I'm at Ballet Revolucion, a Cuban dance company. When I arrived in line, a White man looked alarmed and asked "Are you here to see the ballet?" as if I was lost, contrary to the lining up and ticket in hand. I suspected the Caucasity level would be high. It's critical. /Thread
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The audience is about 98% White. Age range from 10 to 80+ years, but average age is probably 60. I'm in Row A. I'm ecstatic to see a show by fellow
#Latins. We are so few in Australia & not many events celebrate our various cultures. As usual though, White people ruin everything4 replies 0 retweets 16 likesShow this thread -
From the first song, White people are talking non stop, being ignorant. The couple behind me are drunk, criticising every move ("I hate when they can't open their legs properly!") He slurs to the English songs & gibberish to Spanish bits. I have to turn around and ask him to stop
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Ok I'm back. The show was amazing! But the White devils did not let up. Peak White supremacy was during a beautiful and dramatic routine. The crowd started howling with laughter. It was so awful. Why? The dancers onstage were all men. And topless. Brown & Black men.
#latins4 replies 2 retweets 3 likesShow this thread -
White Australians are rarely near
#POC, even in Sydney, our most cosmopolitan city. The sight of powerful Black & Brown bodies elicits laughter because by being exposed, they are sexualised by the White gaze. They are not artists. They are Other. Dangerous. The Whites hoot.2 replies 0 retweets 7 likesShow this thread -
Colonialism is a history of marking Black & Brown bodies as uncivilized. In 2013, I was lucky to see The Australian Ballet perform Vanguard. One of the three acts has all the dancers - men & women - dancing topless the entire time. Guess how many audience members laughed? ZEROpic.twitter.com/U88gJZHq1i
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The dancers of Ballet Revolucion aren't given the same reverence. Instead, older White woman behind me pronounces loudly: "That got me hot!" [Laughs] The White woman two seats away from me says, "That makes two of us!" [Cackles] How would this go if
#POC behaved so audaciously?pic.twitter.com/GRbnjxyhws
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Sure, for some routines, the performance plays up sensuality, at others, the dancers joke, or ask us to clap. This song was about tenderness & strength. That's why they laughed. White people can't handle complexity of men of colour, so they laugh, as they've always ridiculed us
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White people are incredibly disrespectful. If you follow me on Instagram, you'd know I often share what happens to me at art galleries & shows. At the Latin Film Festival last week, White women were talking & making fun of the films Just another day as a
#POC in racist Australia1 reply 4 retweets 11 likesShow this thread -
Replying to @OtherSociology
How crappy to have what should've been a beautiful experience marred by so much ignorance and disrespect! I'm really sorry that happened to you.
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Thanks Jenét! The White man behind me got drunker & drunker and was singing out of tune when he recognised songs (Despacito was excruciating) and making wolf sounds by the end! Australians know so little about Latin people & yet feel entitled to act so uncivilised at our expense
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