JEB
Legend
The fact that it doesn't match the one you looked up doesn't make it incorrect. Some of the more basic definitions don't unpack the racist undertones enough to make it obvious to someone who's unfamiliar with Rousseau's writings. Even the definitions you linked to are pretty obviously not Conan either. Barbarians are not by definition anything to do with the 'noble savage'. I think the part you're missing about the definition there is the part about innate goodness and simple-mindedness. So not Conan.
Guess we'll have to agree to disagree on how "obviously not Conan" those definitions I found are, but OK. So if a character with other traits of the "noble savage" trope isn't innately good or simple-minded, they're not evoking the "noble savage" trope anymore? That seems a lot narrower than the definition applied upthread, which included the Native American characters from The Last of the Mohicans, or the definition that seems to be accepted elsewhere online. But let's go with that.
This sounds to me that if you have a society of Conan types, avoiding any intimation that there's something simple-minded or innately good about that society, that's enough to distinguish it from a society of "noble savages" and no longer evokes the harmful trope. Is that a fair statement? Or is it still too close for comfort?
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