Race and Pirates

Sat, Jul. 8th, 2006 11:54 am
oyceter: teruterubouzu default icon (Default)
[personal profile] oyceter
I ended up buying Beverly Tatum's "Why Are All the Black Kids Sitting Together in the Cafeteria?", despite already having borrowed it from the library because a) I wanted something to read in line while I waited to get a seat for Pirates of the Caribbean 2 and b) I want to financially support books like these and authors who tackle the subject of race.

I read a few chapters while standing in line, delighted by Tatum's definitions and her clear explanations and her compassion toward people of color and Whites alike.

Then I went in to watch Pirates.

And I watched, and I grew more and more uncomfortable. Jack Sparrow and crew run amok of cannibals. The cannibals, are, of course, Black. They have face paint and random piercings; they have made Jack Sparrow their king. He speaks to them in terms like, "Licka licka, savvy?" There are a few people of color in his pirate crew, but their speaking parts are small, and they all have very strong accents. Or they don't speak at all and lend their faces to the motley look of the crew. The main character of color is a Black woman, a voodoo witch or something, with eyeballs in jars, blackened teeth, and an accent so strong that I couldn't understand her half the time.

While I was noticing this and noticing the fact that there were no non-stereotyped portrayals of people of color, I was growing more and more uncomfortable with this awareness. I'm actually very ashamed to say this, but I kept thinking of things like, "Oh, is it really that bad?" and "It's just a movie" and "Really, it's about pirates, what can you expect?" and "It's all in good fun."

Except... it isn't.

And I can't get over the fact that even though I had been reading about race right before the movie, noticing the stereotypes and being critical of race in the movie made me incredibly uncomfortable and squirmy, so much so that I tried to rationalize it away. I spent the first half of the movie squirming and becoming more and more aware of the fact that my mind kept trying to slip away from the topic of race, kept trying to not confront it and come up with more and more reasons why it really wasn't that bad.

Except... it is that bad.

It is bad that I cannot think about race without this extreme uncomfortableness, that I cannot do it without attempting to rationalize and excuse, that I cannot do it even after reading about it and being fully committed to speaking out. And it is even worse, because I know if I had seen the movie without having read the Tatum beforehand, I would have noticed, but I would have let myself brush it off, let myself not post about it.

I didn't even post about this last night because it made me so uncomfortable.

Well, also, I wanted to make myself a "Not the magical minority fairy" icon.

But anyway. No more excuses from me, no rationalization. The movie is incredibly racist. I still had some fun watching it, but knowing that it was racist and knowing that most of the audience very likely wouldn't think so spoiled the majority of it for me.

I have difficulties just typing "The movie is incredibly racist," and I have to keep thinking about how I routinely notice the portrayal of women in nearly everything I read and watch (the movie is not as deeply sexist as it is racist; thankfully, Elizabeth gets to do stuff. But it is still very male). I have to keep thinking that for me, noticing sexism is ok, that pointing it out in my LJ is standard. And I have to keep thinking that I need to do the same about race, even though posting things like this frighten me because of the reaction to the Great Cultural Appropriation Debate of DOOM.

Part of me doesn't even want to keep talking about this because it's so uncomfortable, because it causes such defensiveness in other people, because I am tired of being told that I am wrong for seeing these things. And that's the very reason I am making myself post this, making myself confront the nidginess and the squirminess, the problems that I have in just acknowledging that something that I am enjoying is racist.

ETA: Freezing some threads in which further discussion seems to be rather pointless.

ETA2: I'm now screening all anonymous comments to this entry, not because I don't welcome them, but because I've been getting stupid spam comments everyday. If you aren't a spambot, you should make it through the screening! This is for spam only, not opinion-filtering.

(frozen) (no subject)

Fri, Jul. 28th, 2006 06:19 pm (UTC)
Posted by [identity profile] anarchodandyist.livejournal.com
Sorry, perhaps you didn't catch that. Let me try again:

The Caribs that were stereotyped in the movie -

that is, the natives who spoke Pidgin and

practiced religious cannibalism

- are long gone.

(frozen) (no subject)

Fri, Jul. 28th, 2006 06:21 pm (UTC)
Posted by [identity profile] anarchodandyist.livejournal.com
Read: The modern Caribs DO NOT SPEAK PIDGIN ENGLISH OR PRACTICE RITUAL CANNIBALISM. I was referring to the Caribs PORTRAYED IN THE MOVIE. Namely, CARIBS FROM THE HISTORICAL PERIOD OF THE MOVIE.

(frozen) (no subject)

Fri, Jul. 28th, 2006 07:03 pm (UTC)
ext_6167: (Default)
Posted by [identity profile] delux-vivens.livejournal.com
But the Caribs say that they never practiced cannibalism in that time period, or pretty much ever. In fact, they are pretty clear about how it was a fiction perpetuated by the British while they fought them off for decades, according to this statement from the Garifuna of Belize (http://cacreview.blogspot.com/2005/04/national-garifuna-council-of-belize.html).

(frozen) (no subject)

Fri, Jul. 28th, 2006 06:48 pm (UTC)
ext_6167: (Default)
Posted by [identity profile] delux-vivens.livejournal.com
Thanks for the explanation! I'm just curious as to how these cannibals, who didnt quite seem to exist according to what the Carib/Kalinago say, could be gone?

(frozen) (no subject)

Fri, Jul. 28th, 2006 09:24 pm (UTC)
Posted by [identity profile] anarchodandyist.livejournal.com
Evidence as to whether the Caribs ever practiced religious cannibalism is, indeed, inconclusive. However, given that nobody actually knows (including the modern Caribs), I see no problem with the portraying a particular historical slant on the islanders (who are *based* on the Caribs, but not actually supposed to *be* the Caribs) in a movie that incorporates stereotypes of *all* cultural/racial/social groups of the era in which it is set.

Read:
http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Carib_Indians

(frozen) (no subject)

Fri, Jul. 28th, 2006 09:41 pm (UTC)
ext_6167: (potc give us free)
Posted by [identity profile] delux-vivens.livejournal.com
Inconclusive? Really? The Caribs keep saying that they didnt, I have this wacky idea that they might actually know what they are talking about.

incorporates stereotypes of *all* cultural/racial/social groups of the era in which it is set.

So because 'everyone" seems to be stereotyped, the movie is fine?

Are you actually serious?

Had you ever *heard* of the Caribs or the Garifuna *before* this movie came out? Had the slightest bit of acquaintance with Maroons in Jamaica, Surinam, or elsewhere? Heard anything about the importance of Blacks in the atlantic maritime industry from the 1500s on?

Its beyond insulting to expect that, given Disney's clear and conscious choices to portray the indigenous people that way, they should just sit quietly and be grateful that 'everyone else is stereotyped'.

(frozen) (no subject)

Fri, Jul. 28th, 2006 09:52 pm (UTC)

(frozen) (no subject)

Fri, Jul. 28th, 2006 09:55 pm (UTC)
ext_6167: (eating white peepul)
Posted by [identity profile] delux-vivens.livejournal.com
well, oyce... that about sums it up!

Profile

oyceter: teruterubouzu default icon (Default)
Oyceter

November 2025

S M T W T F S
      1
2345678
9101112131415
161718 19202122
23242526272829
30      

Most Popular Tags

Active Entries

Expand Cut Tags

No cut tags