Kazundo Gouda

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Kazundo Gouda
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Kazundo Gouda

Kazundo Gouda (合田一人 Gōda Kazundo) is a fictional character in Masamune Shirow's Ghost in the Shell anime series. Gouda is head of the Cabinet Intelligence Agency in Stand Alone Complex. Gouda's name is hard to pronounce for most cyborgs and other AI. An alternate spelling of his name is "Gohda."

Contents

[edit] Background

While on a mission, Gouda was involved in an accident and had to have cybernetic parts installed. He was horribly disfigured, but, curiously, chose not to repair his face with easily available cybernetic parts. During a failed training exercise by the Japanese military for its new helicopters, Gouda was dispatched to approach Aramaki with a plan of action to protect the people living in the Refugee Residential District. Gouda later becomes a main suspect in the Individual Eleven case by Section 9. He is the head of Japan's Cabinet Intelligence Agency, a position which gives him the power to carry out his plans (see below).

[edit] Personality

Gouda's character is much like his face, as he appears polite and well-spoken but seems to have ulterior, warped motives. Manipulative, amoral, and smug; he quickly draws suspicion and hostility from the members of Section 9, particularly Batou. He also acts to make himself appear superior by criticizing others.

[edit] Trivia

Gouda is a virgin, having never had sex prior to his cyberization. This is made evident in an episode when Batou borrowed Motoko's external memory device to confront him about the Individual Eleven issue. Gouda presents this information to Batou as part of an argument concerning the motivations of self-sacrificing activists (e.g.: suicide bombers).

[edit] The Individual Eleven

Gouda is the mastermind of the whole Individual Eleven incident. He planned to use the tense issue of Japan's numerous postwar refugees in order to create social unbalance and political upheaval. The rogue helicopter incident in Episode Four may itself have been helped along by his maneuvering. His extremely convenient knowledge about everything to do with the situation suggests that he had a hand in its cause. It may even have served as "practice" for the bombing of Dejima with the same Jigabachi attack helicopters, given the incidents' similarities, which is noted by several characters including the Major and the Tachikomas.

Part of Gouda's plan is to harness the stand-alone complex social phenomenon in order to produce revolutionaries based on the refugee issue. He made these revolutionaries (the Individual Eleven) by disseminating a fake eleventh essay written by (fictional) writer and philosopher Patrick Sylvestre. This essay, itself titled "The Individual Eleven," contained a cyberbrain virus which forced the reader to conform to a scenario of terrorist actions related to the refugee issue (e.g. murdering cyber-rapper and refugee idol Densetsu, attempting to murder Prime Minister Yoko Kayabuki), followed by mutual suicide at the Selecon tower. The strongest infected members, of which there were twelve, successfully carried out the scenario, each believing himself to be acting independently and without viral influence.

Gouda anticipated the emergence of one "hero", by the rules of the social variation of the stand-alone complex would go on to further exacerbate the refugee situation. This hero was Hideo Kuze, who disappeared after the suicide and resurfaced as a hero of the refugees. In order to stage a revolution, Kuze rallied the refugees to his side in Dejima by virtue of his will and utter belief in his cause (which had existed before his infection with the virus). Using salami slicing, he obtained enough money to procure weapons-grade plutonium as leverage to secure the independence of Dejima. This process was facilitated by Gouda, who performed such actions as cutting all the power in Nagasaki as a distraction so Kuze could escape the naval blockade there. Gouda also arranged the circumstances so that Kuze would not actually get any plutonium, leaving the refugees with baseless confidence and the military with an excuse to start an all-out war with Dejima.

Ultimately, Gouda wished to escalate the conflict to the point where public dissatisfaction would destroy the government, allowing him to create a new power structure more to his liking. He doesn't seem to have any personal ambition (though several members of Section 9 suspected him of at least wanting credit for the incident) and claims to be only giving the Japanese people what they want "deep down", which he says is a return to Japan's imperial days when the country prospered off the labor of its colonies. He almost succeeded, as the Prime Minister was arrested and a coup was underway as Dejima was being carpet-bombed. Fortunately, Kuze, Motoko, and Section 9 (especially the Tachikomas) turned out to be too unpredictable for Gouda's scenario. Thanks to their actions, the Dejima conflict was halted before the full extent of the damage was done. Gouda himself was eliminated by Motoko Kusanagi and Batou while trying to escape to the American Empire.

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Ghost in the Shell by Masamune Shirow
Manga: Ghost in the Shell | Ghost in the Shell 1.5: Human Error Processor | Ghost in the Shell 2: Man/Machine Interface
Anime Films: Ghost in the Shell | Ghost in the Shell 2: Innocence
Stand Alone Complex: S.A.C. (Season 1) | S.A.C. 2nd GiG (Season 2) | S.A.C. Solid State Society (Movie) | Tachikomatic Days (Omake) | List of episodes
Novels: After the Long Goodbye | The Lost Memory | Revenge of the Cold Machines | White Maze
Video Games: Ghost in the Shell | Stand Alone Complex
Music: Ghost in the Shell: Stand Alone Complex O.S.T | be Human | Ghost in the Shell: Stand Alone Complex O.S.T 2 | Ghost in the Shell: Stand Alone Complex O.S.T 3 | Ghost in the Shell: S.A.C. Solid State Society O.S.T
Characters: Daisuke Aramaki | Azuma | Batou | Boma | Kazundo Gouda | Ishikawa | Yoko Kayabuki | Motoko Kusanagi | Hideo Kuze | Laughing Man | Pazu | Project 2501 | Proto | Saito | Togusa | Yano
Technology: Armed suit | Cyberbrain | Fuchikoma | Operator | Tachikoma | Think tank
Other: Public Security Section 9 | List of organizations | Philosophy of Ghost in the Shell | Seburo | New Port City | American Empire