I thought a lot over the past few days, partly prompted by discourse on here, partly due to a couple of âinterestingâ asks and messages I received (the type you donât answer). I *think* they might have been prompted by engaging in discourse on topics like anti-blackness/racism, misogyny/sexism, TERF characters etc in The Sandman.
Fandoms are always getting super sensitive if someone shines a critical lens on their favourite works, authors and characters. So to make this clear (in case it isnât already obvious from my brain-rot blog):
I love The Sandman. I have an extremely soft spot for Dream (and Desire btw, who deserves a lot more character analysis than just being summed up as âvillainous, sexy bitchâ. One day, perhaps ;)).
I can read The Sandman and just get lost in the story, even after decades and many rereads.Â
But I can also view it through a critical lensâthese things arenât mutually exclusive.
Not critical enough or too critical?
As fans, we can get trapped in certain thinking patterns, like:
âMy blorbo can do no wrongâ-syndromeÂ
âCharacters with flaws are inherently problematic and imply authorial endorsement of those actionsâÂ
âCharacterisation and problematic subtext are one and the sameâ (aka overanalysing and looking for problems where there are none is the death of every story, but failing to see problematic patterns where they are clearly visible is a problem, too).
Don't say anything bad about my favourite character
I think this doesnât need much further exploration. Itâs not my personal way of looking at stories through permanently rose-tinted glasses (I always feel it stalls my experience, but my experience is not everyone else's). Some people prefer that type of escapism, and Iâm good with that (although the downside is of course that by not willing to engage with issues, we can unwillingly perpetuate them). Live and let live, ship and let sail. But please, for the love of god: Donât insult people via their inboxes or messages just because their opinions and preferences donât align with yours. Iâm not going to sugarcoat it or phrase it ânicelyâ: Itâs infantile (and a form of bullying btw), end of.
How can you even like a character who's so horrible? And that author must be equally horrible, too
We have to separate flawed characters, even those who are written to be really problematic, from real-life endorsement of these actions.Â
Author, narrator and character are three fundamentally different things, and donât overlap as much as some people seem to think.Â
We can write vile, despicable characters to make a point (for me, Thessaly was always a prime example for this, and I explained why here). We probably hate them as we write them. I donât know what else to say, but this facet of writing seems to get more and more lost on people, and itâs a worry. Crying for sanitised characterisation is one step away from censorship. We explore what is problematic about people and humanity through story. Thatâs how we process and learn. Itâs nothing new, but it becomes impossible if we canât write flawed and even disgusting characters.Â
Face valueâŠ
Since Iâm mostly in The Sandman fandom, I often read that its ending is hopeless, and thatâs supposedly the entire message.Â
It is agonisingly sad, yes. But is it truly hopeless? I personally see it as quite the opposite, but of course thatâs my opinion, coloured by my life experiences.
I also get that show-only fans often havenât read the comics, or at least not the whole arc. And as such, their outlook from what theyâve seen so far (and choose to focus on) has to be different by default. I also understand that many people are quite new to the comics, even if they have read them in their entirety. Iâve sat with them for 30 years, and I still find new things on every reread (and I read it more times than anyone should đ), and I still donât feel like Iâve understood it all. Perhaps because I still havenât fully understood myself (and itâs unlikely I ever will). If thereâs one thing The Sandman isnât, itâs one-dimensional and easy to grasp in its whole depth.
I just wrote a ginormous meta on it, if youâre interested, itâs here:
I know one of the biggest points of contention in the Sandman fandom (especially between show-only and graphic novel fans) is the end:
On t
Subtext, (not so) glorious subtext
This is where it gets complicated:
We shouldnât mix up characterisation and story subtext. Overanalysing every line to death will always make us find something thatâs âproblematicâ, when it really isnât in the wider context of the story.
Zooming in is NOT always a good thing. Sometimes, we actually need to zoom out.Â
But subtext *can be* (accidentally) problematic. Even in stories we love. And none of this negates what I previously wrote.
Stories have real-life implications of sorts, and we need to be able to talk about it. Thatâs where those slightly flabbergasting, hostile inbox messages come in, and I want to expand on that "topic of contention" a bit:
Neil himself confirmed that the Endless basically warp reality, and that this is why, after Dreamâs failed relationship with Nada, many black women in his vicinity suffer terrible fates (Ruby and Carla in particular). And that this spell is only broken when he dies, and that it is the reason why Gwen doesnât suffer the same fate. And said Gwen then gets used as a plot device to basically absolve Hob (who canonically really is a problematic character, whether show-only fans like it or not) from his slaver past. Once again, very clearly: No one is making this up. Neil confirmed it (for the comics, and that was over 20 years ago. It remains to be seen if his stance has changed as we move into that arc in the TV show).
I don't think it is correct to imply that Dream as a character is racist (I've read that, too) because he logically canât be. He holds *all* the collective unconscious. He is also, strictly speaking, not white. He is everything and nothing, and he shows up in many different ethnicities throughout the whole arc, depending on who looks at him. But Neil played with a subtext here (reality warping due to a bad relationship which then affects everyone with similar physical traits) that will read very differently to a black person than it reads to a white person, and we have to understand why that is an *extremely* slippery slope.
Plus, we are supposed to see Hob, who *was* a racist at some point (you canât not be if youâre a slave-traderâitâs impossible by default) as redeemed. And yes, he *does* regret deeply, good for him (and if I were saying this aloud, you would hear the sarcasm in my voice, because it is indeed all about him. We are to sympathise/empathise with him and his character growth while there isnât much mention of the people he maltreated). But also: it was a black woman who basically forgave him (with dialogue that personally makes me cringe). And that black woman who offers forgiveness is not truly a black womanâshe is a character written by a white man. And as much as author and character are not the same (see above), there is an inherent sensitivity in that power imbalance that we can't brush under the carpet.
I donât think Neil is racist. Probably quite the opposite, and I can even see that his intentions were good from a storytelling point of view. BUT intention and impact are two fundamentally different things, and telling the story this way (comic version) betrays blindspots only white people have. Just like women have blindspots when they tell stories about men, and men have blindspots when they tell stories about women (and there are a few of those in The Sandman, too). And and andâŠ
As storytellers, we canât always speak from lived experience. Itâs impossible. And that also means we occasionally make mistakes that look bad in hindsight, even if our intentions were good.
I guess the proof is in the pudding: What do we do when people who *have* that lived experience tell us it looks bad? If they inform us why it is hurtful, plays into old stereotypes etc?
Are we willing to listen and yield (both are the foundations of allyship btw), or are we insisting that our viewpoint as someone *without* lived experience is right? That lived experience extends to all lived experiences (sex/gender, sexual orientation, age...), and from all weâve heard from Neil so far, it seems important to him to rewrite what he sees differently today. Whether theyâll always get it right for the showâweâll see. At the moment, it looks a lot better than in the comics, and certain issues are already being handled with a lot more sensitivity, but a few problems remain.
Pushing back on criticism that comes from people with lived experience is problematicâIâd encourage us to think about what it looks like if a white majority in the fandom is basically saying that the opinions of POC are essentially âoverreactionsâ (and yes, that happened).
Itâs complicated. The Sandman was written in a different time, and I think we have to distinguish between things that werenât really problematic at the time but have aged poorly (again, Thessaly springs to mind, and I have lived experience as a queer person during that time, so I can see it in context while at the same time acknowledging that I would make changes to bring it to the present day), and things that were always a problem due to blindspots. They were a problem in 1990, and if they donât get changed, they are still a problem today.
This fandom is generally so much more open and nicer than others I know. But that doesnât mean itâs infallible, because itâs full of humans.Â
Nuance is sorely needed, in both story interpretation and interaction between said humans.
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