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It's easy to identify prejudices in another's work, though -- that's why we have editors, because it's too hard to find our own problems in our own work. Which is why, I think, the representation problems in Milliways go largely unnoticed. It's our work. Last night, Coalhouse Walker from Ragtime entered and summed it up: You travel beyond the reach of the sun, to whatever world lies beyond, and it's full of white people.
I'm as guilty of it as everyone else. I was thinking this morning as I walked back from getting coffee, composing this in my head, Why didn't I cast Epimetheus as Greek? Well, because I'm playing off Prometheus' PB, who's white, and whose music partner is white. So why is Prometheus white?
For that matter, why are all of the mythical, seperate-from-general reality characters in Milliways white? The only exceptions I can come up with off the top of my head are Coyote and, on occasion, Raven (
varadia talked about that a lot). Why are these pups that are half personal canon white? Why did I assume Tom would be white? Why are none of my pups in The Wasteland non-white?
I don't feel that I can use the excuse that I'm white, and that I therefore can't write a non-white perspective. I'm female and I write guys fine. I'm straight and I write lesbian okay. I'm young and I write middle-aged or immortal okay.
And to be fair to myself, I play two non-white characters: Carmela Rodriguez and Nirupam Singh. But I still come back to that question -- why are the characters I create white?
Not like I'm going to change my PB selection on Epimetheus and Tom and Russ and Journey all of a sudden, but it's worth keeping in mind when I write.
I'm as guilty of it as everyone else. I was thinking this morning as I walked back from getting coffee, composing this in my head, Why didn't I cast Epimetheus as Greek? Well, because I'm playing off Prometheus' PB, who's white, and whose music partner is white. So why is Prometheus white?
For that matter, why are all of the mythical, seperate-from-general reality characters in Milliways white? The only exceptions I can come up with off the top of my head are Coyote and, on occasion, Raven (
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I don't feel that I can use the excuse that I'm white, and that I therefore can't write a non-white perspective. I'm female and I write guys fine. I'm straight and I write lesbian okay. I'm young and I write middle-aged or immortal okay.
And to be fair to myself, I play two non-white characters: Carmela Rodriguez and Nirupam Singh. But I still come back to that question -- why are the characters I create white?
Not like I'm going to change my PB selection on Epimetheus and Tom and Russ and Journey all of a sudden, but it's worth keeping in mind when I write.
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Date: 2007-09-29 09:11 pm (UTC)Le Guin, from what little I've read of her stuff and about her stuff, likes to fuck with binaries and assumptions, so. Yes. *grin* And I love the fact that you use images from Atanarjuat for Therem.
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Date: 2007-09-29 09:27 pm (UTC)Miniver is indeed supposed to be of 100% Irish descent on both sides. Why I did that has vaguely to do with a spur-of-the-moment backstory decision that came from wanting to give his backstory a sense of realism and basing him off people in my mother's hometown. Also, he looks like Oscar Wilde. ^^ But honestly, his canon doesn't really specify his race -- it's a personality sketch applicable to anyone, at any time, and in fact I *know* I'm cheating by having him be from the 1960's because the poem was written in the late 1800's. And it WAS written as part of a series of poems about people in some imaginary small town and was actually the author's self-insert character. Contextually, in terms of what's known about the poem and the other poems written around it, Miniver was probably envisioned as white by his own author.
Now that I think of it, it'd be a fun experiment to do some drabblythings writing Miniver as black or hispanic or Jewih or an American mutt of uncertain ancestry or not even American at all (even though his author was, and the other poems in the series make clearer that they're in an American setting). I might do that later.
Oh yes and as for othergame pups... SPOCK IS NOT WHITE. pwn'd.
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Date: 2007-09-29 09:43 pm (UTC)Miniver was probably envisioned as white by his own author.
Which I think is part of why I chose Edward Norton for Tom's PB, because the guy who wrote his song is white and probably assumed the characters he was writing were white.
Experiment! That sounds like fun.