ONTD

1:14 pm - 02/19/2013

Django, in chains

Editor's note: Jesse Williams is an actor/producer who plays Dr. Jackson Avery on the TV series "Grey's Anatomy." He is a Temple University graduate and former public high school teacher. Williams founded the production company, farWord Inc. and is an executive producer of "Question Bridge: Black Males." Follow him on Twitter and Tumblr. Note: This article contains offensive language.



Films such as "Django Unchained" carry with them an uncommonly high concentration of influence and opportunity. Due to the scarcity of diverse and inspiring representations on screen, Quentin Tarantino's latest movie casts a longer shadow than many are willing to acknowledge.

In a recent interview with UK Channel 4, Tarantino stated his goals and interpretation of the Oscar-nominated film's impact: "I've always wanted to explore slavery ... to give black American males a hero ... and revenge. ... I am responsible for people talking about slavery in America in a way they have not in 30 years."



He went on, "Violence on slaves hasn't been dealt with to the extent that I've dealt with it."

My personal biracial experience growing up on both sides of segregated hoods, suburbs and backcountry taught me a lot about the coded language and arithmetic of racism. I was often invisible when topics of race arose, the racial adoptee that you spoke honestly in front of.

I grew up hearing the candid dirt from both sides, and I studied it. The conversation was almost always influenced by something people read or saw on a screen. Media portrayals greatly affect, if not entirely construct, how we interpret "otherness." People see what they are shown, and little else.

It's why my dad forced me to study and value history from an absurdly young age -- to build a foundation solid enough to withstand cultural omissions from the curriculum and distortions from the media. It's what led me to become a teacher of American and African history out of college. There is a glaring difference in outlook between those who have mined the rich, empowering truth about how we've come to be, and those who just accept that there's only one or two people of African descent deemed worthy of entire history books.

If, like Tarantino, you show up with a megaphone and claim to be creating a real solution to a specific problem, I only ask that you not instead, construct something unnecessarily fake and then act like you've done us a favor.

[...]

GO READ THE REST @ THE SOURCE

READ JESSE'S COMPANION PIECE HERE
shangman 19th-Feb-2013 09:39 pm (UTC)
We had a temporary science teacher that looked a lot like him. It was at a girl's school, and girls would follow/stalk him EVERYWHERE and screamed at him. Whenever people talked to him in class the people that fancied him that were also there would glare at us. He left after a few months.
hera_bearrra 19th-Feb-2013 09:41 pm (UTC)
I had this one really good-looking substitute teacher in middle school who was also the principal's son. That half-Japanese, half-white hottie had so many fangirls.
shangman 19th-Feb-2013 09:56 pm (UTC)
the one substitute teacher who could control a class?
queen_insane 19th-Feb-2013 09:45 pm (UTC)
D:

that poor teacher.
goldengal1193 19th-Feb-2013 09:46 pm (UTC)
LOL awww
sandstorm 19th-Feb-2013 09:48 pm (UTC)
SCREAMED at him? Whoa, rudeness.
shangman 19th-Feb-2013 09:53 pm (UTC)
Screamed in that stereotypical boy band sort of way. Lots of loud giggling when he passed. More annoying than rude
saintssin 19th-Feb-2013 09:53 pm (UTC)
My cousin taught for around a year and basically had high school girls hitting on him daily. Pretty sure he was freaked out.
shangman 19th-Feb-2013 09:55 pm (UTC)
Yeah when you're young they're just a hot older guy, but for a 30 year old with 13-16 year olds trying to seduce them at every turn, it must be creepy as fuck.
openpick 19th-Feb-2013 10:12 pm (UTC)
aw man that sucks :/
misscrystal 20th-Feb-2013 05:51 pm (UTC)
LMAO. Poor guy. He prob had to leave for his own safety tbh.
This page was loaded May 24th 2013, 9:24 pm GMT.