I'm not against black actors being cast in films I'm just against blackwashing white characters as I would be for whitewashing black characters or Asian characters.
I don't think making a white character non-white has the same negative consequences as making a non-white character white. Non-white fans are robbed of an already far more limited supply of characters to represent their communities in our national stories in the case of the latter; white fans, on the other hand, retain a plethora.
I mean, did it really hurt the artistic integrity of Nick Fury to make him black instead of white for the Ultimate line and the MCU? Was anything essential to his character lost?
Let us try to close this debate with you are not wrong wanting to see a new take on the character and open to new ideas, and I'm not wrong wanting to stick with the Superman I'm traditionally familiar with.
It's all about preference and choice and everybody can have different ones and neither is right or wrong.
Well, hold on here. Your idea of a "traditional" Superman is such that he's invalidated if he's played by a non-white actor. You are, in other words, saying you would refuse to watch a story about a black character, because it's not "traditional."
I would encourage you to give serious reconsideration towards whether or not it is a racist thing to refuse to watch a story because it stars black folk.
But let's set that aside a moment.
Do you believe that Superman's whiteness is essential to who he is as a character? Does whiteness confer some sort of element that makes a white version of Superman superior to another?
When I think of Superman, I think of an idealized image of virtue -- the living embodiment of "truth, justice, and the American way." I think of a friendly, out-going, charismatic, compassionate person, a man who is fatherly without being patronizing. I think of someone with profound empathy and compassion and maybe a bit of detachment, but also immense love -- love for Lois especially, but for his family and friends. Confident, and self-sacrificing. And a little bit of mischief on the side.
Now, which of those virtues requires whiteness?
Why is one wrong?, are you so ashamed of being white
Believing it is wrong to refuse to watch a story because it stars black people is not the same thing as being ashamed of being white.
Superman in all the media I have watched has been portrayed as white. It's what I am familiar with, It's how I see Superman. That is not wrong.
But does that mean you think of his whiteness as being essential to who he is?
My point about a black Superman is changing something for the sake of it and using the property to sell the idea rather than come up with something original.
I don't think that's the case at all. In fact, while my personal favorite version of Superman is white -- Christopher Reeve from the Donner film -- I would be excited and intrigued to see a black Superman.
I do not say that because I want to "change something for the sake of changing it." I say that because I love Superman and see him as an aspirational figure, and I think seeing a black version of Superman in contemporary America -- one with the exact same values, personality, and major choices as the original white version of the character, but who is black -- would be like holding up a very powerful mirror to us as a society and asking, "Who are we, really? What do we really believe in?"
If we say we believe in the things Superman stands for -- solidarity, compassion, self-sacrifice, equality, truth, justice -- then why should we even
care if Superman is black? Superman is Superman, whether or not he's got white skin. Right?
Of course, that's what would make it amazing: To see a traditional Superman, who happens to be black, and see the black Superman challenge an America unwilling to admit certain truths about itself. And to see Superman call America to truth and justice, as he always does, no matter what skin he happens to be wearing at that moment.