crumplesnacks:

“IT’S CANON!” the mindless throng cries.

“No it isn’t!” I retort, desperation creeping into my voice. “It’s queerbaiting! It’s bad writing combined with homophobia!”

“BUT MOFFAT! PERFECT! SO GAY!”

“No!” I scream over the crowd. “Steven Moffat is an incredibly flawed writer! Look how flimsy his Doctor Who plots are! Look at the lack of a coherent theme! Look how little depth or variety his female characters have!”

“STRONG FEMALE CHARACTERS!” they screech in return.

He’s won. Steven Moffat has won. He’s acquired a completely uncritical fanbase who can’t see when they’re being toyed with and played for fools. I let out a broken sob and collapse to the ground in despair. As I fall to the ground, the crowd freezes momentarily before they all shout in tearful chorus:

“REICHENBACH FEELS!!”

— via sunshineduk
posted on July 8, 2012 with 468 notes and Comments

Whitewashing, Racebending, and Why “We’re All Human” is Bullshit

beeftony:

There are a few things you should know about me before I start ranting. I am a white heterosexual Christian cis male middle-class American. I am a member of the majority in pretty much every area of life. I am privileged in ways that it took me a long time to fully understand.

And racism still pisses me off so much I can’t even see straight.

I admit to being fairly ignorant of the concept of privilege for most of my life. And I know that what I’m about to say won’t mean as much as if it had come from the fingertips of somebody who truly understands oppression. But I still have opinions on this, and if you don’t want to read them, get out now. This is mostly related to drama on Katrina’s blog, but a lot of this has been stewing for a while so I’m letting it all out.

Also, if my white privilege causes me to say anything ignorant, feel free to correct me (politely, if you can).

I am a member of the Korra fandom. “Racebending” has been an issue in the Avatar fandom since M. Night Shyamalan directed the abysmal The Last Airbender, casting white people in the main roles, erasing pretty much all the references to Chinese culture, and generally making things really awkward for everybody.

One of the hot-button issues right now that tends to draw out all the assholes is the issue of “whitewashing” Korra in fanart, drawing her with lighter skin and blaming it on a trick of the light. One artist recently responded to criticism on this by drawing Korra and shading her pitch black. I’m talking literally black as coal.

This did not go over well.

Fandom racism is something that a lot of people aren’t even aware of until they’ve vomited their unconscious hatred out for all to see, or at least I’d hope so. And the thing is, I can deal with the trolls and diehard racists because I can write them off as simply ignorant, but there is another group of people who grate on my last nerve.

You’ve seen them everywhere. The people who say, “Oh, this is the 21st century: race isn’t an issue anymore,” or “We’re all human, why can’t we all just get along?” They intrude on any serious discussion about racism and turn it into an argument on whether the discussion should be had in the first place since we’ve “obviously” moved past all that in our modern age of puppies and unicorns and diversity where everybody is happy and not talking about things makes them not exist.

This is, very frankly, utter bullshit.

The main problem with this argument mostly has to do with when it’s used. It is always, always, ALWAYS introduced to change the subject and avoid actually discussing the issue. It’s a convenient way of saying, “I don’t want to talk about this because it makes me uncomfortable so nobody should talk about it” without actually coming out and revealing what a selfish ass that attitude makes you.

Here’s another common defense I see a lot:

“I didn’t mean to whitewash! I wasn’t even thinking about race!”

Exactly. You weren’t thinking about it. That is precisely the problem.

This one is most commonly trotted out in situations like the one above, when a fanartist draws a character with caucasian skintone instead of their actual color. However, it can express itself in other situations as well.

A couple days ago, somebody I follow “fancasted” Jennifer Lawrence to play Artemis Crock from Young Justice. I can see the thought process here: Lawrence played a badass archer in The Hunger Games, so she’s obviously the perfect choice. Except that Artemis is half-Vietnamese, and was in fact based on the niece of one of the producers, who has blonde hair and is half-Korean.

Now, a lot of you might not see the problem here. It’s not like this person was an actual casting director with the power to make it happen; she just thought it would be cool.The race issue never even entered her mind. But that is exactly the problem.

There is a concept called the default human being which proposes that, given no indication otherwise, we tend to imagine fictional people as belonging to our own race. The THG connection is actually interesting, because of the whole debacle with fans of the book crying foul that Rue was portrayed by a black actress even though it said in the damn book that she was dark-skinned. I didn’t even read the books and I know that thanks to fandom osmosis. But it didn’t matter, because given no visual reason to believe otherwise, these people imagined Rue as a little white girl, and nothing could change their minds.

It’s not that they meant to be racist, at least not what they thought of as racist, which consists of wearing sheets and burning crosses in the front yard, or making people use different bathrooms. And yet thousands of people launched hateful vitriol in the direction of Amandla Stenberg, a prepubescent girl, just because she didn’t match up to the image they had in their heads.

And that’s the problem here: unconscious racism IS STILL RACISM. What lesson do you think Hollywood is taking away from this whole debacle? The sad truth of the matter is that the reason so many racial stereotypes exist in Hollywood is that part of appealing to a wide audience means appealing to their prejudices, whether those prejudices are conscious or not. They’ve learned that if they don’t cater to all our preconceived notions, their movies won’t make money.

And that’s why, even on a “fancasting” level, this is an issue because it starts with thoughts, or lack thereof. And the fact that so few mixed-race actors get enough exposure to immediately leap to most people’s minds says a lot about how internalized Hollywood’s racism is. A lot of film students have dream casts already in mind before they even shoot their first movie. How many of those do you think include POCs?

You may not have meant it, but that doesn’t reverse it or excuse it. You can apologize all you want for elbowing me in the face, but that won’t stop my nose from bleeding.

I don’t think a lot of people understand how important role models are. As I explained at the very beginning of this post, I am in no conceivable way a minority. I can look at literally any movie, television show, book, comic or video game and find myself represented. Other people can’t, and that’s what’s wrong.

Make no mistake, what we put in our popular entertainment reflects the values we hold as people and as a society. Greg Rucka was making a different point when he said this, but it still applies so I’m including it anyway:

Art – and even if that art is commercial art, produced for entertainment – feeds and is fed by the society that consumes it.

Movies, TV, books, comics, video games: all of these and more are meant not only to entertain, but to communicate ideas that can’t be expressed in a straightforward manner, but have to be explored through observing people and how these ideas affect their lives. And race is one of those ideas.

It’s important for Korra to be a POC because there are children out there who hate their own skin. Skin-bleaching is a common practice in a lot of countries where “whiter is better,” and there are actual commercials for skin-whitening cream in countries like India. The one I just linked to literally says, “The obstacle to my dream job was my skin.” People are willing to physically damage their skin just because somebody told them a lie and said that dark skin is not beautiful. Seeing a character who is dark and proud is a very powerful message to send to a child, because ideas take root deep within us and affect us more than most people would like to admit.

The “we’re all human” defense is bullshit because it ignores the fact that not everybody feels that way, and people receive different treatment regardless of how much you try to ignore it. The Declaration of Independence might say that “All men are created equal,” but nobody ever really talks about what happens after that, when that person is raised in an environment where others are treated better while they are treated worse and they grow up to resent the ones who receive better treatment.

Skin color affects the environment in which you’re raised and the experience you have in the world. Period. There is a scientific theory called Umwelt which posits that animals in the same environment can experience very different worlds because their senses pick up on different things, as illustrated by this xkcd comic. Everything about you determines how you view the world, and how you’re treated by it.

And that’s why characters like Korra and Artemis are so important. They provide a positive example for POCs everywhere to look to and say, “That’s how it’s done.” There are other characters too, like Ultimate Spider-Man’s Miles Morales, Jaime Reyes from Blue Beetle, and Monica Rambeau from The Avengers and Nextwave. YJ even has another dark-skinned blonde in Aqualad. But characters like these are the exception, not the rule, and until that changes, race will not stop being an issue.

To anybody who’s made it this far and isn’t part of the choir I’m most likely preaching to at this point: I get that it can be difficult to see people calling you out on reinforcing racism, even if you didn’t mean it. But saying that the thought of race didn’t even cross your mind sends the message to POCs that you don’t feel like they’re even worth that thought.

And that’s why this is so very fucking important.

— via beeftony
posted on July 2, 2012 with 5,557 notes and Comments

my-survival-story:

chunkybuttjesus:

I just feel like I should make my own post about it because I’m really pissed off

Dear Tumblr, I am a gay male person

I don’t appreciate you treating me, and people like me, like objects

I’ve seen you find out Mark Gatiss is gay and then proceed to ask him who he ships in the show he helped co-create

I’ve seen you completely invalidate the sexualities of real people with wives and children because you think it’s cute and trendy to jokingly tell people they’re wrong about who they’re attracted to

I’ve seen you say that it’s okay to fetishize homosexuality, to homosexual people, and still think that you’re an lgbt ally

you’re not

you’re disgusting

you make me so fucking angry and I’ll tell you why

we are not accessories

we are not here for your entertainment

we are not represented by pornography, written or otherwise

we are real fucking people with real fucking feelings and you should respect them because I’m getting so fucking tired of your stereotypes and your complete lack of self control

if you’re not going to respect me, people like me, and our opinions- if you’re just going to treat us like little neat toys you can play around with for your amusement, then you are just as bad as any homophobe

and you are not my ally, you are my enemy

THIS

(Source: poachy)

— via itsrevolutiontime

b-mommy:

andurrs:

highgardens:

watermeloncholy | sassyknight | robbstark:

Dany, tell them.

#behold viserys #the man who raised dany who told dany stories of the home that he’s /so/ determined to bring them back to #the man who did what he could with the little that he’s given/has left #the man who lost /everything/ — his family his home his /queen/ (aka. dany) etc. — for the chance to get all of it back in the end #he was driven by his ambition #then he was driven mad by the fact that he can’t attain/chase after his wants because he doesn’t have the /means/ to #how much hurt do you think he felt when he realized that /everything/ he’s worked hard for was FREELY HANDED TO DANY #i can’t #so why are people so fucking stuck on the fact that /he/ had hurt dany when /dany/ is the one who hurts and eventually kills him in the end #viserys feels (TM)

#this #when tags are art #the dislike i have for dany builds bigger whenever viserys is mentioned #tragic insane boy #i want to hug him

Are you all actually serious here? This isn’t the first time I’ve seen someone say something like this, it certainly won’t be the last and I’m sure this is a pervasive attitude amongst a certain contingent of the fandom, but I just need to ask—how completely delusional do you have to be to ignore everything that happened in this storyline? Do you understand how dangerous this sort of attitude is in real life? That it’s the same attitude that comes from people who excuse perpetrators of abuse? That it’s the same attitude that comes from people who victim-blame? 

I have to wonder if we’re reading the same books because there seems to be something that I’m missing. I could have sworn that Viserys was the one who sold his sister like a slave. I could have sworn that he was the one who beat Dany whenever she defied him. I could have sworn that he was the one who used sexual violence against her as punishment (i.e. having her strip for him, twisting her nipples as he threatened her). I could have sworn that he was the one who told her that he would let all 40,000 Dothraki men rape her if that’s what it took to get him his army. !ADWD SPOILER! I could have sworn that he attempted to sneak into her room and rape her the night before her wedding. !ADWD SPOILER!

This was a man who raised Daenerys and told her stories once upon a time in her life, yes, but that didn’t make him a good man. He was nice to her when he saw fit. He protected her because she was one of the only things of worth that he had left—I  use the word “thing” because that’s evidently how he saw Dany in the end. He was taught from a young age that she belonged to him and so he saw her as a bargaining chip. He must have cared for her in some capacity at some point in his life, sure, but his desperation made him cruel and he still treated her as though he owned her. Despite Viserys’ harsh life, he was still an abuser and he was still vile. He thought his sister weaker than him and instead of protecting her, he took advantage of his authority over her and abused her.

I reiterate, this was a man who bargained and gifted his barely teenaged sister to a warlord and threatened her with violence if she didn’t acquiesce to his every demand. He was the one who gave her away. He was the one who secured his inevitable fate and set into motion Daenerys’ awakening from her abuse. He was the one who disregarded and disrespected the Dothraki at every turn, which in the end got him killed. Viserys was the only one responsible for his death. You don’t just approach the Khaleesi of a Dothraki horde with a sword and threaten to cut her son out of her—on the night of a special ceremony, in a peaceful city where weapons are explicitly not allowed, in front of the Khal himself, the elders of the tribe, and thousands of other people in the tribe—and get away with it. Explain to me how Dany was supposed to save him from that? What was Dany supposed to have told them? That he was king in some land they gave no fucks about and they should respect his authority? By Dothraki law, drawing a weapon on anyone, even someone completely insignificant, would have been punishable by death—and he did it to the freaking queen. In any scenario, in Westeros or Essos, he would have been killed. 

Despite all the abuse, Daenerys still cared for him. She protected him from harm after he assaulted her in front of her bodyguards and handmaiden. Do you honestly believe that if Drogo had been there, Viserys would have survived as long as he did? Daenerys commanded her bodyguard to leave him alone and when she did, she still called him her brother. She punished him for his insult, but she kept what happened from her husband who would have surely killed him. She reached out to him, made him clothing, tried to reason with him and instead he hit her in attempt to assert his dominance. He knew he was losing ownership over her and that only increased his abusiveness toward her and his insolence. This was twice now after he hit her that she had mercy on him. This was countless times during the months of traveling with the Dothraki that she begged Drogo to spare him. People behave as though as Daenerys didn’t protect him and love him despite what he did to her. It was obvious that she cared about him to the point where she ignored his abuse of her to spare his life. 

You can feel for Viserys without woobifying him and excusing what he did to Daenerys. Furthermore, you can feel for him and understand and accept what happened to him without vilifying Dany, the one who put up with Viserys’ physical and sexual abuse for years.

P.S. I’m sure if you tried to hug Viserys, he’d have spat in your face like he did to Dany. 

You can love Harry Lloyd without projecting your feelings for him onto his character. 

/House Targaryen stan out

IS THERE REALLY DANY VICTIM BLAMING IN THIS POST

IS THERE REALLY VISERYS APOLOGISM GOING ON HERE

Well this is new.

WHAT. WHAT. WHAT THE FUCK IS WRONG WITH PEOPLE.

Tumblr source: b-mommy

on asoiaf, -isms, and the “fandom police”

villainesses:

As you may have noticed, there’s been a post going around the ASoIaF/GoT fandom asserting that those fans who have taken it upon themselves to call out problematic statements they see in the tags are running a dictatorship of sorts, in which there are definitive rules about which characters you’re allowed to like and dislike. In particular, the comments appended to the post as it circulates seem to be directed at stans of Cersei, Catelyn, and Sansa, who are characterized as over-zealous, ready to categorize any dislike of their favorites as sexism.

I’d like to begin by acknowledging that yes, discussion has gotten heated on both sides, even to the point of some uncalled-for mudslinging. And yes, unprovoked or misplaced meanness is hurtful and unproductive. But what is worrying to me is that these comments seem to be identifying the entire mode of discussion as in the wrong—the calling out of isms is characterized as oppressive, fun-killing, and (this is the one that really gets me) unnecessary.

In fact, one of the most-reblogged comments states that the group of people actually making problematic statements is “probably only a few people large anyway.”

I don’t know how much people reblogging this post have interacted with portions of the fandom outside of tumblr, but there is a damn good reason the tumblr climate is the way that it is.

(trigger warning: discussions of sexism, violence against women, rape, domestic violence, and general grossness)

ALSO SPOILERS FOR THE BOOKS

This is the fandom where new actresses are constantly scrutinized on the basis of their appearances (the w-i-c comments on Michelle Fairley’s casting are, on a balance, horrid) with the justification of “book purity,” while the men in the cast are praised even if they completely contravene the original descriptions (Tyrion and Jorah being the two most egregious examples).

This is the fandom where criticism of Cersei is almost exclusively couched in gendered terms like “cunt,” “whore,” “slut,” and “bitch,” rather than substantive commentary on her villainy. Where her husband’s domestic abuse and marital rape is often celebrated because it’s “what she deserves.” Moreover, she receives this intense hatred where Jaime, who is textually the same person (one person in two bodies, if I were a woman I’d be Cersei, reflections in a mirror, it’s stated in the text over and over and over again) is almost universally adored.

This is the fandom where towerofthehand.com did a poll (a poll! way more than one or two people!) of most hated characters and Catelyn Stark placed above Ramsay Bolton (yes, this was before ADwD, but let us not forget that he had already forced Lady Hornwood into a marriage, locked her in a tower, and starved her until she ate her own fingers in desperation). Some fun excerpts from that essay (emphasis mine):

bad mother … whining … in front of her brother Edmure’s men, she reproaches him for having some fun with the ladies and later chastises him for hoping the woman he’s going to spend the rest of his life with doesn’t look like a weasel … she witnesses the assassination of (as far as she knows) her last surviving son, goes mad, and is finally put out of her misery—and ours … there are no happy endings, so she is brought back to us, worse than ever, as Lady Stoneheart. We haven’t seen much of her since her resurrection, but just knowing that we’re not completely rid of her rankles us … we thank the gods every day that she hasn’t returned for further emoting as a POV character, and can also take some solace in the fact that Ser Raymund did a reasonably good job on her vocal chords

This is the fandom where I, when expressing love for Catelyn among a group of my rl friends, was shouted down, told she is endlessly annoying and for that crime didn’t suffer enough.

This is the fandom where Sansa, one of the sweetest, most morally good characters in the books, consistently receives some of the most vitriolic hate I’ve seen in any fandom. A sampling (all from different people, ftr):

YOU LITTLE WHINY BITCH. That little whore has no substance. … [in response to a gif of her being beaten and stripped in front of the court] I hate her though, so it’s fine. … vapid, needy, helpless … a total bitch sometimes (because of her ignorance mostly)

The hate for Sansa is so palpable that Sophie Turner actually commented on it at a panel, saying (again, emphasis mine):

A lot of people do dislike Sansa, and they dislike her from the books so I guess I’m doing my job, hopefully well? But sometimes the dislike goes a bit too far and people say horrible things about Sansa that they want to happen to her. Sometimes it goes too far, and it upsets me because then I kind of feel like, “Am I making her too annoying?” Like, people want to kill her? Really? So, um, it hurts.

An isolated group of a few people? No. THIS IS SO WIDE-SPREAD THAT A CHILD ACTOR NOT ONLY FOUND OUT ABOUT IT, BUT WAS HURT BY IT.

And there, ladies and gents, is the point. Baseless, gendered, and yes, sexist hatred is a widespread and ongoing problem in this fandom, and it hurts. It hurts the actresses, who work hard to portray complex, multi-layered women only to see them reduced to “sluts” in the general discourse. It hurts the fandom, who absorb and then perpetuate conceptions of femininity that have no room for ambition (bitchy), sexual freedom (whorish), anger (even more bitchy), traditionally “girlish” characteristics (shallow), idealism (stupid), or a whole host of other traits that, when taken in total, comprise basically all available options. It especially hurts those who have suffered similar insults for the crime of being a woman, and who see in these characters things they admire and/or relate to.

The ASoIaF fandom has a long and storied history of creating a toxic climate of sexism, often culminating in calls for gruesome violence against the female characters. I’m not sure why I even have to say it, but this is a problem. This is harmful. So the response to people calling you out on contributing to that climate really shouldn’t be “stop ruining our fun!” I don’t know about you, but my fun gets ruined when someone says an 11-year old girl deserves torture and humiliation as a punishment for her naivete.

Trying to guilt into silence those people who have fought long and hard against what I would argue is the dominant mode of discourse in this fandom is part of the problem. It’s a tactic used just as often by those who have made problematic statements as those who haven’t. Yes, some people have been mean. But other people have been deeply, horrifically problematic, and even more people have casually validated the language and tone of their arguments by adopting their words, indicating even vague agreement, or even just ignoring the issue and thus condoning their actions.

And that is something I’m just not willing to do.

(Source: acaele)

— via demonrevolutionary