Black and Gray Morality: Difference between revisions

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{{trope}}
{{quote|''"'Let me give you some advice, Captain,' he said, 'It may help you to make sense of the world. I believe you find life such a problem because you think there are the good people and the bad people. You're wrong, of course. There are, always and only, bad people, but some of them are on opposite sides.'"''
|'''Lord Vetinari''', |''[[Discworld/Guards! Guards!|Guards! Guards!]]''}}
 
{{quote|''"When will you fools learn that there are no battles fought by heroes?"''
|'''Talpa''', |''[[Ronin Warriors]]''}}
 
It is often found in fictional media that the [[Black and White Morality|protagonist/antagonist conflict]] takes the form of the [[Knight in Shining Armor|shining knight]] whose breath smells of flowers and has holy light shining from his every orifice versus the very fount of all evil who [[Eats Babies]] as a hobby, and [[Kick the Dog|Kicks Dogs]] as a profession.
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It's simple: leave the job half-done. Only the white gets removed, leaving behind a world where the choice is between mundane corruption and baby-eating supervillainy. This is the essence of '''Black and Gray Morality'''; the only choices are between kinda evil and soul-crushingly evil.
 
Obviously, the heroes of such settings tend to be [[Anti-Hero|antiheroes]]es In such a world, any characters who appear to be good in any way will eventually be revealed as a [[Knight Templar]] in disguise, a [[Dark Messiah]] inches from the edge, or a [[Moral Dissonance|deeply flawed]] [[Anti-Hero]]. And if there ''are'' any [[Wide-Eyed Idealist|genuinely good]] characters on the show, they'll either 'come around' to the [[The Dark Side]], die horribly, remain a figure of [[Butt Monkey|perpetual mockery]] or, if ''very'' lucky, [[Knight in Sour Armor|grow a protective shell of cynicism]].
 
A good litmus test for this trope is as follows:
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** This also applies to Vlad's friends Aliera and Morrolan. Both are ruthless and quite selfish, but are nicer to humans/arguably less of a danger to Dragaera than their fellow nobles. Thus, in ''Dragon'', Vlad sarcastically notes the irony of calling Morrolan's army in which he is a member the "good guys", since all they are doing is trying to take some artifacts of doom/empathetic weapons so that a somewhat worse noble can't have them. Similarly, the plot of the upcoming novel, ''Iorich'' involves Vlad trying to defend Aliera after she is arrested on a charge of using illegal magic (the same type her father used and accidentally destroyed the old capitol and killed everyone there). This isn't because Aliera is innocent. Rather, it's because so many nobles break this law, that there must be a conspiracy at play for Aliera to be arrested for something she does in essentially plain sight.
* ''[[Conan the Barbarian]]'', especially Robert E. Howard's original stories. The hero is a mercenary/pirate/bandit/professional thief albeit one with a code of honor. Most everyone else is worse.
* [[J. K. Rowling]] was very fond indeed of doing this with her characters in the ''[[Harry Potter (novel)|Harry Potter]]'' series. [[Word of God]] says that there were concerted efforts made to remind the readers that Harry is a flawed person (see his ''[[Harry Potter/Harry Potter and Thethe Order of Thethe Phoenix (novel)|Order of the Phoenix]]'' "[[wangst]]ing", and is certainly no saint (his ready use of {{spoiler|the Cruciatus curse on Amycus}}, and before then, Bellatrix). James (and specifically Sirius) are shown to have very good hearts overall, but could definitely be [[Jerkass]]es at times (Sirius and his treatment of Snape/Kreacher, his recklessness). Ron (who never went through what Harry did but accomplished more than most Hogwarts students could ever admit to) {{spoiler|left Harry and Hermione in the woods.}} Dumbledore, of whom so many people "thought the sun shone from every orifice", made plans in his youth with another to take {{spoiler|siege of the general Muggle population, during which time he neglected his remaining family.}} Paradoxically, Regulus {{spoiler|turns out to have been not as Black as first painted- same for Snape, of course.}} Draco is a tricky one, who at first {{spoiler|doesn't turn Harry in, but then later tries to capture him, accompanied by his old henchmen who, by now, are not just brainless brawns and are unafraid to kill.}}
{{quote|'''Sirius Black:''' The world is not divided into good people and Death Eaters.}}
* Martha Wells' ''Death of the Necromancer'' has [[Anti-Villain|Nicholas]] [[Aristocrats Are Evil|Valiarde,]] a coldblooded thief, murderer and all around [[Magnificent Bastard]]. Nic has spent years sabotaging his enemy on a [[Roaring Rampage of Revenge]]; at the start of the narrative, Nic's nearing the completion of his [[Xanatos Gambit|ultimate scheme]] when he and his subordinates run afoul of an unknown person using [[Black Magic]]. Somehow, this leads to the group spending the rest of the book fighting an insane mass murderer. And the reason they do it is at least partly because it's ''bad for business.''
* In Frederick Forsyth's ''[[The Day of the Jackal]]'', the OAS are far right terrorists. The eponymous [[Villain Protagonist]] is a consummate [[Professional Killer]]. However, the French Action Service are secret police-like, going to use [[Electric Torture]] on an OAS captive.
* The various races in [[The Lord of the Rings]] could be this. Tolkien makes it pretty clear that any of the "good" races, even elves, are capable of evil. But you aren't likely to see a [[Exclusively Evil|goblin or ork turning good any time soon]].
* In [[Andrew Vachss]]'s Burke books, Burke and his [[True Companions]] are mostly ex-cons who skirt or break the law frequently. They cross paths with pedophiles and other [[Complete Monster]]s from time to time.
* Near the end of ''[[Good Omens]]'', the forces of Heaven and Hell line up across the sky, and the narrator mentions that if you looked ''very'' closely, and had been specifically trained, you could tell the difference.
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* ''[[Gone (novel)]]'' started out having [[Gray and Grey Morality]], but, by ''Plague'', has solidly veered into this. The heroes are still quite far from white, and the bad guys, after a year of enduring even worse [[Nightmare Fuel]] than the protagonists, are now growing increasingly [[The Sociopath|sociopathic]] and [[Kick the Morality Pet|kicking morality pets right and left.]]
* ''Sisterhood'' series by [[Fern Michaels]]: As the series goes on, the morality of the stories turns into this. The good guys are called the Vigilantes because they break the law in capturing a bad guy and inflicting a cruel and unusual punishment on hir. The good guys don't kill anybody, but since their punishments tend to be of the [[Fate Worse Than Death]] variety, that fact may not be very comforting. Also, the good guys have acted like big-time [[Jerkass]]es a number of times. That's okay, because the bad guys have virtually no redeeming qualities to speak of!
* ''[[Percy Jackson and The Olympians|Help]]'': Help the [[Jerkass Gods|Gods]] who are often jerkasses and sometimes cause problems, or serve a [[Big Bad|Titan]] who devoured his own kids and uses humanity as a source of cheap amusement or as a snack.
* ''[[A Series of Unfortunate Events]],'' especially from book eight onwards.
* ''[[Hench]]'', by Natalie Zina Walschots, is set in a world of metahumans with Black and Gray Morality. On one side there are superhumans who are quite willing to permanently cripple or kill bystanders, use their powers to attack people who are simply defending themselves, or throw each other under a bus at the slightest hint of negative publicity. On the other side are the villains.
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* ''[[Chuck]]'': The NSA, CIA and their agents are clearly intended to be on the "right" side, fighting to protect the country and its citizens (and often the world in general) from extremely evil terrorists and corrupt spies. However, they are ready and willing to do some pretty nasty things for national security - such as killing a completely innocent guy who happens to have all the government secrets in his head, or summarily executing an unarmed, defenseless, and surrendering (albeit very dangerous and evil) enemy agent.
* ''[[Lawless Lawyer]]'': Bong Sang-pil is a lawyer brought up by his gangster uncle who uses extralegal methods in pursuit of those who murdered his mother and the powerful conspirators who ordered the hit.
* ''[[Money Heist: Korea – Joint Economic Area]]'': On one side are hostage-taking criminals with various neuroses that nevertheless try not to kill anyone, not even the police shooting at them. On the other, while most of the police are good people doing their jobs, they are being ordered around by [[Sleazy Politician]]s who aren't afraid of collateral damage.
 
== Mythology ==
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** [[The Empire|Caesar's Legion]] is a brutal but incredibly effective autocracy that brings true stability and security to its territories, but enforces slavery, views women as little more than breeding stock, traps its populace in [[Medieval Stasis]] and submits its enemies to horrific executions.
** The Brotherhood of Steel are [[Lawful Stupid]] [[Jerkass]] technology gatherers who are known to rob and kill people to get their technology.
** The [[Barbarian Tribe|Boomers]] are [[Proud Warrior Race GuysGuy]]s who will join up with ''anyone'' if it means [[Stuff Blowing Up|bombing]] "savages", and by that they mean [[Of the People|everyone who isn't a Boomer]].
** And then there's [[Player Character|you]], yes [[Courier|you]], who can chose to turn the Mojave Wasteland into a new Wild West; completely independent and free, but everyone has to look out for themselves with no one but the person standing beside them to rely on. You do this by essentially burning every other group to the ground and letting the flames sort it all out.
* ''[[Scarface the World Is Yours]]'' follows the original film in this. Sure, Tony is wiping out the gangs and the enemy gangsters all the way up to Sosa, who watchers of the film would have known was not a nice person, but he is still putting drugs on the streets of Miami.
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[[Category:Settings]]
[[Category:Morality Tropes]]
[[Category:Cynicism Tropes]]
[[Category:The Wild West]]
[[Category:Black and Gray Morality]]