Somehow I don't see Chakotay adhering to a worldview that includes bloodletting and human sacrifice.
No, he's far too "soft"... thankfully.

Somehow I don't see Chakotay adhering to a worldview that includes bloodletting and human sacrifice.
That makes sense. Modern cultural ideas do merge and blend. Chakotay was not my favourite character on Voyager but his spiritual and ethnic portrayal was something I appreciated about him. He had a sensitivity and respect for other characters belief systems too, which is a tolerance that Star Trek does try to aim for.What if Indian cultures have blended together and changed into something new? Kind of like the religion that Franklin had on "Babylon 5" that sort of cherry picked the best concepts and is sort of open to all religious and philosphic concepts. Cultures change over time. Why would modern cultural idea's still be expected to be the same other than some basic surface level idea's that managed to stay alive. Also in the future human cultural has more or less blended into one big culture and the things we see as "culture" or more like regional quirks but in the end everyone seems to be living the same Roddenberry dream of utopia. At least that is the impression. We haven't even nailed down if humans still use money or who does the crap jobs on earth because everyone we see seems to be a business owner or have a great job or be a starfleet officer.
Jason
So you'd be fine with Uhura being a Swahili-speaking cannibal who comes from a family of camel breeders living in the Kalahari Desert? (note that these four groups have NOTHING in common other than their continent of origin)
That's essentially what you think is just fine for Chakotay - a Heinz-57 stewpot of Hollywood cliches, in the mistaken belief that "Indians are all the same."
The producers did not intend to give him this Native American one note heritage that some would think validates his worth. They intentionally kept his background vague and in fact he was born on a colony. That gave them the wiggle room not to be scolded by people who think they know everything.
What if Indian cultures have blended together and changed into something new?
Exactly. Chakotay was not pinpointed to one reference. In fact who is to know what has evolved in this future world? Cultures change and blend. I represent a variety of influences myself and do mix my clothes! Bad me. I'm Australian and I wear a cross, sometimes greenstone and sometimes western and aboriginal patterns together.What if Indian cultures have blended together and changed into something new? Kind of like the religion that Franklin had on "Babylon 5" that sort of cherry picked the best concepts and is sort of open to all religious and philosphic concepts. Cultures change over time. Why would modern cultural idea's still be expected to be the same other than some basic surface level idea's that managed to stay alive. Also in the future human cultural has more or less blended into one big culture and the things we see as "culture" or more like regional quirks but in the end everyone seems to be living the same Roddenberry dream of utopia. At least that is the impression. We haven't even nailed down if humans still use money or who does the crap jobs on earth because everyone we see seems to be a business owner or have a great job or be a starfleet officer.
Jason
Chakotay is a fictional character, from a fictional off world, with a Native American heritage that includes aliens and sky people. He is not a case study for a documentary.
This is not a story about a Native American. He was born on a made up colony. Generations were. In his heritage there was Native Americans (non-specific). We were told of aliens. I wonder if the aliens were written with correct research of their individual customsAnd yet, if I wrote a story about a fictional Native American that played so fast and loose with Native American customs and traditions, and excused myself on the grounds that he was only a fictional character, no editor would take me or my story seriously. (They would, in fact, probably tell me to do my research!) And if I somehow managed to get it into print, I would be castigated by any knowledgeable reader. And rightly so.
And yet, if I wrote a story about a fictional Native American that played so fast and loose with Native American customs and traditions, and excused myself on the grounds that he was only a fictional character, no editor would take me or my story seriously. (They would, in fact, probably tell me to do my research!) And if I somehow managed to get it into print, I would be castigated by any knowledgeable reader. And rightly so.
@Holly Day: I don't claim to know everything. But I do claim to know certain times when Hollywood producers screwed up and when people are presenting ignorant arguments to defend those screwups."That gave them the wiggle room not to be scolded by people who think they know everything."
I'm thinking I wish now they had made Chakotay hispanic.
I'm gladI'm thinking we just found something we agree on!![]()
In short, “Hispanic” focuses on Spanish-speaking origin. This means Spain is included, but Brazil is not because Brazilians speak Portuguese. “Latino” refers to people of Latin American origin. This includes Brazil and excludes Spain.
I would hope that the running with the bulls stuff would have been discontinued by the 24th century.Of course if they did make him Latino they would still go with broad strokes to define his character. He would celebrate the Day of the Dead, be Catholic, like Latin Music and like to run with the Bulls once every year. It might not make any sense if you look at it to hard but it would be just familiar and generic enough to pass muster.
Jason
Of course if they did make him Latino they would still go with broad strokes to define his character. He would celebrate the Day of the Dead, be Catholic, like Latin Music and like to run with the Bulls once every year. It might not make any sense if you look at it to hard but it would be just familiar and generic enough to pass muster.
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