![]() One thing I thought you might also point out is that fact that maybe when black people are cast this way something fundamental to their history, ethnicity, and perspective stands out: all magical traditions, mystery schools, and early shamanism practices that every religion later came from stem directly from the depths of black people, deep in all of their collective unconscious. You do point out that the black characters are always cast as witches. But just as in statistics, maybe you are making that fundamental error: looking at the facts but interpreting them through an occluded lense. In other words, race and ethnicity aren’t ignored, blissfully or otherwise. The show’s producers are aware enough of Dobrev’s ethnicity to not only reference it in the show, but also make use of it (via Dobrev speaking the language in flashbacks), but there can be no indication in the show at all that the black actors are playing black characters with history, ethnicity and perspective. Not even for the Bennett witches, who are central to the show’s mythology.īut here’s the thing: The vampire Katherine Pierce, who is also central to the show’s mythology played by lead actress Nina Dobrev, is Bulgarian because Dobrev is Bulgarian and speaks the language fluently. This is a show that nearly always casts black actors to play witches but provides no mythological reason for this even though it’s clear that the producers are consciously deciding to always. I mean, this is a show that is set in Virginia, with frequent flashbacks to antebellum South and constant celebrations of antebellum Southern culture that conspicuously sidesteps the fact that that period was defined by American chattel slavery. And so this is the one area of the show that drives me fucking crazy.īonnie, one of the all-powerful Bennett witches Race and ethnicity should be central to creating character, particularly if you’re going to have a diverse cast, as The Vampire Diaries does. And let’s be honest, the banter between him and Damon would be priceless.īecause race and ethnicity are “social issues” one has to “worry about?” Wait…what? But sexual orientation (and sex in general) is such a huge part of the show that I think taking on a handsome gay vampire could add a lot to the mix. because these kids have a lot more to worry about than those kinds of social issues. Robyn Ross: I love that the show often blissfully ignores race, ethnicity, etc. Do you think a gay vamp making all sorts of snappy one-liners about the pretty boys in Mystic Falls would be a good thing? (Sorry folks, Caroline’s deceased Dad doesn’t cut it). There’s yet to be much of a gay presence on the show. In a fairly inoffensive, if silly, roundtable discussion post on AfterElton about The CW’s brilliant, The Vampire Diaries, this jumped out at me: ![]()
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