hth: (bitch please)
I think I'll quote somebody out of context, because that's always worked really well for me in the past.

Saying "black characters are written too broadly in New Who, making them resemble stereotypes" rather ignores the fact that white characters are treated the same way.

Look. This is the problem with trying to raise white people on Sesame Street in order to cure racism: you get a generation of white people who think it's to their credit that they hold everyone to the same standard, and run around operating like the world is one big, happy block party -- people who think they're complementing themselves when they say they're "colorblind."

BLIND is not a moral positive. BLIND is an inability to perceive what the non-blind people around you can clearly fucking see. My grandfather was red/green colorblind. His family also had a strawberry farm. His father used to beat him for not obeying instructions to pick only the RED strawberries and leave the GREEN ones on the bush.

Now, I'm not recommending regular beatings for the colorblind. That wasn't a nice thing to do (my great-grandfather was not a nice person in general, for oh so many reasons). But the thing is, my grandfather's colorblindness? Was a problem, because there is actually such a thing as color when it comes to strawberries, and it's easier to work on a strawberry farm when you can see it.

And there is actually such a thing as race. If you can't see it, you're not doing yourself or anyone else any favors. There are cases where you can give the EXACT SAME script/character arc/iconography/etc. to a white performer and to a performer of color, and the overall effect WILL BE DIFFERENT. Race is real. People respond to it, often on levels they aren't entirely aware of. So it actually misses the whole entire point of discussing race and racism if your sole defense is "but we're just treating them the exact same way we treat white characters!" It may be true, or it may not be true, but either way it's singularly useless.

Some fans seem to find gender easier to understand than race, so think of it this way: if there's a character that isn't very bright but always uses sexuality to manipulate other people, does it make a difference if that character is a man or a woman? Isn't it more of a stereotype in one case than in the other? And if some writer or producer said, "Oh, it's not sexist -- this is just what we were going to do, and we thought we might hire a male actor, but we went with a woman instead, so we kept the same stuff!" that doesn't magically make her not a sexist cliche, does it? If they'd cast a man, the character would read one way; when they do cast a woman, it reads differently. Same character. Different, because of the baggage we bring surrounding gender. If you were somehow magically oblivious to any and all gender issues, you might not notice that. But you wouldn't thereby be a better person than the rest of us. You'd just be oblivious.

Unfortunately, in our culture, we are conditioned to see white people as Real People, and black people as sort of thin slices of people, operating in one of a very few available modes and with only a very few emotions and interests. Therefore it's just different to write a white character "broadly" versus a black character. It's not enough to write the black character "just like" all your white characters, because race is not invisible to most of us and it doesn't have no consequences. In order to challenge people's already racist assumptions about black characters, writers have to work that much harder, and they have to work not blind. They have to work with their eyes open and their brains engaged and with the awareness of subtle signals and context and connotation that anyone who writes for a living should damn well be conversant with. To do less than that is to write lazily, to write foolishly, to write contemptuously of one's characters and one's craft, and to do all that because you can't or won't go the extra mile to bring race into the universe of stuff that factors into your writing does, in fact, have racist implications.

"Colorblindness" may be one's reason for making all of those mistakes, but it isn't an excuse, and it doesn't magically make the product impervious from criticism. Be less blind.

Date: 2007-07-15 05:37 am (UTC)From: [identity profile] hth-the-first.livejournal.com
people assume that "this behaviour is based on socially constructed roles" means "we can stop any time we want", which makes them think "well, obviously we don't want to be racist, so we must not be racist, because if we were we could stop any time we wanted to, and we do want to."

That's a perfectly brilliant way to put it, and it's a thought I've had about sexuality and never thought to apply in just that way to race. I'm often uncomfortable with the "is it genetic or not genetic?" question regarding sexual orientation, because the subtext seems to be, "because if it's not entirely, 100% coded into your DNA from conception, then it's up for grabs!" When I really think that sexuality is *constructed* from a number of component parts, *including* genes and received ideas about beauty and desire and one's sense of what masculinity and femininity mean and the connections you do or don't make between emotional closeness and sexual attraction, which themselves may come from taught or inborn sources, and obviously social expectations and pressures toward conformity -- but that doesn't mean you can just up and change your mind about it. Saying something is (wholly or in part) "socially constructed" can be *entirely true* and still not mean that it's a Tinkertoy structure that we can knock down and rebuild on a whim.

As for your example, if it makes you feel better, plenty of Americans are confused about other Americans' racial assumptions in exactly that way. It came as a complete shock to me, in my late 20s, to learn that there were people who didn't view Italians as white! I had *no idea!* I grew up near Kansas City, which has a pretty significant Italian-American history, but I'd never heard anyone speak of "Italian" as a *racial* distinction, merely an ethnic one. Then you get into the questions of, say, light-skinned Hispanic people -- white or non-white? Barack Obama -- kind of black, *really* black, or just not white? Nobody can agree! Is Jessica Alba an actress of color, and ergo is her relationship with wossisname on Dark Angel an interracial one? Is Jason Momoa a white guy with dreads or an Asian-American or just sort of generically a person of color? Is The Rock a black guy? I have *been part of* debates on every one of those questions, where Americans just simply don't agree because they've been taught to mentally construct those categories differently from one another.

It's not just you -- we really are a hot mess on the subject!

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