Posted by Lynn Cartwright on February 11, 1999 at 17:37:39:
In Reply to: Why I Think Farnham's Freehold Is Racist posted by Terry on February 08, 1999 at 14:32:09:
: GC,
: And it just turned out in _FF_ that all the good guys were white and all the bad guys were black and lording over the poor whites in a future Africa which has escaped anhilation. They weren't just antagonists, but evil and evil in ways that made me think of Jim Crow. Very nasty types - lazy, pushy, unredemebly bad. No respect for the characters at all. In fact as an aside the greatness of literature is the respect an author has for all his/her characters.
: Maybe I'm overly sensitive, but it was personally embarassing to me to read my favorite author writing what, to may mind at least, was the most palpably racist, charicatures of blacks. Some evil daydream of a white racist put on paper in the name of a great author. I thought it quite sad.
: Vance, on the other hand, skates close to racism in _The Grey Prince_ which at least abstracts the problem to another planet and another society. If the prince were black and the country were South Africa, say, I'd lay the charge on Vance as well.
: Vance has always had a Eurocentric viewpoint which is fine by me and especially fine when the villains are Dirdir or other alien races. When villains become humans of a different racial type (but not black) I'm made uneasy by that narrow distinction, but can give credit to a fine author of an earlier sensibility.
: I'm trying to remember black people in Vance and can come up with only a couple - believe in Slaves of the Klau there's a black jazz band (here's what saves Vance from stepping over the line I think, his obvious love of jazz that is rooted in the black soul/experience). Also believe that in Take My Face there is a visit to a Bohemian neighborhood in San Francisco with black jazz musicians there. Anyone care to add to this list of black people in Vance?
: Anyway, I thought that Heinlein's book was indefensible, but I'm willing to cut Vance slack on the subject. You are welcome to your opinion, but I was in pain after finishing _FF_.
: Terry
Dear Terry,
I understand your train of thought because FF made me uncomfortable, also. The reason it did had nothing to do with thinking that the author was racist, but rather that any society should become opressive in any shade of skin. I watched a movie of a similar nature with Harry Belefonte and John Travolta, that depicted a black family in a employers position of power and financial advantage. 'John' badly and seriously needed work and went to 'Harry' to ask for a job but 'Harry' wouldn't hire him because he didn't like or trust white people - he stereo typed them as do most white people tend to do blacks... they are theives and lazy and so on. It hit the same nerve for me. R.H. is one of my all time favorite authors, but there are others that I thought less of than this title - they were a little racy in the sexual sence. Over all, I feel that he had the best of intentions and would be surprised to hear anyone thought of him as a racist and might attribute it to his last name being of German origin - I might be inclined to agree if that were the case!
But that is just my opinion, I could be wrong...
Lynn