Has there ever been a documentary or artistic work
from sopularity_fax@sopuli.xyz to nostupidquestions@lemmy.ca on 28 Oct 19:41
https://sopuli.xyz/post/35889327

Examining the life of a royal birth person accustomed to all the posh stuff and cermonial nonsense having none of that a forced to get a “real job” and basically economically completely stripped of all privelege?

#nostupidquestions

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fletcher_bosom@lemmy.world on 28 Oct 20:04 next collapse

Coming To America

Mouselemming@sh.itjust.works on 28 Oct 20:05 next collapse

There’s been several works where doppelganger poor and rich people switch places. The Prince and the Pauper is one example. They usually include some scenes of the privileged person learning how hard it is to be poor, and also the truth about how others think of them. The pauper has some difficulty navigating court life as well, and learns about powers behind the throne, that may constrain them from making improvements.

Usually (see Trading Spaces) the switched people get together to fix the situation.)

sopularity_fax@sopuli.xyz on 28 Oct 20:29 collapse

Will do. On a sad note it alwahs made me think of my sleepovers with friends like going to their house with cool parents and good food vs the ones I hosted

Mouselemming@sh.itjust.works on 28 Oct 22:52 collapse

Fwiw, your little friends may have experienced it differently from how you felt about it.

My kids grew up sharing a room in a small, not-fancy apartment. They had a friend who lived in a BelAir mansion. That friend spent the night, and as she went back to her mom she exclaimed, “Mommy, the Mouselemming family lives in a HOTEL! Just like Eloise! With an elevator!”

I had a mom who made everything from scratch, and my friends would love to come over and have bread hot from the oven, with butter and homemade strawberry jam. But at school I wished my PBJs would be on squashy paper-white bread with grape jelly and Jif, like theirs.

sopularity_fax@sopuli.xyz on 29 Oct 01:46 collapse

Grass is always greener eh? I guess it didnt help that my stepparent adored my friend and wanted to seem cool to them, but didnt give a shit about that once the friend returned to what I saw as their blessed elysium for the elect home vs my horrible shit one

tal@lemmy.today on 28 Oct 20:28 next collapse

Someone else listed The Prince and the Pauper, which was gonna be my first response.

There’s Paula Volsky’s Illusion. Volsky’s thing is fantasy with settings based on historical revolutions. Illusion does the French Revolution; the story follows a young woman who is part of the rural aristocracy who moves to the capital shortly before the revolution occurs. She winds up homeless, fleeing the book’s equivalent of the real-life Reign of Terror. Has a harder time than just getting a “real job”.

streetfestival@lemmy.ca on 28 Oct 21:21 next collapse

Siddhartha Gautama, most commonly referred to as the Buddha. He chose to leave the castle, as opposed to being forced to leave, in the pursuit of truth

sopularity_fax@sopuli.xyz on 29 Oct 01:50 collapse

Ya thats an interesting data point for sure but Im a bit more intersted in the non-elective case studies so to speak

sylver_dragon@lemmy.world on 29 Oct 02:27 collapse

The Last Emperor was a semi-biographical movie about the last emperor of China. He ended up imprisoned and re-educated by the Chinese Communist Party after they took power. He’s not exactly a sympathetic figure (he worked with Imperial Japan and their atrocities in China). But, it would seem to fit the request.

sopularity_fax@sopuli.xyz on 29 Oct 02:33 collapse

Yes it does precisely, thank you :)