What Symbolism Did Makima Death Carry In The Manga?

2025-11-24 17:05:54 141
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3 Answers

Delilah
Delilah
2025-11-25 15:01:43
I read that ending with a notebook and a cup of coffee, and I kept coming back to symbolism as structure rather than spectacle. Makima wasn't just a villain in 'Chainsaw Man'; she was an abstract force given flesh — order, control, the seductive face of ideology. Her demise therefore functions on multiple levels: narratively it's the falling of the antagonist, but symbolically it signals the death of an unquestioned ideal. I see her as a personification of institutions that promise meaning through submission, and taking her down unravels the myth that authority equals salvation.

Beyond institutions, her relationship to language and promise always struck me. She sold visions and used words like chains. So the moment of her death reads like a reclamation of narrative: voices that were silenced or bent into obedience are freed, if only for a moment. Yet Fujimoto complicates the moral tidy-up by showing that systems persist even after leaders die. That ambiguity is what makes the scene linger for me — it’s not just catharsis, it’s an invitation to interrogate how quickly new hierarchies can form in the absence of old ones.
Blake
Blake
2025-11-30 13:20:18
Makima's death left a weird, electric ache for me — like someone pulled the rug out from under a character I’d been both repulsed by and weirdly comforted by. The obvious reading is liberation: her fall is the moment the story rips the leash off Denji and, by extension, off a world that prizes obedience and neat, controlling hierarchies. I felt that physically as I read; it wasn't just a plot beat, it was a symbolic undoing of toxic possessiveness. She embodied a system that used love and worship as tools, and killing her felt like tearing down a gilded cage.

But it also isn't a tidy victory. Her death carries the weight of cost — the idea that freedom often arrives messy, through violence and trauma. The manga keeps nagging me with questions afterward: what replaces control when the controller is gone? Denji's liberation tastes Bittersweet because the world that allowed Makima to exist still hums along. So her death feels like a rupture rather than a neat cure, and I love that Fujimoto trusted readers to sit with the discomfort. It left me thinking about how desire, authority, and the idea of being 'saved' can be weaponized — and how breaking that spell can hurt as much as it heals.
Oliver
Oliver
2025-11-30 21:53:41
Her death hit me like a final chord that refuses to resolve — bright and unsettling. On one level it’s simple: Denji breaks the hold someone had over him, and that act stands for personal emancipation. But the symbolism runs deeper; Makima was control made human, and killing her felt like severing the tidy narrative that power gives us — the promise that submission buys safety. That rupture exposes how much of our lives are quietly governed by promises we didn't choose.

I also felt the story making a point about idolization: people worship what gives them answers, and when the worshipped figure falls, the aftermath is a chaos of meaning. It left me thinking about how freedom isn't just the removal of a tyrant, it's the messy work of learning how to live without one. Ending that chapter made me oddly hopeful and wary at the same time, which is exactly the kind of bittersweet note I like in a story.
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