
No joke, this is one of the only TOS Klingons not in blackface.
These days, most of us know not to use racial slurs* or say anything that starts with “some of my best friends are…” We can all go on about how important it is not to judge someone by the color of their skin, which is great, but it isn’t enough. Like sexism, racism is pervasive. It influences us, and by extension our stories, in ways we’ll never realize. As such, we must know what signs to look out for in our work, even if we’d never write anything racist on purpose.
1. All the Enemies Have Dark Skin

Few authors would intentionally write a protagonist who loves to kill people different than themselves, and yet we have a host of stories where the main character must fight their way through wave after wave of dark-skinned opponents. Each story has some kind of internal justification for this. The protagonist is an American soldier in Not-Iraq, or the evil wizard made all their orcs dark to symbolize eternal night.
After a while, the explanations blur together. The pertinent fact is that we have a lot of stories that cast large groups of dark-skinned people as the bad guys. This is most obvious in video games and films, where you can actually see what’s happening, but it pops up in prose as well. In the Belgariad series, for example, entire races of people are classified as good or evil. The Murgos in particular are described with East-Asian features, often with terms that border on racial slurs.
In real life, far too many white people think they’re under attack by those with darker skin. We see this in the obsession with crime rates in largely black neighborhoods and the rejection of refugees coming from war-torn countries. The irony is that it’s almost always the other way around. For hundreds of years, up to and including the present, people who aren’t white have been far more likely to be on the receiving end of harm and oppression.
As authors, we have a responsibility to not reinforce this trope. It’s harmful to people in the real world, and it will cause future generations to judge us harshly.
How to Avoid It
The surest way out of this trope is to have a diverse cast. That will inoculate you against a situation where an all-white group of heroes faces down a dark-skinned horde.
There’s nothing wrong with having a non-white villain, provided it isn’t their non-whiteness that makes them scary. Lex Luthor from the Justice League animated series (JLA) is an excellent example. His threat to the heroes comes from being a billionaire businessman, which is far outside the stereotypes that make so many people afraid of black men. The JLA’s relatively diverse casting* also helps make sure Luthor’s villainy is never defined by his race.
In fantasy and science fiction, there’s no reason you can’t create diverse groups of space pirates or goblin raiders. When your story is set in the real world and involves a disenfranchised group, don’t play on their otherness to frighten the reader. That means not overemphasizing foreign customs and not describing innocuous elements of culture as threatening. For example, many Western storytellers portray minaret speakers as imposing and scary, blaring out words of oppression, when in reality they’re not any worse than any other forms of media.
2. Characters Play to Stereotypes

Sometimes, stereotypes are obvious. Chakotay from Star Trek: Voyager is a walking pile of inaccurate ideas that white people have about Native Americans. He uses cultural trappings from various North American tribes, even though his tribe is supposedly from what is now Panama. He’s portrayed as peaceful and nonviolent, even though he’s a leader in the Maqui, a violent rebel group. He uses the cliche “a man does not own land” without any context.* These stereotypes could have been avoided with a little research or even a little thought.
Sometimes, stereotyping is harder to see. The writers of Daredevil probably thought it made sense to make the mob boss Nobu Yoshioka into a super-ninja, because Daredevil is a show about fist-fighting and they wanted a formidable villain. Unfortunately, that also plays into the stereotype of Asian exoticism and all Asian people knowing martial arts, especially since Nobu is the only Japanese person on the show.
Storytellers use stereotypes in place of real character development. Stereotyped characters don’t grow; they’re confined in a predetermined box. This not only makes for boring characters but also reinforces prejudice in real life. Even if the stereotype is something that some real person somewhere might do, it’s best to leave it out. Fair or not, minority characters are often judged as representatives of their group, which means making them well-rounded characters is even more important.
How to Avoid It
First, do some research to make sure you know all the potential stereotypes your character might face. For example, did you know there’s a stereotype that black people can’t swim? I didn’t until recently, and without knowing that I might have written a joke about a black character not being able to swim, unaware of the harm I was doing.
Second, focus on the character as an individual, not on the larger group they belong to. Chakotay is a former Starfleet officer who defected in order to join a criminal insurgency. That backstory is full of potential, and it’s all wasted because the writers were so busy trying to prove how Native American he was. A better strategy would have been to cast an actual Native American for the part and then focus on the backstory they established for him.
Third, add traits that directly counter a stereotype. Nobu could easily have been a threat to Daredevil without falling into the ninja trap. Instead, the writers could have given him a broadsword or made him a master of savate.* Those changes would have made Nobu dangerous and also played against stereotypes.
With a little effort, you’ll find it easy to remove stereotypes from a character, and they’ll be more interesting for it. If the stereotypes resist all attempts at removal, it may be time to redesign the character from the ground up.
3. Minority Women Are Fetishized as Exotic

Ah, intersectionality, my old friend. While minority men are often treated as dangerous threats to be dealt with, minority women get cast as objects of desire. Naive writers try to spice up a romance line or sex scene by emphasizing the otherness of a woman of color, almost always for the benefit of a white protagonist.*
In real-world settings, women of color are sexualized by their race. Asian woman, Japanese or not, are put in the author’s idea of a geisha role. Latinas and black women are often portrayed as more sexual than whites, and this causes a terrible backlash when women of color assert their sexuality on their own terms.*
Spec fic writers sometimes try to disguise this behavior with alien or fantasy race trappings. Star Trek has a particularly bad habit of talking about Klingon women in terms of their sexual appetites. The parallels are all too obvious, especially when so many Klingon are played by minority actors or white actors in skin-darkening makeup.
When a well-meaning author uses exotic otherness in a romance, it diminishes their characters. Instead of a romance based on how characters relate to each other as individuals, we’re left with the most shallow of interactions. Instead of showing us why a protagonist is falling in love, the story focuses on stereotypes that erase what’s special about the love interest.
How to Avoid It
Remember, character comes first. If you want a romance line involving a woman of color, great, but it has to be about her as a person, not what others expect her to be. This is basic writing advice, but it’s easy to forget when so much of the media that’s come before features the exact fetishization we’re trying to avoid.
Casual hookups follow the same rules. Women of color are as likely to be interested in a one-night stand as anyone else, and when such an encounter is important enough to include in your story, it should be about what the characters get from each other. Otherwise the scene is just gratuitous and should probably be cut.
4. The Only Minorities Are Non-Humans

When authors include non-human races, be they fantasy or alien, it’s usually to draw contrasts with the humans in the story. Most of the time there’s nothing wrong with that, but sometimes it leads to both humans and their non-human counterparts being simplified down into homogeneous groups. You can guess what tends to characterize the homogeneous humans.
In The Way of Kings, most of the story focuses around the conflict between a powerful human nation and the Parshendi, a non-human race. Based on cover art and description,* the humans are exclusively white. Meanwhile, the Parshendi are often described as having very dark skin.
On one side of the conflict, humanity is represented exclusively by white people, and on the other, a race of non-humans with dark skin. The lack of diversity among the humans is even more puzzling because the author, Brandon Sanderson, went out of his way to establish that the human society divides itself into classes by eye color. There was no reason not to include other forms of diversity.
Science fiction isn’t immune to this either. In Stargate SG1, almost every character from Earth is white, while the Jaffa and Goa’uld host bodies are much more diverse. Even though neither Stargate nor the Way of Kings fall into direct stereotyping, they reinforce the idea of humanity being white by default and people of color being a strange other.
How to Avoid It
When writing non-human races into your setting, resist the urge to dumb humanity down. It’s true that you might not have time to do an in-depth cultural study of your humans when there are elves and dwarves waiting, but you probably have more room than you think. The Mass Effect universe is filled to the gills with aliens, but the designers still had plenty of room for diversity among the human characters.
Remember that you don’t have to justify diversity. Some authors think that if they want a black man in their epic fantasy story, they need a long backstory to explain him. Not so. Fantasy exists in a world of your own making. It can contain as much diversity as you like.
5. Minority Characters Have Nothing to Do

Some stories remember to include minority characters and then leave them to waste away. Nowhere is this better exemplified than Star Trek: Enterprise. There’re a lot of white people on the bridge, but two exceptions are Hoshi Sato and Travis Mayweather. At least the writers will treat these two characters well, right?
Nope! Neither of them have anything to do. Entire episodes go by with Travis saying nothing but the occasional status update. He’s the helmsman; surely it wouldn’t have been difficult to give him some cool lines during the show’s many space battles? Hoshi is treated even worse. She’s the ship’s translator, a super important job, but her few plot lines mostly focus on how she’s afraid of everything. In one episode, just for a change of pace, she’s sent on a mission to find a cake for Reed’s birthday while the ship is getting attacked by aliens. That’s how valued her character is.
Meanwhile, the show lavishes time on Captain Archer and Commander Tucker, mostly so they can be racist against Vulcans. It’s unclear why the writers thought they needed a story about Archer’s dog getting sick or Tucker getting mystically impregnated by an alien,* but they could have used that time to develop other characters instead.
Even though Hoshi and Travis are in the main cast, they’re shoved so far into the background, you could sometimes be forgiven for thinking they were extras. Enterprise is an extreme example, but this problem is all too common. Including diverse characters is great, but they have to matter to the plot as well.
How to Avoid It
When you add more diverse characters to your story, make sure you’re actually interested in them. Travis and Hoshi got pushed aside because the writers were more invested in other characters. If you find yourself bored with the minority characters, there’s a very simple solution: Make them more central to the story.
Instead of trying to carve out diversity on the edges of your story, put it front and center. This is when switching the race, gender, sexuality, etc. of a main character or two can come in handy. If your story only has room for three characters, you don’t try to add in two minority characters over that limit. Instead, you make the original three more diverse.
None of us want to be racist, but that isn’t enough. We need to make a conscious effort to eliminate the racism that creeps into our stories unbeknownst. As with sexism, it isn’t a task we’ll accomplished overnight, but it’s something we’ve got to keep working on. Our stories will be better for it.
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I usually love these articles, but could you please at least read The Way of Kings before you critize it?
Straight from Coppermind (Sanderson wiki) about Parshendi: “Their skin has either a marbled pattern of black and red or white and red, although the white and red is more common in Alethkar.”
And on Alethi: “Alethi are modeled on half Asian and half Hawaiian people, and according to Brandon, picturing Alethi as looking east-Indian works very well.”
Exactly. Thank you for pointing that out
Just to add to this, the “Alethi tan” and their darker hair is often described and is considered the beauty standard.
People from Jah Keved, like Shallan, have clear skin, but are still not white in the traditional sense. Pretty much the only “white” people in Roshar are the Shin, as all other have eyes with Epicanthic folds (and various other features).
The only reason to imagine a majority of white characters in the Stormlight Archives is because of our socialization to default to it (especially in positions of power), as pretty much all actual descriptions contradict it. Not even parallels to European cultures would indicate an all-white cast, as the peoples of Roshar often mix inspiration from various sources.
Just to clarify, Epicanthic folds happen among white people too. Unless you consider Poles or Hungarians as non-white :V
The thing that annoys me about this is that the book makes it clear the Parshendi are not black, but mixed coloured marbled skin, yet fanart tends to draw them as dark skinned with red armour.
This gives the impression that Sanderson has created a race that is black and either near-mute slaves or primitive warriors. Leading to accusations of racism whe not its the fans not the writer who have assigned them the skin colour and therefore the fault of the stereotyping does not lie with Sanderson who is an amazing writer and has done a fantastic job of diversifying the cast of the stormlight archive.
This article made some excellent points about perceptions of race in SFF genre including how The Way of Kings introduces and oversimplifies an entire subjugated race from unintentional parallels with real-world perceptions of race in the US. I’ve read the Stormlight Archives and I’ve devoured everything Sanderson has written. I don’t think that he intended for the first book to come off the way it did, and I think that he would benefit from reading this perspective and possibly agree with the thinks pointed out here, which is why some of these mistakes were addressed in later releases. In fact, I even recall a lecture from him where he addressed lessons he’s learned in fairly portraying PoC characters and fantasy race construction over the years. Brandon Sanderson is actually a pretty open-minded guy who admits to making mistakes like any other human being. I doubt he wants his fans shutting down PoC authors for expressing a balanced opinion.
Just for the record, while I agree Sanderson is unlikely to be bothered by anything I have to say, I am also white.
Often the easiest way to diversify is write/cast against stereotype. I’m thinking of The Librarians here where they cast Australian John Kim. He’s just Aussie. Not Asian Aussie, he doesn’t throw boomerangs, no other associated nonsense. In other words, people are just people.
I keep meaning to check that show out. Is it any good?
Sure it is! But be aware that is not serious and have a touch of comedy
Tyson Adams, Good point! “He doesn’t throw boomerangs” he will someday ?
Oren, I enjoyed the show a lot more than the TV movies. The movies were too cheesy-stupid for my liking. The show still has some cheese, but it works better. From the same team that made Leverage (one of my favourite shows), so it was always going to be fun. I haven’t bothered tuning into the second season though.
Also, I’m no longer receiving notifications of comment replies. Only saw this in the sidebar.
I do really love Leverage, so I’ll check it out. As for your issues with the subscription, we’re looking into that. It seems to be an issue with all commenters, hopefully we’ll get it fixed soon.
He’s a criminal (Australian stereotype) and a tech genius (Asian stereotype). Not really casting against stereotypes so much as combining them.
Hadn’t thought of it like that. Probably because most people don’t regard the criminal stereotype as anything other than a joke.
I’m an Australian. I wasn’t aware that we had a criminal stereotype.
These are great tips for making sure we as authors are being mindful of what we’re writing and how they can ‘Anglosize’ a book.
I do have one nit pick, though. ‘The Belgariad’ demonizes the entire Angarak race, regardless if where they are from. Eddings then spends most of the sequel series, ‘The Mallorean,’ knocking down those walls that were put up. It’s a nice example, where the main character meets these ‘evil’ Murgos and Malloreans and struggles with his own hatreds. Regardless of how wrong it was in the first series, I would have loved to have seen props for him breaking it down, too.
I’m glad I found this article for a couple of reasons. First, I am 100% cognizant of white privilege and my place of privilege because of it (I am white.) Secondly, my current WIP has a more diverse cast than I have written previously.
For example, the criminal defense attorney in the book is African American and while she is a secondary character in this book, she is a main character in the next. I want to create an exceptional character and I am doing my best to avoid stereotypes without sacrificing aspects of her character that speak to her human experience. She is not simply a character who happens to be black, but a woman of color with a voice that is proud, strong and powerful in her defense of others.
My question comes from another character (two actually) who are Mexican American. Both of them work for one of the main characters on her ranch in southern Nevada, modern day. One of them is the housekeeper and cook. The other (her son) is the ranch foreman. Mom is an immigrant, having come to America (legally) as a young adult. She has an accent and is incredibly motherly to the ranch hands and even her boss. She is much older than the rest of the cast, to which I attribute her “mother hen-ness.” Her son, on the other hand, was born in the US, has no accent and while he does work for the MC, he is in charge of the ranch. He isn’t in a subservient role.
My question is this: If we cast our characters into certain roles based upon reality in this world (a Mexican woman with little or no education arriving in the US in 1960 may likely find work as a maid or in some other domestic capacity not because of her race, but because she speaks little or no English and has little education) are we being inadvertently racist? Or are we being practical? She wanted a better life for her son, and worked hard his entire life to provide for him a bright future. He grew up on the ranch and ultimately worked his way up to foreman. Would his position in the ranch be racist in any way?
Thanks for your question, Cooke.
So, to be clear up front, I’m not the supreme arbiter of what is an is not racist, especially as a white dude myself. That’s why the post is about signs, not guaranties.
The mother character does sound to me like she might be setting off some stereotype signals, based only on your description. Obviously plenty of people are motherly and work as house keepers, and there’s nothing wrong with it, but that’s also the standard image we seem to have of immigrants from Mexico and other countries.
If you’re worried about that, my suggestion would be to give her some role that plays directly against stereotypes. You say she came to America without a lot of education, fair enough, but what if at some point in her past she discovered a gift for numbers, and now she’s the ranch’s accountant? Working ranches certainly need someone who’s good with numbers, and that doesn’t have to reduce her motherliness.
Anyway, that’s just my thought based on your description, not having actually read your story. The most important thing you can do is develop the characters in question the same way you’d develop anyone else, like human beings.
It sounds more to me that he is reflecting actual historical accuracy rather than succumbing to stereotypes. The key is in what time period this work is set in. If it’s decades and decades ago, then he’d have to work hard to put immigrant Mexican-Americans in ‘realistic’ occupations for the time. Set this in a more contemporary time, and those problems are less pressing. A comparison would be setting a story in suffragette-era Britain but making the female protagonist the head of a bank when women were generally deliberately blocked from such positions, or having a black protagonist in the deep South not encounter racism.
I ran this by my husband, who is Mexican-American and grew up as a migrant farm worker. From his view, there isn’t anything racist about the scenario you describe. It is stereotypical, but not necessarily negative or insulting. Problems would happen if the character becomes a cardboard cut-out–nothing more than a brown face and a few Spanish phrases. So, make her a well rounded character, with likes and dislikes, virtues and vices, like any individual. Remember that someone who comes from a different culture doesn’t live for years in a new country without picking up new ideas, preferences, etc.
Generally a decent article with good points.
One nitpick, the actor who plays Chakotay is, in fact, Native American. His tribe comes from Mexico, but are still part of the native population.
During his audition, he actually ended up arguing his way into the part. He was told he did well, but that they were looking to cast a Native American. He argued that he was Native American and Mexican.
To me, this detail actually adds to your point. The producers were looking to get their diversity cred from simply casting an actor with a particular background, but did not know or care enough to actually know who fit the background. If this is representative of the attitude towards Chakotay, one can easily see why the character was a messy mash-up of Native American clichés. Also, the source material from TNG that set up Native Americans as they exist in the Star Trek universe was similarly bad about cliché, but is important to some of the background development that would have improved Chakotay as a character.
While I don’t deny that racism exists in fiction, I find these examples extremely weak in proving the ‘we’re sometimes inadvertently racist’ argument. I laughed out loud when you used a picture of Uruk-Hai to illustrate the ‘don’t make your antagonists dark-skinned’ point. So the bad guys can’t have dark skin, period? Even when they’re monsters? This is bending over backwards to be PC.
Diversity among casts has now swung so completely in the opposite direction that it’s now common to see anachronistic multi-race casts even in settings where they have no reason to be there. The most glaring example was the BBC’s ‘Merlin’ series, where in Arthurian England several thousand years ago, we have mixed-race and black handmaidens (complete with cockney accents, just to rub the ‘look! We’re so PC we recruit minority black actors from London!’ message in just a bit harder). If a work has a race of red, green, yellow or white-skinned people as antagonists, so what? Like you claim, character matters more. I don’t care whether a character in NCIS or Stargate is white, black, Asian, middle eastern or any other extraction – I care if the character is relatable, believable and whether I can understand their motivations. That’s where shows like NCIS triumph whether others just wheel a procession of characters of different ethnicities in front of the camera to tick all the demographic boxes.
This type of article reminds me of the sexism arguments from 20 or so years ago, which by the time anyone really noticed wasn’t even an issue anyway. Female characters even in the 90s were becoming far less cliched and far more fleshed out. It only still seems to be an issue because writers like Joss Whedon STILL get asked ‘why do you write such strong female characters?’ ‘Because you keep asking that question.’
Point of order: Medieval Europe was actually a far more diverse place than we’re often lead to believe. NPR did a piece on it a while back. It also seems a stretch to say that Merlin is supposed to take place in any “historical” setting.
Krssven has a point, though. Sometimes I watch a show and think: “This cast was just chosen to demonstrate ethnic diversity.” Doctor Who for example seems very keen to make a point about ethnically-mixed couples. I get the impression every white person in Britain has a black boyfriend or girlfriend, and certainly vice versa!
Choosing people just for diversity is a little weak. It’s a fine line, though, because it’s totally legit to have a team of characters mirror the diversity of the population they come from.
I’m a little in the middle here. For instance, including a black character into a medieval setting would make this person and his/her skin an issue. Yes, there were black people in Europe in the middle ages, especially in Spain, given their history, but very few people in what is now Germany or Britain would have just accepted a black person without noticing how he/she is different and “doesn’t belong” there. This isn’t necessarily a bad thing for the story, but it needs to be adressed.
I guess the bottom line is: All in all I agree with your article, but I would warn the readers not to annoy their audience with it.
> “This cast was just chosen to demonstrate ethnic diversity.”
Well, no, not just because of that. Presumably they were also picked because they have enough talent to sell their performances on a middling-popular TV show, they show up on time, hit their marks, remember their lines, and can do all the other things that professional actors do to make a living.
Also, bear in mind that the casting was probably done in London, which is one of the most ethnically diverse cities in the world, and, being a sci-fi show, there’s no particular need to conform to whatever anyone thinks is “realistic” — something which often turns out to be more “normal-istic”.
Now take US shows, or at least the shows that get exported to the UK: ever since Kirk kissed Uhura, US productions have seemed strangely reluctant to show any couples of differing race. I can’t remember the last time I saw an African-American of either gender paired with a European-American of either gender on a broadcast network. Strike that, I can: Six Feet Under, David Fisher and his boyfriend. But that was over a decade ago. If there have been more, they do not seem to be as common as real life. Are you sure that you’re reacting to a diversity that does not reflect reality, and not to a diversity that does not reflect the TV you’re used to?
Deep Space 9 had Jadzia/Worf. Firefly had Zoe/Wash. Those are just a couple examples off the top of my head, but I’ll be paying closer attention to that topic. No point patting ourselves on the back if we don’t maintain the effort.
I’m not a fan of the BBC Merlin series, but as a somewhat related point, in Sir Thomas Mallory’s La Morte D’Arthur (written in the 1400’s), we have at least three dark-skinned knights, including Palomides the Saracen, who was badass enough to hold his own against some of the best knights of Camelot.
The most glaring example was the BBC’s ‘Merlin’ series, where in Arthurian England several thousand years ago, we have mixed-race and black handmaidens
There were black people in Britain then.
Ever since the Romans, if not earlier – so a good deal before Arthur.
Enjoyed the article. Do you think this issue is the reason the Orcs on The Hobbit were pale? Unlike those portrayed in Lord of the Rings who were all dark skinned.
I can’t say for sure, but it wouldn’t surprise me. Also nice for the visual distinction, even though I found those sections rather forced.
Well, the entire trilogy was rather forced, so there you go.
Great article! If I may add, another problem I notice when it comes to minority stereotypes, and don’t see many people pointing out, is about people with albinism. There are very few people with this condition portrayed in stories, but the worst part is that it seems whenever the audience is introduced to a character with albinims (or, at least, remarkably white-skinned/haired as to look almost like so), this character is always a villain. To think of a few examples, the monk in DaVinci’s Code, the evil monk from The Princess Bride, the twins from The Matrix, the “Pale Orc” from The Hobbit movie… Is is just a coincidence the stories I happened to know show this “evil white” thing, or is this harmful stereotype really out there?
You have a point there … I can’t remember any character with albinism not portrayed as evil or at least bad.
Actually, today I was reminded of the first Detective Dee movie which features an albino character who is not a villain.
I know this is 3 years old but I’ve been on a Mythcreant kick lately. Just wanted to mention a movie called Powder. I use to really like it as a kid. I can’t say it’s a remarkably great movie but the protagonist is an albino.
And I just noticed someone mentioned him further down.
Michael Moorcock’s Elric of Melniboné is… well, he’s an albino, and in his case, it’s not always clear whether he’s a hero or not; certainly, he brings a lot of death and destruction to those around him. I guess he sort of straddles the line. But he’s the protagonist of the stories, and I’d say he’s more of a tragic figure than a villain, what with having this awful relationship with a sword that sustains his life but needs to eat souls and all.
Boo Radley in To Kill A Mockingbird is an albino, I guess? (Or is he just super pale because he spends so much time indoors?)
Geralt of Rivia, the main character of The Witcher franchise is an albino.
In The Grey King, one of the The Dark is Rising books, one of the heroic kids is an albino, and he turns out to be the son of King Arthur.
It does feel like heroic/good examples of albino characters are vastly outweighed the by evil and villainous ones.
Geralt and all other witchers are actually magically/genetically altered, he is not an albino in the traditional sense. The white hair is a side effect of the treatments they’re submitted to.
True. But just to be precise – the white hair is a chemical/alchemical/magical mutation unique to Geralt because he was subjected to a slightly different procedure. If I recall the books correctly the other Witchers had unchanged hair colours.
Jeremy from “Powder”
Well spotted. Even the Temeraire books do this, despite their focus on social justice. Although at least in this case Lien (an albino dragon who is a major villain) has sympathetic motivations and understandable goals.
Akita Witch, set in Nigeria, the main character has albinism. It’s remarked upon, but not her defining feature (having magical abilities is seen as a far more pressing matter).
Love the article.
I do feel the urge to nitpick about one particular detail, though — Nobu’s an Asian guy who knows martial arts, yeah, and he fits the trappings of that stereotype, BUT in that particular instance, he doesn’t know martial arts because he’s Asian, it’s because he’s a high-ranking representative of the Hand, an Asian ninja organization that is an integral part of Daredevil lore. Or, to put it another way, he’s not a random Asian mob boss who just happens to be a ninja because obviously all Asians are ninjas.
That doesn’t necessarily mean that whole setup doesn’t have its problems, I should perhaps add, but I think the context does matter. (And granted, said context may not be obvious based on the first season of Daredevil, but it’s been a part of the comics since 1981, and they were building up to the Hand being a major element in season two.)
In any case, again: love the article.
Hi, love the article, but I need to be slightly nitpicky here.
Nobu from Daredevil is actually a slightly modern spin on Hironubu Yoshioka, leader of The Hand syndicate of ninjas. They’re a recurring villain in the Daredevil universe. His Japanese stereotypical behavior is because he’s either based on or actually is a Samurai from the Ashikaga period.
Considering the other people with backgrounds based on ninjutsu are Daredevil, Stick, and Elektra and one of those is a dark skinned woman and two of those are pretty white guys – they aren’t afraid of having ninjas who aren’t Japanese. They could probably have more Asian characters who aren’t ninjas, but it’s a little unfair to call it racist.
It is, of course, true that loudspeakers on mosques aren’t “imposing and scary, blaring out words of oppression”, but anyone claiming that “they’re not any worse than any other forms of media” has plainly never lived with one pointed at his or her bedroom window.
“Idiot box” or not, at least my tv has the courtesy not to turn itself on at top volume at 4 a.m. every $%*&@^# morning.
Sulu was an Asian character in Star Trek and was one of the people that worked alongside Chekov, who was Russian, while piloting the Enterprise.
True. The original Star Trek was all about true diversity and equality. That was always Roddenberry’s goal; to show a glimpse of how the future COULD be. He even went against stereotype on purpose, making Sulu’s favorite sword a French foil, not an Asian weapon. Spock was even supposed to be a woman (his wife) but the network excs couldn’t have that.
I am the biggest Trekkie of the ORIGINAL. Sadly, he died during the run of the TNG. When he did, I noticed the later franchises (and even the TNG episodes) grew much darker, more violent, and much less diverse than the original.
RIP Mr. Roddenberry. You’re original is still what we should strive for in stories and life.
I still feel the original was a bit sexist (I mean women unable to captain star ships, rapey scenes, and whatever that eisode where they were worried Scotty would hate women for all time since one beat him up? Jack the Ripper one.)
Also it was George Takei’s idea for the fencing sword, not Rodenberry’s.
As far as diversity I think Deep Space 9 and Voyager managed fairly well in that regard, sometimes better than the Original. (even if how they showed Chakotay was absolutely cringe worthy)
In the reboots of the original, particularly Star Trek: Beyond, Uhura proves to be badass.
I never knew that it was Rodenberry’s idea, but, yeah. Sulu with a fencing sword? Not helpful in ANY mission for a Starfleet Officer of the Federation.
In TOS fencing was just his hobby, though, it wasn’t meant to be used in battle.
Just as Spock playing the Vulcan harp and Uhura singing weren’t relevant to the missions … they were ways to flesh out the characters and show more about those people than just how they solved their problems.
The Star Trek Academy is at least a SEMI-Military institution and they would be encouraged to do athletics. I did Fencing in College without any military background at all, but it was EXCELLENT exercise and a very difficult skill to learn, whether useful or not!
Thanks for writing these articles. They have helped me to realize that one of my own WIPs is actually a bit racist. To fix this, I have decided to make another character black, but I’m having trouble finding a good place to communicate this to the reader. The character is introduced in the first chapter and is relatively important so I want to say it right away. I don’t want to make it seem like I’m going out of my way to say it though because that would suggest that there’s something strange about being black. Do you have any advice?
Hey Evin, you’re very welcome, glad you liked the article.
As I haven’t read your story, I can’t comment on the details for sure, but I have a question: why does it feel strange to describe a character as black? Would their skin color not be something the POV character would immediately notice?
I suspect that it feels weird because we’re not used to describing a character’s race when they’re white, so describing them when they’re black, Asian, etc feels strange to us. So you might find it easier to casually describe your black character’s race if you did the same with your white characters.
Alternatively, if straight up saying “this character is black” is what’s giving you trouble, you could just describe them as having darker skin and readers should get the message. Just avoid food metaphors ;)
I’m glad you’re willing to ask this kind of question. I’ve been there too, and it’s a challenge to change course.
Thank you for the reply. The reason it’s so difficult that I forgot to mention is that my protagonist isn’t meeting this character, they’ve been friends for a while. And I didn’t casually describe the white characters’ race either; I in fact hate physical descriptions in general and stay away from them whenever possible, but in the case of someone’s race not matching what I know the audience will assume I suppose it’s necessary.
In this case, perhaps you can have someone they meet for the first time mention it? Being surprised, perhaps, because the protagonist hasn’t mentioned their friend is black before?
I’d try to simply work that into a sequence as a bit of description, not making a big fuss about it, just suggesting his/her skin is darker or something similar. You could also put it into a dialogue where it will fit or do something similar. You don’t have to outright say ‘I’m now introducing a black character.’
What is your POV character’s reaction to meeting that character for the first time? What is the first thing they notice? Height, build, voice? It’s okay if it’s ‘hey, that person is black!’ if you also make clear that’s unexpected and why the POV character is not expecting it.
In CW’s The Flash, Cisco is Mexican-American, part of the main cast, smart, has badass powers AND makes pretty cool comments. Also, In the Star Trek reboots, it’s Spock (not Kirk) that has a romantic relationship with Uhura. And to make matters WEIRDER? Uhura’s in love with a half-human/half-alien hybrid. And, as far as Flash goes, Barry is currently dating Iris, who is an African-American AND part of the main cast, and not to mention a reporter. Also, in Supergirl, there are two black men part of the main cast. Martian Manhunter/head of D.E.O. and James Olsen, Supergirl’s former love interest/vigilante superhero, head of Catco Worldwide Media and best friends with Superman. Originally Jimmy Olsen was white. Back to Star Trek, originally, Asian people were enemies/comic relief, not so in Star Trek, since Sulu is co-piloting the ship WITH Chekov, and Russians were mostly portrayed as the enemy, but Chekov was an exception. And, combat wise, Chekov, Scotty, AND Bones would stink as a captain. Sulu would be OKAY, Uhura would be a better fit since she’s a lieutenant. Kirk is obviously captain, but if he was down, Spock would have to take the role, and Spock is not just a science officer, but a first officer to make it interesting. If he was just one of them, he wouldn’t be as interesting, probably, let alone capable
Iris maybe isn’t the best example as (unless season 3 changes), she’s a bit nothingy. But there’s also Joe, who Barry regards as a father figure on a par with his biological (and still living, for a while) father – faced with the chance to save his mother from death and father from prison, Barry saw losing that relationship as a huge deal – so much so he wavered about doing it.
And Linda, a temporary love interest for Barry was Asian – plus, she and Iris had a refreshing lack of antipathy for each other (though that part’s more about sexism than racism).
One should avoid stereotypes because they make for lazy and uninteresting storytelling. But the advice for avoiding unintentional racism is ridiculous. The example the author gives of the black character who cannot swim is a perfect example. Filtering one’s writing through a matrix that will render it as bland as possible only creates pablum.
Take the character of Chakotay on Star Trek: Voyager. He is picked apart here for being a racist stereotype. But the whole purpose of his character was to placate the mid-90’s conception of diversity. Similar false efforts today will be trashed in another 20 years.
Real art is a reflection of truth, not propaganda. And that is what one is writing when one curbs one’s creative instincts to adhere to an agenda- no matter how noble the objective.
Here is some alternate advice: write what is in your heart. If what is there is good then don’t worry if others misconstrue your motives. If what is there is ugly then put it out there just the same and take your licks. Trade the checklist for self-awareness and have the courage to be who you are.
Chakotay, a diversity hire? As if. They didn’t ask any actual Native Americans to help round him out. They didn’t get a Native actor to play him. They didn’t specify his tribe. From day one, he was heavily criticized, and in response, rather than actually step up to their errors, the producers doubled down on their stereotypical portrayal.
“Real art is a reflection of truth, not propaganda”
How is truth determined if one is using “creative instincts?” What truths are we talking about, here? Can you give an example? Can you give an example of propaganda endorsed by this article?
“to adhere to an agenda”
How does one determine if there is or is not an agenda? What kind of agendas are we talking about here?
“Trade the checklist for self-awareness”
I’m pretty sure these “five signs” are intended to help you begin to acquire self-awareness by asking questions about your work. By all means, write what is “in your heart,” but never dare to not question it.
A good article.
Editor’s note: I removed a comment for blatant insults.
My comment is a bit late, since this article is from last year, but I’d still like to post it.
Chakotay is one of my favourite characters in Voyager, despite the cringeworthy stereotyping (it’s like they were trying to tick all the boxes: medicine wheel, dream catcher, vegetarian, spirit guide, storyteller…) I’ve always wondered if Robert Beltran actually protested at any point, or if they asked for his advice at all. Maybe I’m just naive, but it would make sense to ask the actor.
But the episode about him coming in contact with his “alien ancestors” is something I’ve noticed quite a few times: the suggestion that any kind of profound knowledge or advanced skills of a non-white people, must certainly be alien. Aliens must have visited the Native American tribes to share secret knowledge with them, Egyptians didn’t build the pyramids, aliens did.. the Sumerians did not invent writing (and other things the Ancient Greeks have been credited with), those were aliens as well, or maybe the Sumerians were an alien race themselves… I mean, they’re all far-fetched conspiracy-type theories, but they’re still a symptom of white supremacy, and they’re easily used in fiction. Only the white, male, Enlightened person can apparently be clever and successfully practise science and philosophy.
4. What is the story doesn’t include human beings at all?
Then that particular point probably wouldn’t apply, though it still could if you have one group of non-humans who are pretty close to humans (say, elves) and white, while having another group that’s much further from humans and clearly reads as black or some other non-human race (say, orcs).
I’ve been watching Stargate SG1 and I got to the Thor’s Hammer episode and I’ve already had enough. Really? I mean, I get that all the bad guys are dark skinned, and all advanced and benevolent races are white. Sure. Standard stuff. But why every minority token character thrown in there has to be some broken character that needed to be saved? ugh.
Thank you for answers, but I still have two questions:
1. I usually write characters with various skin colors, mostly of those that human beings can’t have (pink, blue, green, purple, orange etc). What should be considered in this situation?
2. What do you think of depicting “fantastic racism” (eg, elves bigoted against unicorn people)? Can it be racist in the sense of justifying real-life racism? What should be considered in this situation?
It’s not so much the question of the skin colour, I guess. If those people with pink, blue, green, etc skin are treated no different from the ‘standard’ skin colour (whichever one that might be), it doesn’t matter. Skin colour and ethnicity among humans are a problem, because people are treated differently because of them. If you want to make, say, people treat your green-coloured populace worse because of their skin, you have the same things to look out for as you would for a POC in a modern (or even not-quite-modern) setting.
Racism is always a difficult topic, no matter who is being discriminated against. It can be elves or dwarves (or non-humans in general), it could be humans in an elf-controlled world. As soon as you portray racism, you shouldn’t justify it in your story (by making all ‘whatever is the reason for the racism’ people a bad person who actually deserves the treatment). And, especially if you write from the POV of a person who suffers from racism (or sexism, or other -isms), you should seek information from people who really go through it and you should consider if your skill is high enough to portray it well.
There isn’t a hard science to this, but in my experience when we give characters fantastic skin coloration, audiences still tend to read them as white by default. If you say a character has brown skin, we know they aren’t white, but if they have blue skin it’s like the brain defaults from that impossible option back to white.
There are ways around this of course. You can use things like culture, names, and other signifies to code characters as not white. This isn’t necessarily something you *have* to do, since the further your creatures differ from humans in appearance the harder it will get to code them properly, and that may just be too great a burden on your story. It’ll help if the story has definite diversity in other ways of course.
As for fantasy racism, I always recommend that as the safer alternative to using real racism. It buffers you against accidentally harming people in real life.
There are still important things to consider when using fantasy racism though. You want to make sure it’s not a thinly veiled analogy for real racism, for one thing. But most importantly, you have to consider the context.
In real life, black people are not inherently dangerous to white people. The stereotype that they are is conjured out of thin air to justify bigotry. In a fantasy world, this might not be the case. Consider The Wheel of Time. In that setting, male magic users are inherently dangerous, so discrimination against them is justified on some level. So if you have fantasy racism where some of the prejudices have basis in fact, you have to write it differently than you would racism in the real world.
Considering the context will help make sure your story doesn’t come across as justifying real racism.
I wonder whether a good approach to this would be similar to how we (should) approach the possibility of genetic discrimination. The important thing to remember about genes is that in many or most cases they’re probabilistic, not deterministic. Your genes may say you have a high susceptibility to cardiac arrest, but that doesn’t mean it’ll actually happen, and often there are steps and lifestyle choices you can take and make to prevent it from happening. In terms of writing fantasy racism, this could mean that a certain race is considered predisposed to certain things – and so there is a certain underlying wariness or animosity towards them – but the truth is, that preposition is not the end-all be-all.
This could provide some basis for a racism that doesn’t exist in real life (people in real life are not more or less disposed to do violence or commit crimes – that’s mostly based on upbringing from what I understand) and show how your world can grow (by realizing that these predispositions are probabilistic and learning not to judge the fantasy race by them).
I wonder what’s better to do in such situation? Maybe, it’s better to make character’s skin dark (although their skin color might deviate from human coloration), so they would resemble people of color and not white people? Or add some “token white person”, to show others are not white?
If you want for people to react to people with certain skin colour(s) differently, just do that. Make it clear they are treated differently, because their skin is blue (or pink or green…). In that case, however, you will have racism based on skin colour in your world and need to be careful with it. It’s true that we usually treat ‘fantasy skin colours’ as a version of the ‘standard skin colour’ in the setting. However, in a fantasy world, people with dark skin don’t necessarily have to be treated differently. Personally, I think that humans will find skin colour much less of a difference, once there’s elves, dwarves, or orcs (or all of them) around to discriminate against, because they’re not human (or an alien species of your choice, if you’re going more sci-fi). Since we are (as far as we know) the only sentient species on Earth, we tend to live out our Xenophobia by finding differences within our own species (and both ethnicity, aka race, and gender are easy to see). The skin doesn’t even have to be dark, the Nazis considered people ‘less worthy’ merely for darker hair and non-blue eyes (because Aryans were thought to be the blond, blue-eyed, well-build übermensch). As soon as you have a ‘we against them’ thing in your setting, things similar to racism and/or sexism happen.
I also wonder, what could mean that “the character is read as white”, if it’s clearly mentioned that they’re light-blue or dark-purple? In the comments to your article “Five Tips for Telling Stories of Resistance”, such topics was discussed, but people said it meant that the character’s oppression wouldn’t be linked to their skin color by readers. But if the narrative has no oppression, how could “fantastically-skinned” characters be “read as white”?
I think I have answered this in the other comment thread as well, but here we go:
Skin colour linked to oppression or, in a lighter form, discrimination is a reality of our world, but, and that is the point, we only know automatically which skin colours could face discrimination or oppression, if we know the colours, if they’re real. Blue or purple or green are not real skin colours. And everything not real is very much understood as part of standard (and standard is still very much ‘straight and white’). Those skin colours aren’t treated differently from, say blue or purple or green hair in real life. They are not automatically linked to oppression or discrimination. If you want to use one of those skin colours as a stand-in for a real skin colour, then you need to communicate it in the story. People will not read ‘character X had deep-blue skin’ and immediately assume that character X has faced discrimination or worse because of that skin colour, whereas if they read ‘character X had dark-brown skin,’ they’ll assume it, unless told otherwise (for, of course, dark-skinned people might not face oppression or discrimination in your fantasy world).
Racism always happens because a society has picked a specific trait (and skin colour is an easy-to-spot trait, unlike, say, being of a specific religion) and treats people badly, because they have that trait. The explanation for it may vary. Dark-skinned people were for a long time said to be ‘less civilized’ or even ‘hardly human’ – which served as an excuse to enslave them. Nazis claimed Jews were warmongers and only focused on their own gain (and had instigated and controlled the development of WWI), so they had a reason to hate them and oppress them. Needless to say there’s no true word in that. The yellow Star of David was necessary with the Jewis oppression in Nazi Germany, because ‘being a Jew’ is much harder to spot for the onlooker than ‘being black.’ By forcing all people categorized as ‘Jewish’ (who weren’t even necessarily practicing the religion, having a Jewis parent or grandparent was sufficient) to wear that star on a visible spot of clothing, they made the Jews easy to spot and that made it easy to oppress them. Skin colour doesn’t need such a sign, it’s clearly visible.
I think that you missed the point. It’s possible to include black people in the story, but they can face no oppression (since the fantastic world can be more diverse, and there can be no reason for, for example, elven society to oppress black human beings). But if all humanoid characters are given fantastic skin colors and no one suffers any oppression (since society is much different from ours and is actually egalitarian), how does “non-existent skin colors read as white” be applied to that story? If a main character is a purple-skinned faerie, everyone else has a fantastic skin color, and racism isn’t part of the story, how does that apply?
‘Non-existent skin colours read as white’ means no more or less than that the reader will assume everyone not member of a real-life marginalized group will have grown up the way the privileged group has. Since blue-, green-, or purple-skinned people do not exist in reality and thus cannot be oppressed in reality (on account of not existing, nobody oppresses a non-existent group), they are automatically considered members of the standard/normal/privileged group. That is meant when someone says ‘they’re read as white.’
I’m really glad that you mentioned Mass Effect, because it does a good job both having a diverse cast and talking about actual racism* in a science-fiction setting. There’s some really interesting visual and narrative clues that I hope are good writing (rather than just a lack of diverse background characters). While the humans you encounter are a variety of races with no particular stereotyping (of two significant reporters, one Asian and one Middle Eastern; Admiral Anderson, highly respected and the PC’s father figure is black), there is a clear racial bias in the those who discriminate against aliens. The members of the “Terra First” anti-alien group who show up at a protest are all white, and Cerberus, a xenophobic organization that sabotages anything associated with non-human sentients, has only one black member, who the leader disapproves of. I hope all of that is good writing, rather than simply a lack of diversity in the randomly generated background characters.
*Not just human vs alien racism, but that too.
2. I also wonder whether does it apply to fictional stereotypes. Is it racist, for example, if Air Faeries are shown as (for example) selfish, and all Air Faerie characters in the story are shown as selfish? (I’m not writing a story like that, just wondering)
It is not, it’s only stereotyping. To be racist, it must have negative consequences for the air faeries. In your example, ‘air faeries are selfish’ is a predjudice. Making all air faeries in the story selfish is a stereotype, based on that predjudice. It’s not a good way to write a story, but it happens often enough … see ‘planet of hats,’ where all members of a species are defined by one or two traits, which can happen in all kinds of spec fics.
Let me give you another example, which might make it clear to you.
Predjudice: All blondes are dumb (they’re not, but it’s a well-known predjudice, so there’s that).
Stereotype: All blondes in your story are dumb.
Racism (although making ‘blonde’ a race didn’t go too well for us Germans in the past): Because everyone knows they’re all dumb, blondes are not allowed to go to school.
The last part it what makes the -ism (if I said ‘women’ instead of ‘blondes,’ it would be sexism, because it’s gender-based, while racism is based on ancestry). Racism isn’t predjudice or stereotyping, racism (and other assorted -isms like sexism) is when all members of a group defined by a predjudice face negative consequences such as oppression or discrimination. If people with African-American sounding names are not invited for job interviews, no matter their qualifications, it’s racism (and, yes, that happens). Only saying ‘African-Americans can’t be bankers’ would be a stupid predjudice.
In “Five Signs Your Story is Sexist” I wondered about gender-bending. I also wonder about race-bending. What do you think of character changing skin color? Or, for example, human being becoming a faerie?
The first thing to be aware of is that in a lot of circles “Race Bending” has a very negative connotation, as it usually means a character was one race in the original story, but changed to a different race in an adaptation. While it can technically refer to white characters who are changed into a POC, it’s usually meant to describe the reverse, also called white washing. There’s even a website for it!
http://www.racebending.com/v4/about/what-is-racebending/
In general, a person changing race is not the same as changing gender. This is a complex, ever changing conversation, but in general, gender is seen as internal, something a person either just knows or chooses for themself. (also note that it’s different to have a character change gender or race within a single story, as opposed to being a different gender or race in an adaptation)
Meanwhile, race is an entirely external concept. There’s no biological basis for race, it’s entirely social in nature. That doesn’t mean it isn’t real, just that it’s not something a person can change.
People who transition across gender lines are being true to themselves. People who transition across race lines are appropriating someone else’s identity, at least in the case of a white person claiming to identify as a person of color.
So I would definitely recommend against a character who changes race like that. On the other hand, a character who changes skin color is not automatically changing race. Mystique (from Xmen) doesn’t become black when she uses her powers to look like Storm, she’s just wearing a disguise for a while. So a character who can change their looks, including skin color, should be fine as long as they don’t claim to actually be a new, less privileged race.
Likewise, I don’t think there’s any inherent problem with a human who can turn into a faire. Of course, it could become a problem if the human is a POC and the faire they turn into is coded white, but so long as you avoid that you should be in the clear.
That’s interesting. Of course I didn’t mean “white person becoming person of color”, and I meant exactly that — skin color change (I thought of it as due to activating magical abilities) and fantastic race-shift (I call them races and not species, because in my story they are not like humans and animals — human can marry elf and have children, for example). Also, I wonder, what does “white coded” mean and who can be “white coded”? If, for example, a narrative features a dark-skinned elf from a fictional culture, is there a risk that this character will be “white coded”? What are the signs and how to avoid it?
“White coded” means a set of characteristics which are normally associated with white people (or not associated with people of colour). Being considere the default of your species is pretty much the same as being white coded.
If you have, say, an Asian main character who is then turned into a faerie which is blond, has fair skin, and blue eyes, that character would have been turned into a white-coded character (because those are physical characteristics associated with white people). If your faerie are usually described as having blue skin, green hair, and red eyes, that would be the ‘white’ of your faerie populace, even though they are not fair-skinned by human standards.
So, is that possible to avoid this simply by adding faerie character with various colors of skin, eyes and hair?
No, it’s not. You can have a faerie society where different skin colours and other markers don’t count and they might still discriminate against or even oppress faeries simply for not having magic, not having the right magic, being from the wrong area etc. Racism is often tied to outward appearance, but simply changing a skin colour or making up skin colour for your characters doesn’t erase it. It’s all up to how people treat each other.
I think you should think your story through again. You change a human into a faerie. Are they a faerie of similar social status than before or has it changed? If they have a different status, you need to take a look at white-coding (they’re suddenly a member of the privileged group and weren’t before -> white-coding). If they’re even more marginalized than they were as humans, be careful about how you work with that. If they have, more or less, the same status, you’re in the green.
Also, I’ve seen people referred to the “character of color in the book becomes white character in the film” thing as whitewashing, and “white character in the book becomes character of color in the film” thing as racebending (e.g. to tell the difference in social justice implications between whitewashing and racebending).
If I write a short-story about elves and faeries, and have dark-skinned elves, is it a good idea to refer to them as Dark Elves, or does it has negative connotations and therefore, it’s worth choosing another name?
In a lot of fantasy stories I’ve read over time ‘dark’ is more likely to refer to ‘evil’ or ‘user of dark powers,’ so you might want to find another way to identify them. But then, nothing is easier than to come up with a new name for a group in a fantasy setting of your own design.
I’d like to ask, what advice could you give to name dark-skinned elves? Is it better to refer to their skin color (like, Midnight Elves), geographical location (like, Sunshine River Elves), or choose just random term (like, Flower Elves)?
Usually, people refer to themselves by their location or by a name which means something in their native tongue. So Sunshine River Elves or something from their own language (if you’re giving them one, which seems unlikely for a short story) is a better choice. Rivers, mountains, or other clear markers of location are always a good bet for naming a group.
As an example: In Elfquest, the Wolfriders take their name from their mounts (with whom they also share a deep bond), the Sunfolk from the location (in the sunny desert), the Gliders from their usual way of travelling (on back of a large bird or, in one case, by flight), and the Go-Backers from the fact that they went back to the place where their ancestors crashlanded.
Why is everyone so focused on this topic anymore that they have to go picking at works of fantasy to find nonexistent forms of racism?? Orcs have skin as black as pitch in most cases not to depict black people but to reflect the black emptiness of their heart and soul. To try and reinforce the fact that they’re evil. Ex: Tolkien orcs typically have pitch black skin, but if you pay attention, were once elves. They were tortured and corrupted to become orcs. Side note, most goblins are either green or pale colored and there are plenty of pale skinned orcs across the universes of fantasy. Also not all orcs have a dark complexion. Ex: gothmog from Lotr, Azog the defiler in the hobbit, and the orcs of Skyrim. Gothmog has white skin, azog is white as snow, and the orcs of Skyrim are green. Trying to throw slander all over something that millions enjoy just so you can try to sound racially empathetic is just wrong. Stereotypes can go either way,, depending on how crudely they’re depicted sometimes they’re funny. Some of the stereotypes are white people. Ex: the men that tried to rape and murder Sansa Stark were all white but we’re not saying that it’s racist that every piece of trash in a game or movie is typically white…. we just think they’re trash. There also happen to be uncountable numbers of minority characters that are main characters and very important. I’m not gonna comment on sexism in fantasy because often female warriors are barely armored to look sexy, but to be completely honest……. if it weren’t fantasy, (in most cases) it takes place in a time when wemon would have had no rights and were pretty much equal to property, and weren’t aloud to be soldiers or hold any important office aside from the roles of princess or queen. I’m also a male as is probably 85% of the gamer and or couch potato community so it should kind of be expected (wether right or not). But there are plenty of female warriors that aren’t in skimpy armor Ex: Eowen of lotr and breinne of tarth from game of thrones. I’m not trying to bash your writing the article was very well done and I think you should keep writing… just maybe try not to find hate in places where there is none, after all fantasy is based on myth, legend, and imagination. They’re commonly filled with places and species that don’t really exist and the heroes are usually based on the race of the author. Still a well written article and seriously keep writing them if you enjoy it, and to anyone who may read this thread, don’t go bashing someone else’s work. That is NOT okie dokie!! Offer constructive criticism as a replacement for trash talking and hate filth.
Editor’s Note: I’ve deleted a comment for equating trans folks with people who claim to be “trans racial” like Rachel Dolezal. While it likely wasn’t intentional, that sort of comment is inherently transphobic, as it compares gender expression to a type of harmful appropriation.
However, since the issues involved are complex, I’ll try to offer some educational material on the subject.
Mainly, there was some confusion over my comment that there’s no biological or scientific basis for race. While this might seem confusing, given that we mostly judge race based on appearances, this is actually a fairly uncontroversial take in scientific circles. You can read more about it in this National Geographic piece:
https://www.nationalgeographic.com/magazine/2018/04/race-genetics-science-africa/
The short version is that while there are a collection of physical characteristics we often associate with race, they are incredibly arbitrary and don’t hold up to any sort of rigorous scrutiny.
For example, Jews are generally considered a race, but you would never guess I was Jewish by looking at me. Greeks are usually considered white, but the average Greek often looks more like the average Arab or Turk than they do like an English person.
The list goes on. A child of a black parent and a white parent is usually considered black, because that label is socially applied, regardless of which parent they more resemble. There’s no consistent definition for what a Latinix person “looks” like.
As the author of the deleted post I am further confused but I asure you that I meant no harm to trans folks or anyone else.
To reply to your post, there is evidently a huge difference in the meaning of the word “race” where you are from and where I am from (and as officially taught by our schools). I would never think of Jews, Greeks, Turks or Arabs or Latinos as different races from my own white Slavic self. As taught here, these peoples are all white.
A child of a black parrent and a white parrent would be considered “mulat” (I am not aware of any negative conotations of the word, if I’m wrong I appologize) and if people here were forced to asign such child to either the black or the white race, they would probably say white (there actuallly was some research with that exact question and exactly that outcome).
I am convinced that it would be so in most countries of the world with the obvious exception of the USA or maybe the anglophone cultural sphere. Frankly describing all those peoples as being different races feels completely absurd in a way of building-walls-where-there-should-be-none. I am afraid that it is an United States cultural specific.
If it is not much trouble, could you please offer some insight on the topic “harmful appropriation” in relation to people who claim to be “trans racial” ?
I feel that this is the cornerstone of the prior misunderstanding, for which I am sorry.
See, if you were taught that Turks, Arabs, and Latinos are white, that’s a strong indicator of how socially defined racial categories are. While there are certain physical characteristics that are more common in certain population groups than others, none of these are robust enough to give race a scientific underpinning.
As for the harm of claiming to be trans racial, the short version is that people color face real discrimination and violence, physical or otherwise, because their race is culturally marginalized. Having a white person take on that identity like a costume is incredibly dismissive and insulting. If you want more details, I would recommend you search out what activists of color have written on the subject.
On the first topic: Based on the same premise I would argue to the contrary, that the only time when it is acceptable to distinguish between different races is when the difference is based on hard biological evidence. And in today’s society the distinction should only be attempted when it is medically (or for other objective reasons) necessary. That is the characteristic that one is born with. Another thing is one’s cultural identity – I think that this is similar to what you describe as “race”.
I believe that beside the terminological difference mentioned above, our cutural background is very different as to how to approach the possibility of changing one’s cultural identity. In my country (Czech Republic) cultural appropriation is not seen as a harmfull phenomenon – we would feel proud if well meaning people from anywhere around the world wore our national costume or even learned the language and culture and then proclaimed themselves Czech.
So to explain my first post – One clearly cannot change their race in the meaning of genetic makeup, but one can change their cultural identity – both in how they self-identify and how they wish to be seen by the society arounnd them. This site usually promotes self-determination and freedom of choice for one’s identity so I was baffled as to why you take such a hard stance against choice in that regard. Now I think I understand that. I do not agree but I respect your point.
So thank you for the answer.
One last question though, do women not face real discrimination and violence, physical or otherwise, because in many societies they are marginalized?
They do, but if you’re trying to equate trans women with people like Rachel Dolezal who claim to be “trans racial,” I’m afraid that doesn’t hold water. Trans women (and anyone who transitions gender-wise) are being true to themselves, often at great personal risk. White people who claim to be black are not.
And that’s the end of that discussion.
Thank you for the answers.
Yeah there are definitely different goal posts for being white or “white enough” in different places.
I’m a Swede, and Sweden has this weird thing going on where the official stance is VERY much “colourblind”, we shouldn’t talk about race because doing so is just racist (and so the US is considered super racist for that reason). Although people often use “immigrant” almost as a synonym of PoC, and also use “ethnicity” to mean the same thing as “race”, so…
Anyway. I grew up way out in the countryside, where everyone was white. Still, a boy in my class had black hair (as opposed to everyone else, who had blond or brown hair, with the occasional redhead sprinkled in). The other kids would call him “pizza baker” (in an, uh, friendly joking manner I guess, although I don’t know if he really perceived it that way). Because, you know, people who run pizza places often come from the middle east, where people have black hair.
I also have a colleague who grew up in a similar, all-white countryside place, and he was bullied quite a lot for having black hair (his dad is from Greece).
Moving to a city, the goal posts aren’t quite as narrow, but people of Turkish, Arab and so on origin are definitely targets of racism, so that’s not an exclusively US phenomenon.
As race is a social construct, what do you think if fantasy setting has an “alternative race system”? What if in fictional society, white people and people of color are considered of one race, because race is determined by other traits?
I can see that happening easily, as soon as humans aren’t the only sentient beings in that world. If you have humans, elves, dwarves, and orcs (or whatever different beings you have), it’s quite likely that all humans consider themselves human and skin colour as a marker is no longer more important than, for instance, hair or eye colour.
Sorry but your update on the Alethi is still not doing justice to the book. Right now it reads as if the description isn’t there — or as if you didn’t really read the book. I’m not good with details and still remember clearly that the Alethi are tall, muscular, brown haired, dark skinned, and their aristocracy is blue eyed. There are also tons of fan works online that confirm people totally got their skin color right, just google Jasnah Kholin. That example really needs to be reworked because it comes across as either uninformed or contrived to smear the book.
The video about Intersectionality seems dead? Is the video still there or what was the point the video tried to make? An answer would be appreciated.
thanks for pointing that out, I’ve updated it with a better link.
Thank you, I agree with most of it except that Enterprise should not been used as an example. If had used Farscape who would have seen every one of your points. You did miss any transgender or homophobic points but you can bring talk about that later.
Editor’s Note: I’ve removed a comment for incorrectly holding up western countries as being particularly progressive on issues of race. That’s simply not true.
To clarify: when we remove a comment, that generally means the discussion is closed, even for people who saw the comment before it was deleted.
I do Historical European Martial arts (HEMA) and in several GERMAN fencing manuals (Talhoffer, Meyer etc) from 13-15th we find black African men among the fencers. And the manuals depicts people that were either trained or attended classes of these weapon masters. Apparently high medieval and early renaissance Europeans found it at least acceptable to teach black Africans martial arts. Medieval whites weren’t necessarily “racist” because 18th Euros were.
The Patron Saint of Holy Roman Empire (Germany+a few regions here and there) was a blackity black man. Statues of him were everywhere .Medieval Germans though black people were humans who had stayed in the sun for some time.Thats it. It was much more important if you were Christian (but even that wasn’t be all end all as the muslims of Sicily can attest).
There was a least on black former muslim serving as a knight during 1200 (I think it was 1200 on sicily) Giovanno Nere..
True. In those times, it was more important which religion someone belonged to than what they looked like.
Fun fact: The medieval ‘Nibelungenlied’ (which Wagner ripped apart and only used some names of for his Ring cycle) has two parts and at the beginning of the second, Krimhilde, a central female character, marries Etzel the Hun (a stand-in for Attila) as her second husband (after her oldest brother had her first husband killed). Her family fully supports the marriage, despite the fact that Etzel surely is Slavic rather than white. This shows that it wasn’t about race for them – he’s shown as a devout man and that’s good enough.
Lex Luthor wasn’t black in JLA lmaoo he was tanned and supposed to be suggestively Greek. You can compare him to actual black characters he has scenes with and he does not look black. hard to take an article seriously with such glaring misinformation