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- #301
When a particular message is entrenched in society, the very existence of views outside the message is a challenge to it, showing that there are other ways of being. That's what I mean by representation.
First, I love this thought, Feo.
Secondly, I want to show an example of this, so maybe we can get on the same page of what simple, representational diversity can look like without sending any overt messages. I've been watching Fringe a lot lately (I'm only on Season 3, so no spoilers! ) Of the main cast, 3 characters are persons of color, and 1 is mentally ill. Of all 4 of them, only the one suffering from mental illness has his unique situation feature as a plot point. The racial differences of the other 3 characters are not, to my recollection, mentioned at all. It's pretty hard to accuse the writers of Fringe - one of the most tightly-written science thrillers on TV for 5 seasons - of loose writing because of this. The reason? The writers didn't have to. As Feo said, these 3's very existence as powerful, sympathetic characters was enough. They just had to be themselves.