Emotional Justice

Ila Fae

This podcast applies the lens of Emotional Justice to romance novels in an effort to identify the harmful and ingrained misogyny that we’ve been taught to accept in relationships while also highlighting examples of healthy communication, realistic expectations, and looking for a real happily ever after.

Episodes

  1. Audited by the Anubis

    FEB 13

    Audited by the Anubis

    Send a text In this episode, we’re diving deep into Audited by the Anubis by Wendi Guff, a contemporary monster romance featuring fated mates, knotting, generational trauma, and emotional abuse recovery. This episode includes a full spoiler summary followed by an in-depth analysis of the book through the lens of emotional justice. We explore how this paranormal romance handles trauma, consent, dyslexia representation, toxic family dynamics, and whether its happily ever after truly repairs harm. Analysis starts at 1:39:10 Topics discussed: Monster romance & paranormal romance tropesFated mates and magical bondingGenerational trauma and the mother woundEmotional abuse, gaslighting & coercive controlDyslexia and ableismDeath vows as metaphor for inherited obligationHealing after toxic relationshipsSoft Dom dynamics and emotional safetyEmotional justice in romance novelsIs this just a spicy monster romance or does it meaningfully confront power, trauma, and healing? The Romance Writers of America defines a romance novel as having "a central love story and an emotionally satisfying and optimistic ending." The RWA further defines an emotionally satisfying and optimistic ending as the lover being "rewarded with emotional justice and unconditional love." The lens of Emotional Justice is about recognizing, addressing, and repairing emotional harm. It looks for how the MMC and FMC receive validation, healing, and equitable treatment by asking the following questions:  Are emotional wounds acknowledged and addressed?Is justice achieved for those who have been wronged?Are power imbalances meaningfully confronted and rectified?Do the characters grow in ways that promote emotional equity?If you love book analysis, romance deep dives, paranormal romance reviews, monster romance discussion, or emotionally intelligent literary commentary, this is for you. Subscribe for more romance novel breakdowns through the lens of emotional justice. The cover art was designed by Ila Fae using Canva. The music is "Love" by Ivan Luzan, available free on Pixabay. See below for Content License:  PIXABAY LICENSE CERTIFICATE==============================================This document confirms the download of an audio file pursuant to the Content License as defined in the Pixabay Terms of Service available at https://pixabay.com/service/terms/Licensor's Username:https://pixabay.com/users/ivan_luzan-34614814/Licensee:u_lncbfuq57dAudio File Title:LoveAudio File URL:https://pixabay.com/music/wedding-love-148313/Audio File ID:148313Date of download:2026-02-13 20:14:39 UTCPixabay, a Canva Germany GmbH brandPappelallee 78/7910437 BerlinGermanyPixabay is a user-contributed stock content website. The above-named Licensor is responsible for this audio file. Pixabay monitors uploaded audio files only to a reasonable extent. Pixabay cannot be held responsible for the acts or omissions of its users and does not represent or warrant that any required third-party consents or licenses have been obtained.For any queries related to this document please contact Pixabay via info@pixabay.com.==== THIS IS NOT A TAX RECEIPT OR INVOICE ====

    2h 50m
  2. The Raven Prince

    02/05/2025

    The Raven Prince

    Send a text This episode looks for emotional justice in Elizabeth Hoyt's historical romance, "The Raven Prince." The Romance Writers of America defines a romance novel as having "a central love story and an emotionally satisfying and optimistic ending." The RWA further defines an emotionally satisfying and optimistic ending as the lover being "rewarded with emotional justice and unconditional love." The lens of Emotional Justice is about recognizing, addressing, and repairing emotional harm. It looks for how the MMC and FMC receive validation, healing, and equitable treatment by asking the following questions:  Are emotional wounds acknowledged and addressed?Is justice achieved for those who have been wronged?Are power imbalances meaningfully confronted and rectified?Do the characters grow in ways that promote emotional equity?The cover art was designed by Ila Fae using Canva. The music is "I Love You," by Ivan Luzan, available free on Pixabay. See below for Content License:  PIXABAY LICENSE CERTIFICATE ============================================== This document confirms the download of an audio file pursuant to the Content License as defined in the Pixabay Terms of Service available at https://pixabay.com/service/terms/ Licensor's Username: https://pixabay.com/users/ivan_luzan-34614814/ Licensee: u_m4kk0hfqt2 Audio File Title: I love you Audio File URL: https://pixabay.com/music/modern-classical-i-love-you-170732/ Audio File ID: 170732 Date of download: 2025-02-05 17:45:16 UTC Pixabay, a Canva Germany GmbH brand Pappelallee 78/79 10437 Berlin Germany Pixabay is a user-contributed stock content website. The above-named Licensor is responsible for this audio file. Pixabay monitors uploaded audio files only to a reasonable extent. Pixabay cannot be held responsible for the acts or omissions of its users and does not represent or warrant that any required third-party consents or licenses have been obtained. For any queries related to this document please contact Pixabay via info@pixabay.com.

    2h 11m

About

This podcast applies the lens of Emotional Justice to romance novels in an effort to identify the harmful and ingrained misogyny that we’ve been taught to accept in relationships while also highlighting examples of healthy communication, realistic expectations, and looking for a real happily ever after.