Case (
case) wrote in
fandomsecrets2017-01-31 07:21 pm
[ SECRET POST #3681 ]
⌈ Secret Post #3681 ⌋
Warning: Some secrets are NOT worksafe and may contain SPOILERS.
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['Allo 'Allo!]
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no subject
The majority of protagonists are white and straight. Those who are also white and straight learn to relate and empathize with those characters. Those who are not white and straight also learn to relate and empathize with those characters.
Accordingly, most people of any colour and orientation have learned to empathize with straight white men really well. They have a much harder time empathizing with people outside of that description. Witness, for example, the plethora of experiments with little black girls choosing white over black dolls because they're "prettier," or the phenomenon of whites, particularly cops, avoiding criminal prosecution because they claim that a black victim was "threatening."
If the people in media were people as they were in reality, all of us would learn to relate to all kinds of people. But because media is not diverse, we relate to some sorts of people and not others. That's why representation is important, not because I might wish to see someone who shares x feature with me on telly.
no subject
(Anonymous) 2017-02-01 01:19 am (UTC)(link)no subject
no subject
(Anonymous) 2017-02-01 01:41 am (UTC)(link)Do you have figures for that "majority"? With world media being what it is, wouldn't most protagonists be Asian?
What I'm saying overall is that the idea of being able to relate to a character only if they have something in common, especially something that doesn't play into the actual character, is what gives us un-diverse media to begin with. Show diversity because that's how the world is, not out of a mistaken idea that people are so shallow.