Another Antagonist Against Alternate History: On Roxane Gay's “Black Lives and Slavery Fan Fiction,”
The backlash against HBO’s
upcoming alternate history series, Confederate,
continues.
In yesterday’s New York Times, Purdue University professor
Roxane Gay published a provocative opinion piece, entitled “Black Lives and
Slavery Fan Fiction,” which takes the series to task for a variety of alleged
flaws, but goes beyond them to critique the broader genre of alternate history
in sweeping fashion.
Gay begins by acknowledging
that other alternate histories on the South winning the Civil War and slavery
persisting in the present-day United States, such as Ben Winters’ recent novel,
Underground Airlines, may well
explore an “interesting premise.” But she then wonders “at what cost?” At this point in her op-ed, it’s not
exactly clear why exploring any literary premise needs to have a cost, at least
if literature is regarded as a vehicle of individual expression.
But her concerns soon become
clear.
Gay explains that she is “exhausted
by slavery narratives,” especially if they reduce the topic to “an intellectual
exercise rather than plainly showing it as the grossly oppressive institution
it was.” I fully agree with this
fear, IF – and it’s a big IF – the resulting narrative, in fact, falls victim
to this peril. It’s a point worth
raising -- though at this point, I find it to be premature.
Where I part ways with Gay
is when she expresses the suspicion that the series will go down the wrong
narrative path because it is “the brainchild of two white men who oversee a
show that has few people of color to speak of and where sexual violence is
often gratuitous.”
I’ve only just started
watching Game of Thrones and I can confirm
that it has few people of color and lots of sexual violence. It is not unreasonable, therefore, to
wonder whether Confederate might
export these representational strategies to the topic of slavery (if it all, it
probably would do so more with regard to the latter than the former). But I’m not sure why the whiteness of
the creators is of any relevance.
If the creators of Game of Thrones
were not white, Gay would be just as justifiably concerned about the show’s
values being exported to the era of the Civil War. For this reason, the playing of the race card weakens her
argument.
This is especially true
because Gay implies that the allohistorical premise of slavery persisting into
the present is inherently suspicious – “slavery fan fiction” she calls it. What she does not mention in her
article that African Americans have tackled precisely the exact premise to be
explored by Confederate. The best example is Kevin Wilmott’s
excellent film, C.S.A, which portrays
a world where the South won the Civil War and preserved slavery. Presumably Gay would not object to this
particular work of alternate history – at least based on its creator’s identify.
That there is a double
standard here at work is clear.
Gay admits she knows she’s “supposed to say” that “no topic is off
limits to someone simply because of who they are,” but she confesses that “it
is not at all how I feel.”
I respect the frankness of
her admission. But I fear she’s
overreaching.
As a Holocaust studies
scholar who has spent a great deal of time analyzing works of fiction that
explore the Nazi genocide of the Jews, I can confirm that similar fears have
been expressed in debates about Holocaust representation. Jewish depictions of the Holocaust –
whether by Elie Wiesel, Primo Levi, Cynthia Ozick, Steven Spielberg – may
sometimes be subjected to different standards of judgment than depictions by
non-Jews. And maybe they should. Yet I am unaware of many
people declaring that non-Jews have no
business tackling the subject. That
is true for the simple reason that non-Jews (Germans, in particular, but all
Europeans, as well as the inhabitants of other countries who belonged any of
the wartime alliances) performed various roles in the Holocaust -- whether as
perpetrators, collaborators, or bystanders. It is a mantra of Holocaust studies
that the descendants of these people bear responsibility for wrestling with its
legacy.
I would argue that the same should
be the case for all Americans (certainly those who are white or, broader still,
not of African descent).
Regardless of whether or not our ancestors were personally involved in
slavery, as citizens of this country, we all bear responsibility for learning
the complex lessons from this shameful historical experience.
Of course, the attempt to claim custodianship of a particular historical legacy or tradition is part of an ongoing debate about cultural appropriation – one dramatically illustrated by the debate over Dana Schutz’s painting of Emmitt Till by at the Whitney – and seems to inform Gay’s views about Confederate. But to my mind, it is important to defend the principle that the topic of slavery is open to all Americans who wish to engage with it. Being white should obviously not be a disqualifying factor for dealing with the topic of slavery.
Of course, the attempt to claim custodianship of a particular historical legacy or tradition is part of an ongoing debate about cultural appropriation – one dramatically illustrated by the debate over Dana Schutz’s painting of Emmitt Till by at the Whitney – and seems to inform Gay’s views about Confederate. But to my mind, it is important to defend the principle that the topic of slavery is open to all Americans who wish to engage with it. Being white should obviously not be a disqualifying factor for dealing with the topic of slavery.
All that being said, I do sympathize with some of Gay’s
fears.
I can relate to her
exhaustion with the topic of slavery to some degree, inasmuch it resembles the
phenomenon of “Holocaust fatigue” in present-day culture. “What, ANOTHER film about the
Holocaust?” is a common lament.
Some viewers resent being bombarded with moralistic works of cinema,
while others fear the subject is being exploited as an easy – but increasingly
hackneyed – method for Hollywood directors seeking to win an Oscar.
I can relate to her fear
that Confederate may engage in cheap
exploitation of the horrors of slavery – her claim that she “shudder[s] to
imagine the enslaved black body in…the creative hands [of the Game of Thrones
team]. After all, works of
Holocaust film and fiction have long been accused of engaging in lurid and
kitschy forms of exploitation – whether Liliana Cavani’s 1974 film, The Night Porter, or, more recently,
Jonathan Littell’s novel, The Kindly Ones.
I can also understand Gay’s
suspicion that “there are people…who will watch a show like Confederate and see it as inspiration,
rather than a cautionary tale.” This is also a common fear expressed about
works dealing with the Third Reich – that they endorse, rather than just
explore, a given counterfactual premise. Any alternate history portraying the
Nazis winning World War II, for instance, might be suspected of celebrating the
outcome rather than condemning it.
(This explains why some neo-Nazis bought up Robert Harris’s 1992 novel, Fatherland, thinking it was an
endorsement of the premise, which of course it was not). But the danger that one’s work
will be misinterpreted comes with the territory of all creative work, and is
hardly a reason for preemptive criticism.
Nietzsche, anyone?
Finally, I don’t agree with
Gay’s claim that the best antidote to alternate histories that portray the
survival of slavery is to promote works that show a “world where slavery never
happened at all.” For one thing, those works already exist. Harry Turtledove and Richard Dreyfuss’s
1994 alternate history novel, The Two
Georges, portray the American Revolution failing and the British monarchy
abolishing slavery in the 1830s.
Terry Bisson’s alternate history novel, Fire on the Mountain (1988), portrays how John Brown’s successful raid
on Harper’s Ferry leads to Black self-emancipation.
Gay also wonders where the
works are that portray a world where “white people are enslaved,” saying “we will
still not know what could have been in a world where white people imagine their
own oppression.” I am not aware of as many such texts, but Walter Rodney’s
book, How Europe Underdeveloped Africa
(1972), includes counterfactuals about Europeans and Africans trading
places.
In citing these examples, I
don’t mean to reject Gay’s concerns out of hand. In our lamentable present-day
political climate, Gay’s fears are understandable; political contexts always
shape the reception of texts – even ones that have not yet been produced. Yet, I maintain that the reality is not
as one-side as she portrays it.
Ultimately, I agree with Gay’s
point that a multiplicity of counterfactual narratives on the Civil War and
slavery is desirable. But I part
ways with her on the question of who gets to produce them, what they focus on,
and how their interpretations should be stage-managed.
Alternate history thrives by
liberating rather than shackling the imagination.
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