Reylows are still chugging that “hate Poe” juice hard, I see.

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This is literally the first result when you search for Episode IX. It’s right there in the Poe tag for fans looking for content about him, too. You should block this user if you don’t want to see their scintillating contribution to the tags.

And no, LF is not going to spoil a major character’s death in a comic lmaoooo the comic excerpt was about Poe growing beyond being just a pilot. The scene this narration leads into is literally a discussion between Leia and Poe about being a pilot and being a leader.

But saying Poe is not a main character and will die is not a new thing for this user and those who agree with them:

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Redemptive… death. Redemptive death. So let me get this straight, it’s not the mass murderer and torturer who needs redemption and/or death, it’s his victim who needs to die, redeeming himself for unspecified crimes. It’s just more of the “Poe is an extremist and just as bad/worse than Kylo” nonsense, the kind of bullshit RJ was on.

Inconveniently for the people riding the Dameron death train, here’s something from K. Kennedy herself:

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(Source)

Future stories beyond Episode IX with… Poe. And even if Kennedy is on the way out, as I personally hope, there’s the fact that JJ Abrams–you know, the guy directing IX?–nixed the character’s death in TFA so he could get Oscar on board. As one does.

Idk what it is these fans have against Poe–he’s not a main character, he’s the real bad guy, he’s gonna die–but all they do is make themselves look more ridiculous and desperate with every nonsensical “argument.”

sheriffcobbvanth:

Me, working on that K aren Tr * viss dirt post I promised to @lj-writes over a month ago: How can I post this without being sued?

Me, peeping your blog in case there’s KT dirt: Holy shit this dirt must be REALLY good!

If it helps, truth is a defense to charges of libel. If you’re still nervous you could send it to me privately!

I’m nervous to even ask a question that I need to give a disclaimer to, but my intention with this ask is only to learn about representation in media, and what to look out for in the things I enjoy as well as what I create. Given the recent reveal of Nagini by J.K. Rowling, it’s been on my mind a lot what is racist and problematic representation. We want to see difficult, nuanced roles given to POC. Unfortunately, some of those roles by nature will include sketchy backstory and/or (1/)

thehungryvortigaunt:

lj-writes:

irrefutable analogues to real life or history that makes that
representation icky or racist. Let’s take Nagini for instance. Imagine a
raceless character for a moment. A girl is born into a magical world
with a disease that will slowly transform her from a human form. As she
grows up, she learns this is passed on from her mother, who knew this
would happen, but had her anyway. She grows to resent her mother as she
starts to turn, and begins to buy into a blood purity narrative she
hears from(2/)

the corners of society. She finds someone in Riddle who
simultaneously loves her and understands her in her new form and shares
her purity beliefs. She devotes her life to him and views carrying a
piece of his soul as the deepest form of love he knows. So, I’ve read
now from countless Asian people why this character is so problematic,
and it seems so obvious to me once I heard from their point of view. Yet
the ignorant part of me wants to say, “This could be such an incredible
character. (3/?)

Why shouldn’t she be able to be played by someone of Asian
descent just because the real world sucks and has disgusting parallels.”
So my ultimate question is, is there a point where we are so aware of
problematic representation that we miss out on opportunities to
represent? If the creator is of a particular culture or color, does that
change what is acceptable, because we can trust them better to
represent without leaning on inherent biases? (4/4)


I think a work or character can be profoundly moving and deeply problematic all at once. For instance we can criticize the ableist implications in Gollum’s depiction while still enjoying the character and his story. Maybe Nagini’s will similarly be a well-told story that rings true like the one you describe, even if it would leave a bad taste in my mouth.

The questions you raise are ones I’ve struggled with, too, as have many others. We want marginalized identities to be represented as complex and meaty characters, obviously, not just bland, smiling tokens. That complexity includes great evil. I myself envisioned Bellatrix as a Korean-Chinese woman in a fanfic written between Books 4 and 5 before her name and details came out, and readers commented positively on how scary she was even as a teenager. Her brand of violent fanaticism from the Book 4 trial scene really resonated with me, and I drew from Korea’s post-liberation history of ideology-driven atrocities for her depiction. All this is to say I am most definitely not averse to evil characters who look like me, and I imagine this is true of many others who criticize Nagini as Asian representation.

So what’s the line between racist demonization and full, rich depictions of evil characters who happen to be minorities? I think one major issue with Nagini in the context of the HP franchise and the media environment in general is lopsidedness. If Western media had many examples of positive as well as negative representations of Asians and one of them, Nagini, happened to have taken up beliefs about blood purity as a wrongful response to understandable resentments and being preyed on by a powerful Dark magic user, I don’t think I’d mind as much. I mean I’d still be weirded out by her being a Korean woman with a Sanskrit name, but that could be Voldemort being a racist shithead because quelle surprise. Heck, if HP itself regularly treated Asian characters as complex and complete characters instead of bit parts and misogynistic caricatures torn down for the sake of the main white girls, I would not mind as much either. Instead, one of the very few times there is a major Asian character she’s the animal thrall of a magical fascist and thaaaat’s pretty uncomfortable.

Your question about the creator’s identity is an interesting one, too. I mean maybe I’d feel more comfortable if the creator were Asian herself, but that’s more as a matter of statistical probability since a lot of biases get internalized. Personally I think empathy, a sense of balance, and humility go a heck of lot farther than identity alone. What’s really terrifying about societal bigotry is that it allows people in the dominant group to get a pass for underdeveloping and underusing these qualities when it comes to people different than them. Empathy is not inherent in any one race but if you’re, say, a white person in the West you are encouraged in large and small ways to withhold empathy from racial minorities and you can function without being empathetic to their marginalization. The same goes for representation–there’s nothing saying that a white woman can’t depict a fictional Asian woman with sympathy and nuance, but societal racism means that she can get away with not doing so and will still be praised for it.

“Imagine a raceless character for a moment.”

LOL

I don’t see anything more than just tired regurgitations of the tragic Asian lover from shitshows like Madame Butterfly/Miss Saigon and the ‘sexy evil Dragon/Serpent Lady’ that westerners LOVE to perceive Asian women as. Even if this character were white, this retcon is also utterly pointless and misogynistic because of how the main text in Harry Potter literally dehumanizes her to the point that she’s a tool whose destruction to weaken the male villain is celebrated. People have pointed out that Cho and the Patil sisters, the most prominent Asians in HP, are either marginalized OR presented as inferior to Cool Girl Ginny because they’re “too emotional”/literally traumatized by the loss of a lover. And in Fantastic Beasts, every non-white woman is either portrayed as an incompetent racist obstructive bureaucrat, a servant, or an executioner.

People really need to stop giving the mediocre racist JK a pass and realize that she’s an opportunist who takes credit for her fans’ attempts to ‘diversify’ the text without actually taking any lessons from them in improving her own writing.

P.S. For what it’s worth, I imagined Bellatrix Lestrange as an Indian Brit – but in my experience, ‘racebending’ from fans generally prefers to brownwash characters they believe are sympathetic rather than evil.

Even though I LOATHED TLJ I took cues from Snoke’s and Kylo’s relationship for my main antagonist’s relationship with his mentor. I thought it would be an interesting contrast because my dark master-apprentice dynamic is flipped from the Star Wars norm: the apprentice is more evil than the master. Vader and Kylo are both humanized, but my antagonist isn’t. Palpatine and Snoke were pure evil, but my antagonist’s master isn’t. My antagonist also never cries; he only feels hard emotions like rage.

Oh yeah, I actually liked that aspect of the apprentice outsmarting the master and possibly being more evil. I was cheering Kylo on, like fuck yeah you go for your goal! If Snoke hadn’t turned out to be a giant ball of letdown I would have liked that plot a whole lot more. Your antagonist sounds like a personification of toxic masculinity, and I like that!

Reylos when someone say Rey is Kylo’s abuse victim: “that’s sexism because Rey is a strong woman who can defend herself, stop acting as if Rey is a victim!” Reylos when someone say Kylo is abuse victimr: “that’s right. My poor baby suffered so much since the womb. I wrote 750 pages of “Why Ben Deserves a Redemption”, if you know the classic Beauty and the Beast (La Belle et la Bête)…”

Also, Kylo’s trauma from his uncle considering killing him for .1 second makes him a soft boy who can’t be held accountable for any of his heinous actions, while Finn’s lifetime of trauma makes him a scary obsessed stalker who should stay far away from Rey in any romantic sense.