Originally Published on OpEdNews
Friend and fellow blogger Tami Harris (@whattamisaid) asked an interesting question on her blog a few days ago:In your consumption of media, which is better--to be triggered, tokenized or erased?
Harris, who is a fan of the urban fantasy genre, which includes True
Blood, Vampire Diaries, and a variety of book series such as Laurell
Hamilton's Anita Blake novels, laments that the entire genre is
"notoriously bad at characterizations that are not of the white,
straight, male variety. (Making it much like, y'know, every other
genre.)"
I said as much when I wrote my own piece about racial dynamics in a variety of vampire novels
last year, but Harris takes it a step further. Sure, we all want
non-white and non-straight characters that are as complex and realistic
as those that are white and straight, but what if writing such
characters is simply not part of that particular writer's repertoire? Do
we still want those writers to take their best shot (knowing they won't
come up to snuff), or would we rather they just leave those "minority"
groups out altogether?
For me, this
frustration is usually borne of being othered and disrespected, when I
simply aimed to be entertained by a trashy novel or TV show. I dipped
into Charlaine Harris' Aurora Teagarden series, hoping to enjoy the
books as I enjoy the TV series based on Harris' Sookie Stackhouse
series. Instead, I got a bunch of thinly-written, triggering stories
where all women (but the protagonist) are routinely judged harshly and
women like me (black women) are alternately sassy or angry or dead or
running from the law, and blackness or Jewishness or gayness or any
other "ness" that is not small-town and conservative and Southern and
Anglo and Christian is to be frowned at or remarked upon or, best,
hidden. And so, instead of enjoying a cozy mystery in my downtime, I
wound up feeling uncomfortable and marginalized.
Harris
then goes on to say that it is at times like these that she finds
herself "thinking that it would have been better if black women were
absent from the narrative altogether."
"Sometimes," she continues, "there is comfort in erasure. I mean, even a blandly-drawn token black character, like Bonnie on Vampire Diaries,
can be intrusive to my experience. Because I look at her presence in a
show that genuflects to the antebellum South and plantation-owning
families, while at the same time not mentioning the black community
that must still exist in the town, and suspect she is a
black-culture-free cypher added simply to be inclusive."
Harris invited several other race bloggers to chime in and part of the blog post's charm is the many varied perspectives. For example, Racialicious blogger Latoya Peterson hated all three options but ultimately took a stand against erasure.
"I
think there are more than enough all white worlds already," she wrote,
"losing the tokens just contributes to our overall erasure. Remember,
out of sight, out of mind. And we all know how that goes down, season
after season."
As someone who often writes about
racial dynamics in the media, Peterson's words resonate loudly. From
this particular perspective (as a race scholar/activist), there is
nothing worse than erasure, because it doesn't allow any kind of
meaningful analysis or discussion beyond "Can you believe there were no
people of color in the show/book/film?"
Tokens aren't much better. I strongly believe that in order to heal from our traumatic racist history/reality, part of what we need to do as a society is have honest conversation about race and racism,
conversation where we really strive to understand each other in all of
our complexities. Racial content that doesn't play it safe (i.e., that
triggers) provides the best grist for the mill. It provokes and
irritates and, in so doing, allows me to think and learn and, at times,
to try to contribute to the learning of others.
But I have another
answer too, one that's less intellectual and much more personal. Though
I'm white, male, and straight, I'm also Jewish and was not born in the
United States. If I sink into one of those identities and consider the
same question, I go to a very different place. As part of groups that
are sometimes marginalized, there is nothing worse than an uninformed,
inadequate, or stereotypical portrayal of my group. When I see/read such
a portrayal, Like Tami, I often feel annoyed, hurt, and emotionally
exhausted. Sometimes I feel unable to continue watching/reading. Other
times, I continue, but without the same pleasure. The "triggering"
portrayal is a distraction. My mind wanders...I think of clever
retorts...I fantasize about vengeful actions. But more than anything I find myself wishing that they would just leave my group out of it. Entirely.
Which is better?
I
suppose it depends on who you are in relation to the depiction...and on
whether or not you're curling up under a blanket or wearing your
activist/writer hat.
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Mikhail Lyubansky, Ph.D., is a managing editor at OpEdNews and a member of the teaching faculty in the
Department of Psychology at the University of Illinois, Urbana-Champaign, where he teaches
Psychology of Race and Ethnicity and
Theories of Psychotherapy.
His research and writing interests focus on race relations and restorative justice. He is a regular contributor to edited volumes on popular culture, including Harry Potter, Twilight, and The Girl with the Dragon Tattoo, published by BenBella and recently co-authored a book on the Russian-Jewish (more...)