Roe-107 Hari-hari Inses Ibu Dan Anak A---- Natsuk... |best|
Though not academically canonized, incest narratives in Japanese literature have been sporadically discussed in academic circles. Scholars like Tessa Knight-Adams ( Japanese Horror and the Monstrous-Feminine ) argue that such themes often expose patriarchal fears of female autonomy or generational trauma. ROE-107, if aligned with these motifs, could be read as a psychological horror narrative, where the “evil” is not a monster but the decay of familial bonds. However, these interpretations vary widely among critics, with some dismissing the genre as exploitative “edgy” storytelling.
The story does not provide a conventional “resolution.” Instead, it ends on an ambiguous note—Mira’s final entry leaves the reader questioning whether the cycle of abuse can ever truly be severed. ROE-107 Hari-hari Inses Ibu Dan Anak a---- Natsuk...