Introducing Philosophy Through Pop Culture. Группа авторов

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Introducing Philosophy Through Pop Culture - Группа авторов

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      So Black Panther allows the audience members who identify with it to imagine a range of possibilities for themselves. But it has another function: to represent Black and African American experience to everyone. The film offers imaginative possibilities, but it also tries to reflect current reality through fictional representation. The depiction of Black women in the film is especially notable, as even though T'Challa is the protagonist, he is flanked by powerful Black women who are different in their motivations and values, and who drive the narrative forward in their own ways. Nakia is driven primarily by personal principles of justice, and Shuri’s motivations centre around familial ties and nationalism.

      Okoye is loyal to her culture and its traditions, a capable leader and formidable warrior. Her head is close shaved throughout the film, and in the one instance that she wears a wig, she is vocal in her displeasure and throws the wig at an opponent. Calling the wig a “ridiculous thing” flies in the face of Western demands of how Black women should perform femininity and beauty. Similarly, Nakia and Shuri maintain their natural hair, styled in ways designed to accentuate its qualities, not stymie its abundance. After decades of not seeing Black women with natural hair on screen, the recent cultural return to natural hair in defiance of white supremacy's expectations is reflected and validated in the fictional characters.

      Nakia has a similar tension with T'Challa and Okoye. Nakia has experienced much of the world outside Wakanda. Though she does not experience structural oppression in the way Killmonger has, the suffering and oppression of Black populations outside Wakanda troubles her deeply. We first see her undercover on a mission to stop the kidnapping and forced sexual slavery of African women – a real‐world problem – and the film reiterates that she is well‐traveled. She says to T'Challa, “I've seen too many in need just to turn a blind eye. I can't be happy here knowing that there's people out there who have nothing.”

      Similarly, after T'Challa loses the duel with Killmonger, Nakia challenges Okoye's decision to stay and serve the new king. When Nakia suggests a plan to overthrow Killmonger, Okoye is taken aback, believing her duty is to the institutions of her country and therefore the throne. Nakia, however, believes that she can best serve her country by ensuring its better future, even if doing so contravenes tradition and law. When Okoye tells her, “Serve your country,” Nakia responds, “No, I save my country.” This exchange reflects a political dilemma in the real world: often, oppressed populations such as Black Americans have to break the law or conventions in order to effectively resist their oppression. Some find this an uncrossable boundary, but others believe society's laws are inherently corrupt because of the unjust system that created them.

      So, even though Black Panther is a good epistemic resource, we as audience members and knowers have been ill‐served by the fictions that came before it, which gave us faulty, stereotypical resources to understand and interpret Black and African American experience. In turn, Black and African American people have been ill‐served by previous fictions,

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