Sombra, on 09 April 2012 - 09:35 AM, said:
Please stop retrospectively applying modern morals to past generations. They didn't have our advantages for a start, nor our capacity for navel-gazing and overanalysis.
It reeks of revisionism, and frankly it's just as bad as that which you seek to correct. (EDIT: to clarify, this remark is directed at some of the comments above, not the thread as a whole.)
I've seen enough of it in academia and the media in the last 20 years and I'm totally sick of it.
Note the past, learn from it. Just stop judging otherwise-decent people because they didn't hold the exact same viewpoint as you. Don't forget that a lot of authors use earth-analogue cultures simply for an easy frame of reference. Yeah, it's lazy, but then again so are we who read and enjoy them, by extension.
Oh, and Amph - the men of Telmar were descended from pirates, and not necessarily the good guys all the time. Plus if you've read "The Horse and his boy", you'll find there are mentions of Calormenes as pretty much the same as people you find anywhere else - some arseholes, some saints and the vast multitudes of "normal".
EDIT: that whole "Rue" thing reminded me of the "Heimdall controversy" when Idris Elba (sp?) was cast in Thor. I disagreed at the time but thought he did a good job in the flick and the way it was presented, because they made you think that these aliens worshipped by gods may have had contact with all sorts of humans, not just the Norse.
@Starvald Demelain
"Poeple do have these preconceptions of who is bad and who is good, typically authors portray the bad characters as dark/black. Just because you have these preconceptions doesn't mean they're correct. GRRM though a wonderful writer is lacking in that district. For an author who's books are considered realisitc, the lack of other races in a world that technically is supposed to reflect a 'real world' is a little wierd."
Really? Have you READ the books? Noone has a monopoly on good OR evil as a race. GRRMs "easterners" vary from savages to people who view the Westerosi as backward savages. And there are a whole lot of other races.
I agree with your direction here Sombra. I think that part of the problem is that we are dragging entertainment into a larger social debate of racism. Authors use words and their own worldviews to shape a tale they wish to share with the world. Particularly in fantasy, the story is the key not necessarily the props and descriptions. Some authors are incredible at weaving stories and others are inadequate. But the point is the same: they are trying to tell a tale using the medium with which they have experience. If a SF author has to travel the world, meet people of all races and types, and think about the racial implications of all aspects of their books, I would assume SF authors would strictly be independently wealthy 1st world heirs and heiresses who would have the leisure time to embark on such an undertaking.
And iirc, isn't SE an archeologist? I would think that he is ideally placed to include racial variety and perspectives within his books...
As for the larger topic underpinning the thread, there is racism. Sorry, that's reality and unfortunately in my limited experience with this world for the past 29 years, there will always be racism. I am a dreamer as well and believe the world would be better off with more of us around, however I continue to be disappointed by humanity as a whole. Really, sociologically, one has to get at the reasons behind racism. Why are people racist?
I believe in part it is due to other ingrained traits such as insecurity, the need to feel important or "better-than," inexperience and lack of global socialization, and the ubiquitous requirement to break things down into simpler (if not inaccurate) bits of information.
As to simplifying information, think about it like this: we make a lot of assumptions about the dynamics and properties of our world. Physicists know better and can point out a myriad of misconceptions people live with daily. Are these peoples' misconceptions the result of intrinsic laziness? Do we need to correct everyone's view of velocity, speed, and momentum? I mean, wouldn't the world be better off without people mucking up their physics?
To preempt the comment inert, nonliving materials are not equal to people, I provide the metaphor to point back to my initial statement that people are flawed from the get-go. Inherent traits. Racism isn't just about skin color, ethnicity, religion, and language. It's also about a sense of belonging, simplifying the world to us versus them, breaking down information to manageable chunks, etc.
I'm prejudiced, not proud of it, but I would love to hear anyone say they aren't. I look down on the less educated, on people who can't speak properly, on the slovenly, etc. I'm working on crushing those prejudices, but frankly, it's a full time job that requires energy, time to think, and constant rewiring of my thought processes. And I frankly don't have the time to make that my life accomplishment.
Get off your high horse people (while I am riding mine so much better than yours, hehe). Reality, people, the world is imperfect. It's good to fight for change, but demanding objective, unbiased characters and societies seems a little overboard when we have so many more glaring RL problems with racism.
Done, sorry to be preachy