Googling around, I’ve seen a lot of users and journos claiming they are a jewish stereotype. I struggled to even compare them to what HP did. And as a partially jew, I’m really jealous of qualities these bigots paint and the thinking process Quark put to work. He’s probably my favorite character of the whole franchise.

  • vithigar@lemmy.ca
    link
    fedilink
    arrow-up
    3
    ·
    5 months ago

    The point we’re dancing around is whether to boycott a work of fiction due to its use of uncomfortable topics and under which circumstances.

    The core idea remains. Women treated poorly on one side, Jewish people treated poorly on the other. One side praised, the other shunned. Both in the same place.

    Star Trek brought up uncomfortable topics quite regularly specifically to address them. In the context of the episode in which Ishka disrobes, the Ferengi practice of naked and subservient women is literally the central driving contention of the plot, with the protagonists clearly on the side of “women shouldn’t have to be naked, and they should be able to do things on their own without men.”

    Harry Potter goblins are there because… look at the funny little greedy men with big noses, aren’t they annoying and mean, haha?

    Equating those as being “in the same place” is asinine.

    Sure, Star Trek had its own list assholes in charge of production and scummy behaviour, and calling that out for what it is is fine, but the way that Ferengi were portrayed and developed was definitely not an example of that.

    • Lath@kbin.social
      link
      fedilink
      arrow-up
      1
      arrow-down
      1
      ·
      edit-2
      5 months ago

      You really don’t know much about HP goblins, do you?
      They aren’t just there to look funny. They hold the wizards bank because they’re master craftsmen. They’re defeated rivals who still rebel from time to time whenever able to. They can use magic just as well as wizards if not better and were banned from using wands as a matter of status, something they didn’t much care for anyway because they prefer using violence in combat over magic. The half-goblin professor is a master duelist and attributes part of that to his aggressive goblin blood.
      That’s just basic stuff you learn from the movies.

      Sure, the exposition is poor, but it makes sense considering it’s being done from the perspective of wizards.

      look at the funny little greedy men with big noses, aren’t they annoying and mean, haha?

      That’s exactly how the wizards see them. Bravo to the directors for instilling that notion so well in the viewers. It means they did their job well in this regard.

      You say the protagonists in Star Trek had a system of values they respected, but didn’t they also have to respect the culture of other species? To impose their own views and values on another was also considered self-serving and foolish.

      Also the human civilization was post-enlightenment. Is the wizard society in HP also enlightened? Not really. Rowling calls them backwards, centuries behind the rest of civilization.
      How were we a century ago, let alone two?

      This is why I said similar. Circumstances are different. The world, the lore, the setting.
      The goblins were given a foundation and it was built on in accordance with the rest of the world it was in. With the type of background the story portrayed. In line with every other exposition of that world.

      In the first movie they were there to scare a newcomer, but it also showed they took their role in that bank seriously. And with each movie beyond that, more and more was uncovered of their culture, their history and their way of life. To anyone who cared to look at least.
      Goblins didn’t just remain funny little greedy men with big noses until the end, but at the same time they also didn’t change much of their culture. And neither did the wizards. Only a little. A small step forward. Together. Because they’re long-lived, don’t like each other all that much and change is slow.