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Wednesday, February 13, 2019

Is cosplaying as a Drow elf considered to be wearing blackface?

The Virginia governor recently had a photograph of him resurface from a college yearbook wherein he was wearing blackface. If you look at my post last Friday regarding support for wrong ideas, you might recognize that there was support for blackface (no matter how wrong it was) from people in the last 100 years. At present, there appears to be quite an erosion of support for blackface of any kind.

Saturday Night Live did a skit on blackface that I found interesting. A group of white people fielded questions at a black man who promised not to get mad for answering questions, but it did try his patience. The message (TL;DR): it never is okay to wear blackface and it never has been okay to wear it despite what era it was or is (going back in time). This statement affirms what I wrote on Friday which (in a nutshell) is this: "Support for something" and "wrongness" are completely unrelated. Ideas can be super wrong and have amazing support, and vice-versa...really amazing ideas can have no public support. What determines whether something has public support really does appear to be an arbitrary and unpredictable thing (in my mind). However, I will leave room to say that someone out there might have a better clue than me as to what people will support in the end.

That being said, I kind of wish I had been in that audience on SNL, because I would have asked if it was okay to cosplay as a Drow elf at a comic book convention. Allow me to explain just a wee bit.

Drow (or dark elves) are a race of beings from the Dungeons & Dragons fantasy role-playing game (and they are probably based upon something else in actual mythology, but I'm not going to investigate that in this post). With the exception of a character called Drizzt, they are (for the most part) evil, deriving their power from the Queen of the Spiders, who is a goddess called Lolth. She's also a demon that occupies three layers of the Abyss known affectionately as "The Demon Web Pits."

Drow organize themselves into powerful houses and they rule their chaotic evil society through extremely viscious and powerful matrons (Drow have a matriarchy and not a patriarchy). They live in underground cities which (with the aid of darkvision) are true wonders to behold. To keep one house from one-upping another house in their toxic civil government structure, they summon and control demons and set them loose on the city streets. Drow who are unable to deal with the demons (because they aren't strong enough) just perish. So needless to say, Drow society is very cutthroat and unforgiving. Their goddess, Lolth, appears to like it this way a lot.

Drow are also described as being inky black with white hair. And that's like "shoe polish" black. Do you see the problem here? I'll include a picture.

This is called "Drow of the Underdark," and it is a painting by the artist Francis001. It is cover art for a book from Wizards of the Coast (the maker of Dungeons & Dragons), and if you like, you can check out more artwork from this artist located HERE.

So here's the question: If someone wanted to cosplay as a drow elf as above, and it required them to darken their skin with shoe polish or some kind of makeup, would this be considered blackface? Is this now (and always has been) a "No No?"

Because it is a fantasy creature, I'm tempted to say, "This would be okay." After all, you've got the pointed ears, the clear as day need for a white shoulder-length wig, and then the costume which is clearly that of a fantasy race. But what I'm tempted to say might be "okay" others might be screaming mad about, which is probably why I shouldn't be the judge of things like this and would never consider myself "woke" as I have clear questions about "what is and is not crossing a line?"

As a caveat, I don't expect to arrive at a solution based on this post or the comments that follow. A lot of social justice has no central authority, and (because of this) there are varying stages of permission and outrage that seem to flow simultaneously from any given sample size (of a population). The course of action then seems to be more of a "let's just muddle through this without getting killed" kind of thing. Either that, or it becomes a "If there's even a question as to the morality of what is right and what is wrong, then just don't do it." And this is probably one example of the latter...as in...white people should probably (never again) try to cosplay as a Drow elf. It's just too problematic and doesn't look good. Go as Thor or something else (for that matter). There are plenty of things that wouldn't cause protests or threaten your job and still net you lots of compliments and positive attention at a comic book convention.

But it doesn't stop me from being curious about this whole Drow elf thing. :)

14 comments:

  1. Oh wow. I find that Drow elf "offensive" on many levels. (I'm not actually offended.) First, why must an evil race be dark? Why aren't the evil races lighter in color? Why as a culture do we consider "dark" bad and "light" good?

    And a matriarchy? Why are the evil ones ruled by women?

    These are things that as a society we have traditionally taken as "the other", so therefore they were always seen as the antagonist. And for white males, that still holds. As those of us "other" have gained voice (and I'm not really too "other" as a white cishet female), that's when these things have become problematic.

    That doesn't answer your question, of course. I'd say in this case that it would be blackface, but what do I know?

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    1. Let me start off by saying that in hindsight, I consider the choices made with Drow to be a bad idea, though I think they were the result of privileged ignorance decades ago when the species was invented by oblivious white nerds in Wisconsin, rather than racist malice. So when I explain why drow are obsidian black and ruled by women, understand I’m not excusing it but just informing you of what they were going for;
      The drow’s goddess is the deity of spiders and she is themed after the black widow spider and is often depicted as a sort of spider centaur. The drow are the cursed elves who worship her and are a reflection of her. The black skin, red eyes, and white hair of the drow are supposed to reflect the widow’s coloration (including the white web). The women being in charge is again a black widow allusion, as is their tendency to live in the shadows and keep to the dark, their favoring of poison, their callousness toward murder, etc.

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    2. As a nerd from wisconsin im offended

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  2. There are so many complications to this question that it makes it difficult, even, to approach. Like:
    The majority of comics/gaming fans are white dudes that have been quick to cause plenty of racist/misogynistic controversies in the last few years.
    The general population doesn't know what a Drow is and isn't inclined to care. If made aware, I'm sure there would be some kind of outcry about the inherent racism of making dark elves black, and I can't say for sure that they would be wrong (because in Tolkien, which I'm sure is the source for the dark elves as a concept, the dark elves were not any different from other elves physically and were only called that because they chose to live away from the light of the Simarils (I believe (it's been a long time since I read that stuff))).
    I'm sure I could go on, but I'll have to settle on the question of motivation:
    Like the kid who dressed up as MLK for a school project, a kid who really admired MLK, but he was a white kid, so people came down on him for it. And his parents for letting him.
    But, fuck, he was a kid, like 10 years old or something, and was trying to honor MLK so people coming down on him was clearly unfair.
    It's a hard question.

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    1. You and Liz both brought up interesting questions that I hadn't considered when thinking of the Drow elf: namely the inherent racism of making dark elves black, and making the "evil" ones women (matriarchy). It's an interesting choice on both counts from the game creators. Was Gary Gygax a racist? I know that Wizards of the Coast (the latest company to own Dungeons & Dragons) has made impressive gains in the current edition in making the game more inclusive through the use of pronouns and queer characters.

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    2. I don't know much about Gygax, but it doesn't necessarily make someone a racist because they have ascribed to societal or cultural racism. It may just make them thoughtless.
      Of course, being thoughtful is something very hard to do and most people aren't very good at it.

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    3. Andrew's right about that. It's something so inherent in our culture that it may have been done unthinkingly. That's part of what the whole movement towards inclusiveness is about. "When you know better, do better." If they do better now, then blindness before can be forgiven. If they double down...

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  3. I don't think in a convention it would be considered blackface because people would know what it was but you'd better clean that stuff off before you go around any black people. Which actually that would make a good episode of The Big Bang Theory or some show like that: Sheldon paints himself up all black like a Drow but then gets lost in a predominantly black neighborhood and has to run for his life. Or I guess a sketch show like SNL.

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  4. Dark elves are black because they come from ancient norse mythology.
    I believe their being black is not offensive because yes they're evil but they're "cool evil". They're one of the most charming races in D&D. Much cooler than surface elves, which skin ranges from white to tan or brown.

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  5. My larper friends told me that painting themselves all black to play drow characters is a 3-hours job. If they're willing to do that, it's because drows are waaaaay cooler and more charming than surface elves :-P
    Yes they're evil because they're from ancient norse mythology. But I don't think they have anything in common with the perception white people historically had of black people.
    Also, they have a matriarchal society but believe me, it's kinda caricatural. It's total madness. Nothing similar to any human society.

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  6. Let's see now. War is peace, black is white, newspeak, duckspeak, political correctness, Liberals (in this case)....

    Is the thought police really ever a good idea?

    With just a little talking point twisting, one could accuse someone of being racist for not having the courage to wear black skin at cosplays or whatever even though no humans in the real world actually have black or very dark grey skin such as the original Gygax Drow do. Yeah, black is beautiful. What do you have against black skin, racist! Also, what do you have against strong women, you sexist chauvinist you!!! ;-)

    Prime directive = to fight socialism. Goofy distractions such as this further that aim. ;-)

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  7. those who start these out cries are just doing to stir the crap pot, also most who cause play use a mixture dark blues, purple and touch of black given a kinda given them a midnight blue complexion. #slaythetrolls

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  8. while the social justice needs to be dealt in many circles even with coplays and larpers, this isn't one of them and hasn't since the coloration change from a pitch black to a mixture of blues and purples to an ash grey that we now use today. The people that cause these most likely don't actually care about the issue and either seeking attention or just trying trouble and ruin everyone else's fun.Now, that being said if i see dressed as drow that is painted as black as pitch, i'm going to say someything. i don't that there are use this as a ploy to racist and that their those who really do about the social implications of this topic. what, i'm saying as, a white asexual male, many dress as a drow know what it is like to be an outcast, thats why many including myself like them. Not just because thier cool BAMF, but because we indentify with them.
    #loveyourself #stopthehate #slaythe trolls

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    1. "Crimestop means the faculty of stopping short, as though by instinct, at the threshold of any dangerous thought. It includes the power of not grasping analogies, of failing to perceive logical errors, of misunderstanding the simplest arguments if they are inimical to Ingsoc, and of being bored or repelled by any train of thought which is capable of leading in a heretical direction. Crimestop, in short, means protective stupidity."

      Drow skin is "ink black", and let me guess. Thumbs up on the 'The Rings of Power'?

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