4.01.12.

“ In addition to offering object lessons in bad reading comprehension, Hunger Games Tweets—there are now more than two hundred up on the blog—illuminated long-standing racial biases and anxieties. The a-hundred-and-forty-character-long outbursts were microcosms of the ways in which the humanity of minorities is often denied and thwarted, and they underscored how infuriatingly conditional empathy can be. (“Kk call me racist but when I found out rue was black her death wasn’t as sad,” wrote @JashperParas, who amended his tweet with the hashtag #ihatemyself.) They also beg the question: If the stories we tell ourselves about the future, however disturbing, don’t include black people; if readers of “The Hunger Games” are so blind as to skip over the author’s specific details and themes of appearance, race, and class, then what does it say about the stories we tell ourselves regarding the present? ”

Anna Holmes, “White Until Proven Black: Imagining Race in Hunger Games (via annaetc)

(Source: annaverity, via think4yourself)

37

  1. siblingcest reblogged this from annaverity
  2. batninja reblogged this from annaverity
  3. mariannethinks reblogged this from think4yourself
  4. killsmedead reblogged this from notemily
  5. ultralaser reblogged this from notemily
  6. notemily reblogged this from think4yourself
  7. invisiblelad reblogged this from think4yourself
  8. randomactsofchaos reblogged this from think4yourself
  9. miacsws reblogged this from think4yourself
  10. think4yourself reblogged this from annaverity
  11. intellectualhoodrat reblogged this from annaverity
  12. familydutyhonor reblogged this from annaverity
  13. annaverity posted this