In a piece for Clutch magazine, Stacia L. Brown takes issue with the way race and gender are playing out on ABC's Scandal.
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As soapy and sensationalistic as this show is, itโs hard for me to entirely lose myself in it. Iโm too distracted by this idea that, for all her gutsy unflappable-ness, and for all her intimidating, unflinching command in the face of an employee or opponent, the married president happens to be her weakness. Even if it werenโt too convenient a plot point, revealed far too early on, itโd still stick in my craw. One of the reasons why is that I canโt seem to view this show through an un-racialized lens.
This show is giving me too many shades of Sally Hemings. I canโt.
It was especially difficult for me to turn off my Mammy-Jezebel-Sapphire-detector during last nightโs episode, as Oliviaโs and Fitzโs back story developed. This intense need the story-line has to convince us that these two are star-crossed and that their coupling is Something Real reminds me of master-slave-relationship apologists who either believe that the slave is in a position toโseduceโ the master or that their relationship can be rooted in healthy love.
Read Stacia L. Brown's entire piece at Clutch Magazine.
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