The biggest offenders in this regard are usually Star Wars fans and the target is typically Jar Jar Binks, the Gungans or whatever the hell those aliens on the droid command ship are supposed to be.
The Prequels weren't perfect. I get it. But when I first saw Jar Jar, Boss Nass and the Gungans I really didn't think "racist". But when I look at it from the point of view of people who do cry the term I can kind of see it. Okay, so, the aliens vaguely resemble African tribes or in the case of the Trade Federation aliens, Asians.
What I don't get is what's specifically racist about it? Now, lets go even further back to Star Trek: TNG in an episode where the evil aliens were all human looking actors and black. Okay, that's a teensy bit racist, especially when a similar episode prior to this featured a benign race as being equally human actors who were all white.
But Jar Jar is purely alien. There's nothing readily human about him if you don't count speaking English and walking upright. So he says a line or two and stretches a word like "mesa" or "whosa are yousa" and people immediately link that to Africans?
I just don't get it in the long run. It seems to me that people are applying their own stereotypes and then building a straw man to attack and prove to other people how above the steretypes they are.
Discuss.
The Prequels weren't perfect. I get it. But when I first saw Jar Jar, Boss Nass and the Gungans I really didn't think "racist". But when I look at it from the point of view of people who do cry the term I can kind of see it. Okay, so, the aliens vaguely resemble African tribes or in the case of the Trade Federation aliens, Asians.
What I don't get is what's specifically racist about it? Now, lets go even further back to Star Trek: TNG in an episode where the evil aliens were all human looking actors and black. Okay, that's a teensy bit racist, especially when a similar episode prior to this featured a benign race as being equally human actors who were all white.
But Jar Jar is purely alien. There's nothing readily human about him if you don't count speaking English and walking upright. So he says a line or two and stretches a word like "mesa" or "whosa are yousa" and people immediately link that to Africans?
I just don't get it in the long run. It seems to me that people are applying their own stereotypes and then building a straw man to attack and prove to other people how above the steretypes they are.
Discuss.
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