rivkat: Rivka as Wonder Woman (Default)
([personal profile] rivkat Aug. 7th, 2007 08:51 am)
Okay, so let’s take my white liberal guilt and sense of presumptuousness as read. Here are two topics I’ve been thinking about:

First, I’ve been rewatching Life on Mars, and thinking about the intersection of basic stories and racial narratives. I learned that there were only two basic stories: A stranger comes to town, and a guy gets nailed to a tree. What These People Need Is a Honky is a variant of at least one of those. In a lot of ways, therefore, Life on Mars is “What These People Need Is a Honky with Sensitivity Training,” even when Sam Tyler is just interacting with other white folks. 2007 is a better place for many individual people of color than 1973, and Sam has the privilege of believing that it’s completely different. I don’t know that I have anywhere to go with this; just something I’ve been thinking about.

Second, I haven’t seen this cross the fandom radar, but it’s of interest to me for the related intellectual property issues: Fox is promoting The Simpsons Movie by, among other things, transforming 7-11s into Qwik-E-Marts. Even the 7-11 PR spokesperson had to admit that some Indian-American franchisees were upset by being associated with Apu. Discussion by other bloggers, some of whom are unbothered, though the “they’re all stereotypes” response made me itch to get out my antiracism bingo card. When parody becomes 7-11’s corporate policy, the “it’s just entertainment” response is even less convincing. The very entertainment value of the Simpsons makes Apu a useful heuristic for people, as shown by the reports of racist use of “thank you come again” discussed at some of the above links. Of course it’s likely that the racist response would just have been different if The Simpsons didn’t exist. But it’s worth taking humor seriously.

From: [identity profile] wearemany.livejournal.com


ooh, thanks for these links, particularly the simpsons ones. though actually i'm here to comment on this:

I learned that there were only two basic stories: A stranger comes to town, and a guy gets nailed to a tree. because now i am fascinated. i learned the same, or half of the same. mine was, "there are only two stories: a stranger comes to town, and a man goes on a journey."

From: [identity profile] rivkat.livejournal.com


Your version is nicer than mine, and has an interesting inversion: who gets to adopt the perspective of normality, the town or the journeying man? The thing about the "honky" version is that it doesn't matter who's moving -- the white POV character always gets to be normal and learn strange (but attractive) ways.
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