Like black face. But Game of Thrones' Bran exactly exemplifies Takeru's point. I've heard no protests about it.Able-bodied actors playing disabled characters is fast becoming seen as offensive and patronising.
Like black face. But Game of Thrones' Bran exactly exemplifies Takeru's point. I've heard no protests about it.Able-bodied actors playing disabled characters is fast becoming seen as offensive and patronising.
Able-bodied actors playing disabled characters is fast becoming seen as offensive and patronising. If you're creating a disabled character then your first port of call to play that character should be a disabled actor (exceptions can be made for stories that deal specifically with a character's journey from able-bodied to disabled (such as The Theory of Everything) but those exceptions should be exactly that... exceptions).
While people from all over the United States (and outside) join the US military, the highest percentage of the military comes from the American south-east.
And take one of the best casting ever in Patrick Stewart as Professor X away from us? No thank you. It's called "acting".This is about the character, afterall, the actor should disappear in the roll and if they do, then there's no problem.
Why can't we just cast great actors, why does there have to be a politically correct agenda behind every single decision we make anymore?
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But as far a the usual meaning of "disabled" that individual wouldn't be disabled. It would be like a starship that the majority of the crew came from a world where the typical light levels were dim, their eyes were very sensitive.
Now would a Human stationed to this ship be considered "disabled," because they are (from their perspective) in the dark? I would say no.
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I disagree, if you have a character in a wheelchair for example it makes more sense to hire an actor who can walk, makes life easier for everyone especially if they shoot on location, not every place is accessible for wheelchairs. The actor could also be used for dream sequences, flashbacks or alternate realities where the character walks.
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And take one of the best casting ever in Patrick Stewart as Professor X away from us? No thank you. It's called "acting".This is about the character, afterall, the actor should disappear in the roll and if they do, then there's no problem.
Why can't we just cast great actors, why does there have to be a politically correct agenda behind every single decision we make anymore?
I know more than a few people who feel that "Melora" perpetuates the idea that it's perfectly okay for people in wheel chairs to be complete assholes, because (you know) they're in a wheel chair. The episode has it's share of problems, that being one."Melora" showed people the stereotype of disabled people and although I've mellowed toward that in my old age, there's still a art of the young man inside me who found that insulting.
But how many of them join Starfleet?I really think that in the Star Trek future, there are still MUCH MORE humans living in other places than the old USA
But if we're considering the possibility of a disabled character, why not actually have a "disabled character." Someone who has (for want of a better term) an abnormality, as a result of a birth defect, or a illness, or a injury, that causes them a ongoing problem. Starfleet can be a dangerous profession, it would have to be something that is obvious (for the audience), but at the same time no so disabling that realistically they would be disqualified from Starship duty.The point is that it would be an allegory of disability.
To be fair, political correctness also refers to a method that a small group can use to attempt to manipulate a large population into conforming to the particular vision of the small group. Which is why the concept of political correctness is viewed with such disgust."Political correctness" is a nasty term used to dismiss efforts to counter discrimination and prejudice.
From Takei's autobiography and the book Inside Star Trek, While somewhat discrete Takei never kept his sexuality a complete secret. At the end of season cast parties he would bring his boyfriend of the time.Could the people who cast Takei as Sulu sense that he gay?
The new series should run with the fan idea that Andorians in fact have four genders.I want the to write a trisexual ...
You bring up Tyrion Lannister later in your post, so I'll assume you are familiar with the show or the book. How would you handle Bran, a paralyzed child who was shown able to walk (and climb) until his accident, but then is also shown afterward walking in dream sequences?...Perhaps because disabled actors are already discriminated against enough, without being told they can't play a character with their disability because they can't do a flashback scene where they walk?
Hiring non disabled actors in place of disabled ones to play disabled characters is the modern equivalent of blackface or hiring boys to play women. It plays into existing discriminatory practices and isn't something we should be encouraging...
I know more than a few people who feel that "Melora" perpetuates the idea that it's perfectly okay for people in wheel chairs to be complete assholes, because (you know) they're in a wheel chair. The episode has it's share of problems, that being one.
To be fair, political correctness also refers to a method that a small group can use to attempt to manipulate a large population into conforming to the particular vision of the small group. Which is why the concept of political correctness is viewed with such
You bring up Tyrion Lannister later in your post, so I'll assume you are familiar with the show or the book. How would you handle Bran, a paralyzed child who was shown able to walk (and climb) until his accident, but then is also shown afterward walking in dream sequences?
Picard (him again) is overtly nationalistically French for one,
The vocal minority imposing themselves and their vision upon a larger group is such a well known phenomenon throughout human history of small offenses and large atrocities, that I don't believe the concept can escape anyone without simply playing naïve for argument's sake. In some cases, it results in death for the non-believer. Extreme? Yes. But it's part of what makes the smell of political correctness, as T'Girl describes, so "disgusting."I have absolutely no idea what you're getting at here. 'Manipulate' them into what 'vision'?To be fair, political correctness also refers to a method that a small group can use to attempt to manipulate a large population into conforming to the particular vision of the small group. Which is why the concept of political correctness is viewed with such disgust.
The vocal minority imposing themselves and their vision upon a larger group is such a well known phenomenon throughout human history of small offenses and large atrocities, that I don't believe the concept can escape anyone without simply playing naïve for argument's sake. In some cases, it results in death for the non-believer. Extreme? Yes. But it's part of what makes the smell of political correctness, as T'Girl describes, so "disgusting."
You can think of no instance where a group of smaller numbers imposed its will unfairly, even brutally, against a group of larger numbers? Or use no non-literal imagination to apply such concepts in microcosm, abstraction, or loose analogy to political correctness?when has identifying and modifying discriminatory language and customs, resulted in 'death for the non believer' exactly?
And just to be clear, at this time are you a poster on this board, or a moderator?when has identifying and modifying discriminatory language and customs, resulted in 'death for the non believer' exactly?
In Brazil, using the N-word (nigger and niggra) while a bit "low speech" isn't considered particularly offensive, and is somewhat common. The idea of having to watch what you say in public (or even private) would be regarded with humor.Around about the same time white people had to start saying N-Word.
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