#my step-brothers' dad was guatemalen
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I feel like even calling it American-style feminism is a little too broad when it would be more accurate to call it middle-class white feminism or something a little less exclusive to the huge swathes of American women who face struggles much closer to women in colonized communities than the women who they share the colonizer class with.
Black masculinity is heavily defined by reaching for every scrap of autonomy and agency a black man can achieve in a country that still tries so hard to treat black people as things...but sometimes, the only agency they have is over black women in their lives. What does feminism look like to women who are trying to achieve their own autonomy, but live in circumstances that lead everyone to believe their autonomy is only possible at the expense of someone else's?
Many immigrant or first-generation American-born men feel similar pressures to protect the women in their lives from the overbearing influence and assimilationism of their new country. But this often means expecting women to conform to roles that made sense and granted agency, autonomy, and value in another country, but not here. And that means immigrant women and first-generation American-born women have to find a feminism that is not colonized by white gender norms.
I know this seems a little non-sequitur, but I hope this makes a lot more sense when I remind people of Sokka telling Toph that after so many years, half the time when he tries to remember his mother he ends up envisioning Katara instead.
So much of masculinity and femininity in colonized and marginalized communities hinges upon stepping up into older familial roles when your family loses those actual relatives. Katara had to step up and become a mom when she was far too young, and Sokka had to step up and act like a dad when he was far too young to. Being part of a privileged social or economic class frequently insulates you from this effect - both because you are far less likely to lose older relatives in the first place, and because even if you do there are far more socioeconomic supports in place to keep you from needing support, or can just outsource so much of the work that families do for each other.
Any family will grieve when they lose their father, but there's a huge difference between this meaning "we'll have to downsize our lifestyle a bit and I will lose a lot of support" and "whether or not I go to work or go to school will decide whether or not the rest of my family lives in poverty, because no one else is supporting our family." Any family will grieve when they lose their mom, but there's a world of difference between "now we pay a stranger to come in a few times a week and take care of the house" and "if I don't bathe and clothe my family no one will."
A lot of the White Feminist™ disregard for "women's work" feels an awful lot like saying all the work our moms had to put in to raise us didn't matter, and that our dads' desires to protect us were fundamentally wrong (and not just misguided when taken to extremes that hurt us).
there was a lot of mistakes made in the live action but the worst one without reservation was that the creators did not understand patriarchy and they did not understand women's liberation outside of an american context ( or any context if we're being honest )
it's easy to see on a surface level how that fucked up katara's whole character how she wasn't allowed to have her character defining moments how she wasn't allowed to be angry or even excited or impulsive but i think it doesn't really become clear how deeply wrong the show's conception of gender & patriarchy is (and the implications for the political landscape of the show) until you get into how they destroyed sokka's character too
sokka's whole Complex is born of patriarchy. i'm not trying to do men's rights advocacy here but in my experience when a people is under constant threat, constant assault, constant violence (much of which is gendered) and the traditional "protectors" or "providers" of that people are men, the masculine role becomes protecting women and children. i am not saying this is a good thing or a bad thing but it is true the narrative of violent resistance is overwhelmingly about men. to be a man in a time & place like this means fighting to protect your women, & to die for them is honorable. that is where sokka gets this idea that he has to be a warrior & he has to fight & if necessary die for katara & the rest of the tribe. it's about duty. everyone has a part to play, a role to fill
everyone including women! which is the other half of this. the duty of women is to keep up the home, to maintain a country worth fighting & dying for, to raise children so that the community can have a future. it becomes especially obvious in the context of the show when you see how the nwt lives & in specific how yue lives and dies.
many women participate in patriarchy. many colonized women participate in patriarchy. most of my family comes from or still lives in a country completely devastated by colonialism & its aftereffects & many women in my family believe wholeheartedly in the idea that everyone in the house has a role to play. it's not because these women are stupid or they hate themselves. but when you grow up believing that men & women are fundamentally different, and seeing that women are in specific danger because of their gender, it actually makes a lot of sense to expect the men in your family to protect you, and to raise your sons that way.
in practice that means that men aren't really expected to do anything around the house, especially when there's no actual danger. my aunt literally 2 days ago told me this lol like she doesn't make her sons do anything bc she wants to let their lives be easy before they have to go out into the world & take care of their wives & children.
what does women's liberation look like when an entire community is under threat? colonized women have been dealing with this question as long as colonialism has existed. the writers of this show don't even pretend to understand the question, much less to formulate a thoughtful response to it. they just say oh, well, katara, yue, & suki are all the exact same type of liberated girlboss for whom patriarchy is no significant obstacle.
which brings us back to sokka lol. sokka, at the beginning of the show, has completely subscribed to patriarchy, has integrated it into his sense of self. he has a lot of flaws, but he also has a lot of really good traits. his bravery, sense of honor, loyalty, work ethic, selflessness, all of this came from him striving to be a good man. he would die to protect katara, because she's his sister. he also has her wash his socks & mend his clothes, because she's his sister. even after he meets suki, humbles himself, & expands his view of the role a woman can play, he doesn't completely disengage from patriarchy. at the end of the day he believes in his soul that a good man's duty is to fight & if necessary die for his people, & that's exactly his plan. this is a very real psychic burden. pre-aang, it's also largely fictional & completely ridiculous. we're SUPPOSED to think it's ridiculous. he's spending his time training babies & working on his little watchtower. the swt hasn't been attacked since their mother was killed because it has been completely stripped of all value or danger it once held for the fire nation, & everybody knows this. there is very little "men's work" left, aside from hunting & fishing, which is so damaging to sokka's self image he resorts to toddler bootcamp to feel useful. the contradiction here is comical. it's also completely devastating. that's supposed to be the fucking POINTTTT like colonialism & patriarchy convinces this young boy he needs to be a soldier & die for his family. & you know what he does? He acts like a young boy about it. they didn't just leave this unexplored in the remake they completely changed the circumstances to 1. make sokka incompetent for some reason 2. make his "preparations" seem less ridiculous. Which ruins the whole character. Possibly the whole show.
all this makes the writing of katara & the other women infinitely more offensive to me. katara is a good character because she believes in revolution. she wants to liberate her people from imperialism, & she wants to liberate women from colonial gendered violence, traditional patriarchy in her own culture, & the complicated ways those things interact. it is LITERALLY the first thing you're supposed to learn about her. she's the PERFECT vehicle to address the question of women's liberation under colonialism. one of the things i was most looking forward to seeing in this show was how labor is distributed in a place where almost everything that needs to get done is "women's work" & how it affects katara & sokka's day to day relationship when their lives weren't at risk constantly. what actually are her responsibilities every day, & how do they compare to sokka's? how does her grandmother enforce these traditions with katara & sokka, & how is that informed by her own experiences in the nwt? what does patriarchy look like in a tribe made up of mostly women & children? it's so important to who katara is & what she believes! but why bother exploring any of that when u could instead make her a shein model who has nothing in common with the source material except her hairstyle lol.
yue is actually even worse to me bc yue is supposed to be sokka's counterpart. she's supposed to show you how destructive it is for women specifically to internalize this gendered duty so completely. it sucks for sokka, but he is a man & thus his prescribed role gives him some agency. yue's role affords her no agency whatsoever, & this is the POINT. to make her someone who's allowed to break things off with her fiance if she likes, who sneaks off to do what she wants when she's feeling stressed, whose will is respected as a monarch, like what is even the point of yue anymore? in the original the whole reason she was even allowed to spend time with sokka was because her father knew she was with a trustworthy boy. her story completely loses all significance when the dimension of patriarchy is removed from it. the crux of her whole story is that she is not just a princess but the literal & spiritual representation of the motherland. that's what women are supposed to represent during wartime, at the cost of their own sense of self. in order to fulfill her duty to her people she gives her life to them in every single way that matters.
it's just so unbelievably frustrating (and WRONG) that the only types of characters for these writers are "soulless misogynistic fuck" and "liberated american-style feminist." there's no nuance at all! they don't bother exploring how real love manifests in patriarchal communities, & how patriarchy defines the limits of that love. or how for so many of these people their idea of goodness, morality, & honor is gendered. or how imperialism affects not just individuals but entire cultures & their conceptions of gender. but why do any actual work when you could completely change sokka & katara's general demeanors, their entire personalities, & their roles in the tribe so you can dodge any & all nuance
Anyways. in conclusion. it was bad
#intersectional feminism#natla#atla#sokka#atla meta#nyxie is asian#hyphenated american#my step-brothers' dad was guatemalen#so that was the kind of masculinity they internalized#and meanwhile the kind of feminism i was struggle with#was about value of the kinds of work and labor and intelligence#that my dad did not value#but that also did not mean he didn't value me#idk white feminism always feels like i'm supposed to throw out my parents#that my only options are to embrace everything my parents believe including their regressive bullshit#or throw out everything my parents believe including all the good values they've instilled in me#why is katara expected to throw away everything their mother did for them and everything she did for her family#but sokka is not expected to do the same comprehensive dismissal of what his father did for him and what he did for their family#white supremacy#and#colonialism#devalue alternative family structures#and that is why white feminism#devalues the contributions of mothers and fathers in non-white families#and the contributions of mothers even in normative families#and therefore calls upon feminist women to devalue our mothers#by devaluing the labor of anything that isn't playing into masculine pursuits of privilege and power
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