#HandmaidsTale - As much as I enjoy watching about dystopias and thinking about them with a sociological lens, I really think this one misses the point in capturing how 'race'/'ethnicity' would play out in an extension of Gilead (which is basically Trump's America)
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Thanks for clarifying Zuleyka, I haven't read the book - had no idea Atwood appropriated colonial stories in this way. I am told that in the book, the issue of 'race' wasn't dealt with at all. It appears this dystopian society removes 'race' as an issue between humans within.
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Race in the novel is largely swept aside. Almost all dystopian fiction by White people is imagining how unfair slavery, dispossession and murder would be if it happened to White people. And POC mostly don't exist, plus there's the idea that all of humanity would unite...
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OMG Zuleyka excellent point re: Dystopian Fiction. Yeah you are right, I am getting really annoyed with how POC characters are usually sidelined. With
#HandmaidsTale, I think that the inclusion of POC secondary/minor characters is their way of 'addressing race' in the TV series -
Yes. Inclusion of Black queer woman was sloppily handled, even though she's potentially the best character.And Mexican diplomats buying White kids is an insidious and wilful twist on reality. That White people would take kids of colour without enforcing racial categories is ridic
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In the TV series, white commanders are raising children of colour & if this dystopia (unlike the book) is set in 2018, I was thinking issues of 'race' wouldn't be erased - even if social infertility because extreme as in the series
End of conversation
New conversation -
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