Race + Fandom: When Defaulting To White Isn’t An Option
Paracosmic play isn’t the only childhood activity that nurtures the development of creative skills, but for me the benefits are too great to ignore. Fandom turned me into a writer, taught me Photoshop, forced me to learn how to code by the age of 13, showed me the basics of web design, and helped set my course of study in college. All of these elements helped me score my first job after college. Spending years making the singer Monica look like Max from Batman Beyond for online role-playing paid off when I was asked to design ads for a Tony Award winner’s concert series. I can’t imagine what my own life would be like if fandom hadn’t shaped it the way it did, and I’m going to guess that there’re several white fans who would say the same. Luckily, they have a framework to participate in that’s constructed specifically to cater to their needs.
Stefanie Brown’s pulled from Batgirl? Sure, it sucks and it’s a bad move on DC Comics’ part, but it’s not as if they’re lacking for white and blonde representation in the DC Universe. Pull Cassandra Cain, on the other hand, and the number of Asian heroes starring in their own books–not just in the DC Universe, but in all of mainstream comics–ticked back to zero in 2006 (soon to be back up to one when Cassandra returns in Batman: Gates of Gotham).

Courtesy: marvel.com
And so it goes: Williams can’t be Finnick because he “doesn’t look like” the character is described. He’s not Garrett Hedlund or white, period. Why on earth would I dress as Wonder Woman when there’s a black version I obviously should have done? How dare a woman of color think she can become She-Hulk? Not only are PoCs underrepresented, being in fandom is sometimes too downright exhausting to stick around.
Fandom is not for every kid, and some are just genuinely more interested in baseball than they are in Harry Potter, and the singular case of Finnick Odair isn’t going to be the end of PoCs in fandom, but we need to see a change in these media spaces so that more young fans of color like the kids at Madame Tussaud’s are encouraged to reap the benefits of participatory fandom and paracosmic play.
Of course, the half the beauty of white privilege in fandom is never seeing or thinking of yourself rendered as unrealistic in a space that’s supposed to be unrealistic and fantastical to begin with. So what’s to change, right?
Page 3 of 3 | Previous page
Pingback: Weekly Round-Up « girls like giants
Pingback: When a Nonwhite Comic Fan Dresses as Wonder Woman |
Pingback: When a Nonwhite Comic Fan Dresses as Wonder Woman
Pingback: Recognizing your default « Sur Le Seuil
Pingback: When a Nonwhite Comic Fan Dresses as Wonder Woman | TheJusticeTeam
Pingback: This Week In Links 6/8/12 | Paracinema
Pingback: Cosplay Questions: Race and Cosplay | Lady Geek Girl and Friends
Pingback: Cosplay, Race, and Fat-Shaming « geekalitarian