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alright, since no one seems to quite grasp this concept, let me say it again â gender ratios should be a thing of the past. itâs quite literally 2018.
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High School Musical 3: Senior Year (2008) dir. Kenny Ortega
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SO UH blackpink has an album coming out Friday and I'm screaming how did I not know this???? I'm ready for my wives to bless me and I'm ready for the casual jennie/lisa hints everywhere
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itâs pride month and iâm sorry but that means at least one girl has to flirt with me before june ends, the law says so
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Nam Joohyuk // BEAUTY+ 2017 April Issue Making Film
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artists: aw man today was a slow day, i just did a few doodles and colored a sketch from yesterday
writers: never once in my life have a written
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Iâm TRYING to love myself but SOMEBODY *glares in the mirror* is having a TANTRUM
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while we're talking about it who are some of your favourite non-white fc choices for Harry and James ?
Personally, I love the idea of James and Harry being Desi so for sure Avan Jogia, Rahul Kohli, Riz Ahmed, and Karan Brar ( love him so much!! ). Though, Iâm a total sucker for Brandon Arreaga being used as a James Potter fc.
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Iâve previously stated that when people say âWhy have James and Harry as POC?â itâs fair enough to respond, âWhy not?â but there are also some reasons that specifically drive me towards representing them that way. So, without further ado, hereâs why I tend to view James Potter as a person of colour.Â
(Please note that this isnât about authorial intent, since Iâm more than aware that JKR doesnât exactly write with the purpose of people reading her main characters as POC. Itâs more about how the narrative connects as a reader, as well as some personal preferences.)
Racially-Coded Language Directed At JamesÂ
[âŠ] Mrs. Dursley pretended she didnât have a sister, because her sister and her good-for-nothing husband were as unDursleyish as it was possible to be. The Dursleys shuddered to think what the neighbors would say if the Potters arrived in the street. The Dursleys knew that the Potters had a small son, too, but they had never even seen him. This boy was another good reason for keeping the Potters away; they didnât want Dudley mixing with a child like that. (PS1)
and, after Vernon claims James had been unemployed in POA:Â
âAs I expected!â said Aunt Marge, taking a huge swig of brandy and wiping her chin on her sleeve. âA no-account, good-for-nothing, lazy scrounger who ââ (POA2)
Thereâs a very specific trend in the way that the Dursleys speak about James. âGood-for-nothing,â as soon as heâs introduced, a sentiment repeated by Marge. âWastrelâ in that same chapter of POA. And the way that Marge reacts to James being âunemployedâ is very much akin to anti-immigrant rhetoric, i.e. considering them a drain of public resources. Itâs classist too, certainly, but thatâs not divorced from racial dynamics. The great employment disparities in Britain occur among ethnic minorities. And thatâs in recent reports. I can guarantee it was worse approximately 30 years ago, during the setting of HP. On top of that, the idea that the Harryâs âothernessâ can be identified on sight also reads like an allusion to race.Â
Harryâs Appearance
He shot a nasty look sideways at Harry, whose untidy hair had always been a source of great annoyance to Uncle Vernon. (POA2)
andÂ
Professor Flitwick was walking past a boy with untidy black hair ⊠very untidy black hair⊠ (OOTP28)
James and Harry share most of their features. The most prominent of these is by far Jamesâs hair, which is consistently described as both âblackâ and âuntidy.â Neither is a trait exclusive to people of colour, but there certainly is a tendency for people of colour to face greater scrutiny for the state of their hair. The Dursleysâ view that having âimproperâ hair somehow equates lacking societal worth is much along those lines. Itâs not at all unreasonable to relate Harryâs struggle with his hair as partly the product of his heritage.Â
Dynamic Balance Between James and Lily
This one is a point of personal preference. Since we know so little about either James or Lily, itâs hard to gauge what exactly their relationship was like. But I absolutely love the idea of James as a person of colour and a pure-blood while Lily is white and Muggle-born. Although thereâs a claim that thereâs no racism in the wizarding world (Iâd question that, but thatâs a different post), there certainly would be in 1970s Muggle UK. Itâs an interesting dynamic to engage with â James, completely unaware of why people would look askew his relationship with Lily even in the Muggle world. Lily, turning indignant protector for James, while people dislike him for his heritage. Itâs all the appeal of a role reversal AU but built into canon-compliance.Â
Presumption of DelinquencyÂ
For the space of a heartbeat both policemen imagined guns gleaming at them, but a second later they saw that the motorcyclists had drawn nothing more than â
âDrumsticks?â jeered Anderson. âRight pair of jokers, arenât you? Right, weâre arresting you on a charge of ââ (Prequel)
and
Harry preferred Little Whinging by night, when the curtained windows made patches of jewel-bright colors in the darkness and he ran no danger of hearing disapproving mutters about his âdelinquentâ appearance when he passed the householders. (OOTP1)Â
This oneâs a bit more depressing, but itâs something that I think holds true for many people of colour in places where they arenât the majority. Whether in a local neighbourhood, with a police officer, or at an airport, itâs easy enough to think of an instance of racial profiling. Being treated as a threat by people who donât really know you. In James and Siriusâs interaction with the police, up until that point theyâre smarmy, sure, but have made no indication that theyâre any kind of threat. They reach back in their pockets and immediately the assumption is that they have guns. Harry experiences similar profiling. In that same chapter, he talks about how some of the neighbourhood kids are afraid of him. Admittedly, heâs got the Dursleysâ badmouthing and the state of his clothing going against him, but James is well-dressed and cared-for and still treated as if he might become violent.Â
Nuanced Representation Through James
This point is less about the text itself, and more about how interpreting James as a person of colour is beneficial to readers of colour. Although he sort of gets the least physical presence in the series, the things we do see inform us that heâs got quite the story. Heâs described, along with Sirius, as âthe cleverest [student] in school,â in POA, he becomes an animagus at the age of fifteen, and he saves the life of his worst enemy (who later sells him out to Voldemort). He dedicates his life to a war that his blood status exempts him from. And heâs got obvious flaws as well! Heâs arrogant, sometimes rude, and loyal to the point of being blind to the possibility of betrayal. Of all of the Maraudersâ era characters, James has some of the most interesting characterization. In a series where people of colour barely feature, the idea that someone like James (and subsequently Harry) could be men of colour is very exciting.Â
And, for what itâs worth, I actually think itâs kind of cool that James is so well-off financially. Itâs not only a reversal of expectations with the earlier point of racially-coded insults, but also offers a version of an ethnic minority who doesnât necessarily have a class disadvantage. And, if youâre on the Desi James train, it actually plays into a specific narrative of migration and employment for Indians in the UK prior to 1981. Racial discrimination and class do not always follow each other, and I think that disconnect can be jarring for those who consider themselves relatively privileged. Again, itâs something I think is interesting to explore.
Diverse Magical Heritage
Again, this idea comes down to personal preference. Since James comes from a long line of mostly pure-bloods, that means that if he is interpreted as a person of colour, thereâs an entire magical tradition that can come with that. All of the HP spells are Latin-based, but if you read James as Desi (as I do) then thereâs the potential for Sanskrit-based spells! Indian wizard holidays! If Christian wizards celebrate Christmas, surely Hindu wizards celebrate Diwali? Or Muslim wizards celebrate Eid? Not to mention the cool idea of life-cycle rites coming into play. Iâd love to see a wizard version of annaprashan, where instead of reaching for just books or toys, you could have Harry reaching for a wand for power, or the Mahabharata for courage. Not to mention that Jamesâ family has a long history in potions, which actually seems closer to Ayurvedic medicine than chemistry. There are so many possibilities that come from seeing James as a person of colour. These are only a few examples.Â
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QUEER AS HECK
For cute af queer teenage girls and all the shit they have to go through.Â
LISTENÂ
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I hate my phone âcause it reminds me Iâm alone.
Bea Miller / Outside
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bea miller is honestly my idol ?? like she wrote a couple basic real safe lyric pop-y songs to draw radio disneyâs attention, then proceeded to use the attention she got from the Disney hype to spread amazing messages through her music. Like shes literally such a positive influence that everyone needs tbh. All her music is so body positive and all about self love !!! what an icon !!
#all about abby#abby rambles#bea miller#s.l.u.t.#chapter one: blue#chapter three: yellow#self love#body postivity#i mean just look at her
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Love your color, gender or whatever âCause your happiness donât need a sensor
s.l.u.t. - bea miller (via blue-coloredbea)
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just mind your own and weâll keep owning it bea miller // s.l.u.t.
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