to his enjoyment with a few humans he found particularly interesting and thatās probably what started it all: if he found a new interest in ālivingā at the side of those seven guys, the fact death took them away from him is something he probably couldnāt accept.Ā ā¦And itās even worse in case he actually had a family with one of them as some theories propose.Ā
So I really think UT stands out asĀ āthe first real threatā from the Shinigami world (if anything because BDs were probably never a thing before, according to Will + Grell + Ronald) and if heās caught⦠I donāt think redemption or forgiveness will be considered at all.
About the Death Scythes
Really good point on death scythes being able to inflict major damages even to Shinigamis and this is just a headcanon of mine, but I wouldnāt be surprised if some of UTās scars were actually done by a death scythe. ⦠To be entirely honest, at one point I even considered the idea that maybe he indeed tried to attempt suicide a second time at the beginning of his time as a Shinigami by stabbing himself through the heart or by trying to cut his own head.
Time will tell what these scars really are about but I just⦠wouldnāt be surprised.
As for Redemptionā¦
The whole point of the Shinigami job is toā¦
give a chance to people who committed suicide not to go to Hell directly by having them watch countless records of people with probably happier lives than them (not always, but still)
have a way to collect human souls
So I think that if/when a Shinigami was punished enough (= worked nicely for a really really long time), then redemption can be reached because they learnt their lesson and in that case, they donāt necessarily have to go to Hell but instead their tortured soul can rest in peace.
Technically Iām thinking that in Kuro, even though suicide is a major sin, theĀ ārulesā take into account that people who committed such an act were probably extremely sad and desperate, and even though they have to be punished and to learn what exactly they gave up on, mercy and forgiveness can still be upon them if they repent enough.
As you said silyabeeodess though, suicide can also be a decision takenĀ āout of the blueā in a real moment of desperation so maybe the Shinigami job is also a way toĀ āgive them a chanceā at gaining peace in the afterlife, because humans make mistakes and suicide can definitely be one of them (as through my own experience of talking with people who committed suicide and who were saved, I always heard that they regretted trying, not necessarily just for them but also for the people they would have left behind).