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Every dysfunctional family has a secret they agree not to discuss. It is the "elephant in the room," but in literature, the elephant is usually a corpse. In August: Osage County , the secret is the father’s suicide and the mother’s addiction. In Six Feet Under , it is the perpetual disappointment of the Fisher sons. The moment that secret is verbalized—usually at a wedding, a funeral, or a holiday—the family structure explodes. Great drama is not the explosion; it is the pressure building in the walls for twenty years prior.
It is a deeply uncomfortable question. It forces us to look at the passive aggression in our own text threads, the inheritance disputes we pretend aren't happening, the sibling we haven't spoken to since the funeral. matureincest pic
Sibling rivalry is the most underrated engine of complexity. Unlike parent-child relationships, which have a hierarchy, sibling relationships are a constant negotiation of equality. In Shakespeare’s King Lear , the tragedy begins when the father asks his daughters to perform love for him. The two eldest lie; the youngest tells the truth. The drama works because we recognize the primordial scramble for resources and affection. Every dysfunctional family has a secret they agree
Modern examples abound. The Lannisters in Game of Thrones take sibling rivalry to its most gothic extreme (love, hatred, and incest rolled into one). The Bridgertons, despite the veneer of romance, are a show about how eight siblings navigate the limited resource of their mother’s attention and the marriage market. When one sibling succeeds, the other secretly seethes. That secret seethe is the heartbeat of the story. In Six Feet Under , it is the