Cathy, on 25 November 2013 - 03:47 PM, said:
Which is why on the whole you'll see black people in every house but until a few later editions played catch up, they were mostly forgotten as four guys hunting down a lion over a period of three days armed with nothing but a spear each and a flask of water, is clearly not as brave or honourable as a bunch of spazed out space samurai.( this is sarcasm btw)
which is captalisms way of saying there are more rich people in Japan than Kenya.
which is going to be the real reason they got forgotten once all the bull is stripped away and being PC is pushed under the carpet for a brief time.
I get where this is coming from, but I don't necessarily agree with it.
One of the earliest examples of fiction in the Novel series was the "heir to the Dragon" book. Which featured a Black Kuritan character as the central character in the story. Despite the "80's" inspired cover, I felt the book treated him with respect. He was black, it got brought up a lot as far as the xenophobic dealings with his predominantly Asian superiors, but he himself wasn't a "stereotype" by any means.
He was highly capable, intelligent, honorable, and great at what he did. And despite everything that was thrown at him, he remained true to himself up till the end. They didn't rope him in as a "fish out of water," as a black person in a predominantly asian culture, they didn't make his race a reason to put him in certain situations or others, He was just simply a Kuritan that had African Heritage (I think that's actually how they bring it up in the books.)
While I agree that most of the early fiction revolved around the actual mech's and battle's they got into, None of the early fiction ever treated characters of African heritage as " the lion hunting spear chucker's." And I felt they did a good job of kind of transcending race and gender cultures pretty much throughout the fiction. Natasha Kerensky was always the biggest bad *** in the intersphere since ver. 1.0, and you can always say that the early fiction was never descriptive enough to even bring race up as a consideration.
I mean, if you where to just look at the name on the paper "Minobu Tetsuhara" you wouldn't know he was Black. So what is to say that early fictional interpretations didn't see characters in different ethnicity as well. Heck, reading Warrior Trilogy, I will always read Myndo Waterly as a very capable Black Woman (Also Kuritan,) who was arguably more powerful then ANY of the house lords. (The books describe her as dark skinned, and the early illustrations of her depicted her as Black. I really don't know why or when they "white washed" her.)