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Posts Tagged ‘racism’

Last week, Matthew and I went to see Ryan Coogler’s Sinners at the cinema. I’d heard good things through social media and the press that made me interested to see it. Caveat. I don’t do horror and this one verged on horror in parts.

At the end of this movie, I was impressed. I thought this is effing genius, this was magnificent and wow hard hitting too. Michael B Jordan was very impressive. He was great in Black Panther but here he is playing twins Smoke and Stack. Miles Caton who played Sammie had an amazing speaking voice, looked so young and his voice was so deep and his singing? Wow.

I will try not to give spoliers but it’s hard. Also I never heard of the word Hanked before. So clever though.

This is a story primarily about black lives, poor lives in the south of the USA. It doesn’t dwell on the misery but uses it to paint a picture that is bleak and also beautiful as people live and love and survive there. The KKK are mentioned like pepper in the stew, the lingering threat, the nail in the coffin at the end. There are other people of colour featured. Chinese immigrants, Chaktaw natives, and even Irish who had been downtrodden in their homeland and came to the Americas for a better life. They also came here to Australia and I am a descendent of a number of them.

There is folklore here, real or not, I cannot say, but it is woven into the fabric of the story and the music which is at its heart. Sammie’s music draws in demons and spirits and there is one scene that showed this and it wasn’t time limited. There were ghosts of the past as well as the future. At times, the visual elements could be overwhelming and a little incoherent but then there was a coherency to that. It is a movie that will need to be watched again to pick up the bits I missed.

The way music is used in this film in innovative and compelling. From the boy, Sammie who just wants to play, to those who want to listen and sing, to the bad guys and their music, their lure if you get my drift.

Genius and a must see.

What amazes me is that Ryan Coogler wrote this and directed it. The cast was so good. Every single one nailed it. What an amazing feast for the eyes, the ears and the heart.

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A fun part of my PhD is reading romances. Mostly I’m concentrating on retros–1970s and 1980s but I want to read up to and including current titles.

The President of the Australian Romance Readers Association (ARRA), Debbie Phillips, gave me four boxes of books. These were mostly Harlequin Silhouette novels from the late 1980s and early 1990s. I’ve read two so far.

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Then I unpacked the books!

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And then I didn’t have the heart to put them back in the box so I bought some bookshelves for them. (I’m not supposed to be doing that being frugal. Alas, the savings were attacked!)

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I’ve read one cowboy romance by Lass Small called No Trespassers Allowed and I enjoyed that a lot. I even sniffled a bit at the end. It wasn’t feminist but it did discuss gender roles and was almost entirely told from the male perspective. I noticed I have about 5 more of Lass Small’s titles. She’s deceased now but published a lot in her life time.

Cherokee Thunder by Rachel Lee was published in 1992/93 and is from the Silhouette Jasmine imprint. It appears to be slightly longer than the traditional category romance. I’m sure someone can tell me all about that line. I’ve not read Rachel Lee or heard of her before. A quick look on line tells me she is still writing and is using the same setting, Conard County. And she’s won awards etc. I’m not surprised.

For someone reading with an eye for feminist or social issues in these book like I am, there was heaps in this book to interest me. It’s main theme is domestic violence and the secondary theme is racism. There was also some discussion about being a working woman, being independent, being a wife and mother and liking housework. The kind of book this is-set in a small county in Wyoming- being a house wife is a natural aspiration.

I’m not sure how politically correct the half-Cherokee character/heroe, Micah Parish, is but I found him to be represented in a very positive way.This is a character who is solitary, cut off from family, both his white and his First Nation side. He is honorable and emotionally amoured and very gentle.  I ‘heart’ him very much.

Faith, the heroine is a battered wife. She’s not ordinary, run of the mill, battered wife either. She’s seriously battered, stabbed, brutalised…you name it and her ex husband is a crim and an ex cop and a psycho!. Six months pregnant and her ex has even tried to carve the baby out of her. Seriously, scary, stuff!

She’s the frightened kitten, small, petite and hurting. Micah is a big man and he’s got a soft spot for strays. She may be battered but with his caring way, she’s able to find her spirit and over come her timidity. Never though is her abuse trivialised. It is discussed throughout that she’ll have flashbacks (she does) and that it will take time to heal.

As I read this I could see that there could be other stories in this setting. There were some interesting male characters but I haven’t looked up to see if this was a first or a third in a series.

Faith in her reminiscence about life reflects that she’s been betrayed. She was brought up to be a wife and mother and all she got was  abuse. Her stepfather had conditioned her to have low self esteem and told her she deserved a beating. The representation of the abused woman in this story was very accurate to my mind. It takes someone very special to help her. And man does Micah do that.  As I read this I was thinking this is really good. This would make a great movie.

The story seemed to me to be predominantly from the male point of view, except it wasn’t. It was a shared point of view, slipping between Micah and Faith within scenes. It was smoothly done. The only other time I’ve seen this style was in Cory Daniels The Last T’en. It is certainly different from the pseudo omnicient/weird quasi from the male perspective that some of the other retro Mills & Boon had. (apparently before the 1980s they couldn’t use the male PoV)

What I loved about this book (and being a victim of abuse myself) is that it’s so positive. The message here is that there not all men are the same. That even a big, hard man can be tender and kind. It’s such a powerful message. I know Micah is a constructed male. A hero drawn from a woman’s imagination. But I can’t understand how something like this can be denigrated, the way romance fiction, is generally denigrated. It’s a healing story. So there are so romantic foibles-some things the hero says a man probably never would, but still…

I recall JD Robb’s In death series and I remember being so impressed that (Nora Roberts) discussed child abuse in the story line. The unspeakable trauma that the main character, Eve Dallas, went through as a child is revealed slowly over the series and I was so heartened that she discussed that topic. It’s not a nice topic but it happens and it’s important.

I’m still at the beginning on my retro reading. It’s been an interesting and enjoyable experience so far.

Cherokee Thunder was a touching tale. Thank you Rachel Lee for the lovely piece of fiction.

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