Tuesday, May 21, 2019

Skin

indistinguishability and Belonging K atomic number 18n Ford May 14, 2012 Skin directed by Anthony Fabian Skin has so much power on so many levels. It is both empowering and crippling. Protagonist Sandra Laing proves to be a survivor, scarce at what salute? She is alienated from her family, her home and her identity operator because of South Africas Population Re propagation Act. For a long time xenophobia, fear and racism have been entangle and hidden indoors government policy. The issues explored in Skin ar no different to those sometimes raised in liaison with British settlement of Australia, the stolen generation and Australias asylum seeker policies.More specifically, a court case last year in which commentator Andrew Bolt was accused of racial vilification stirred on attitudes reflected in Skin. Mr Bolts comments regarding fair-skinned Aboriginal people were found to be in breach of the Racial Discrimination Act. A theme in both the Bolt case and Skin is the way skin c olour is used as a weapon against individuals and their rights as human beings. One of the disabling elements of Skin is that so much of the South African landscape looks so much like the Australian outback.It is ironic that the beauty of the landscape is countered by the evil of racism where the rights of individuals to belong are less valued than the fear of those powerful few. Is the landscape the only aspect we have in common? Sandras suspense What did I do wrong? could also be the question posed by any person rejected and isolated on the basis of diversion. Sandra is neither white nor black, and as a result is denied a happy life. Though the film traces her life over 30 years, with legislative change on the way, a more entrenched culture of discrimination remains.Though the end of the film brings happiness to Sandra, with her tuck shop, doesnt the fact that her two brothers refuse to have march with her suggest a lamentation for true equality and the existence of persecu tion? In some ways, Skin is more about Sandras father than it is about her. He is a very complex character who insists justice be pursued. But what kind of justice is it that is based on denial? Abrahams insistence on having Sandra reclassified white is not so much for her benefit. He admits he is doing it for all of us.To have the young Sandra attend a white school and be subjected to furious media inquiries and to drag her to face a courtroom does not suggest an seeing of her ineluctably as much as his pursuit of legal justice. Abraham needs her to be white to assuage his own black genes and racist philosophy. Working with the Text Skin is all about identity. Sandra is born one thing but taught she is another. Throughout the film she is punished for committing a crime that of being neither black nor white.Perhaps the greatest tragedy is that her own family rejects her because she does not conform to the Afrikaans ways inherent in the National Party to which her family belongs. The nature-nurture divide is reinforced throughout the film and the idea that without connectedness to others there is no me (2011 VCAA English Exam) can be linked to the film in many ways. It is skin that causes tension with her father it is skin that causes her to be humiliated in school and to gravitate towards the black workers on her farm.It is skin that forms an attachment to Petrus, the black employee and first male to show her any sense of happiness and comfort it is skin that ultimately causes her to be abused by her husband and which made her a reference point for the multiracial elections of 1994 and the victory by Mandelas African National Congress. Living among the black community, Sandra is confronted with racism from within a racism created by racism. After the Government Issue destruction of the homes, Sandra and Petrus are exiled into the bush along with the many others exiled on the basis of their skin.One can understand Petrus frustration and malaise as he rejec ts Sandra because she is white. There is truth in his alcohol-infused dirge They treat us like animals and were supposed to believe were human The audience must wonder how anyone is this predicament would feel a sense of belonging. Indeed, several instances in the film reinforce Sandras literal and metaphoric nomadism. She is shown coming to and leaving an environment she is shown walking over the country and back again to find a place where she can belong.Sandra is constantly moving or being moved to find a home. Even at the end of the film, when Sandra is shown happily working inside her rainbow-coloured tuck shop, it is a makeshift accoutrement to her brick unit. So where does that leave the text and the prompt? What does Sandra have connectedness with? How does the film reflect the idea of connection and identity? Sandra wants only to connect. It is those around her who prevent her connection hence preventing her happiness and sense of belonging.Prejudice and bigotry even from her own family are endemic in those who believe there is something wrong in being different, something to pooh-pooh and deride. Throughout the film, though, there is one place where Sandra finds a connection, and that is with other women. Sandra is supported and empowered by the women in the film, including the black workers on the family property. The bond of motherhood connects them and, unheeding of location, women find support in other women. The women pass on her letters.It is her mother who opposes to maintain a relationship with her it is Petrus mother who supports and cuddles her during their exile and it is her mother she seeks out following(a) her abuse. It is the women who reflect the importance of belonging through kindness, compassion and nurturing. The power of women to override the political and cultural divide, and embrace connection, is the empowering force in Skin. In the end, the film confirms that connection does not have to mean a physical or even emo tional connection. It can be a spiritual one, and this is what Skin celebrates.Sandras struggle is less about skin colour than it is about knowing that where we find happiness is where we belong. And for Sandra, that is a simple life helping, caring and supporting those less well(predicate) from her Rainbow Tuck Shop. Identity and Belonging Sample prompts * Conflicts can strengthen our understanding of where we belong. * Belonging enriches and challenges identity. * Choosing not to belong may be detrimental but rewarding. Identity and Belonging quotations list An identity would seem to be arrived at by the way in which the person faces nd uses his experience. (James Baldwin Actor)) From the beginning each human fertilized egg has its own genetic identity. (Robert Casey) The value of identity is that so ofttimes with it comes purpose. (Richard Grant US writer) We all need a past thats where our sense of identity comes from. (Penelope Lively English writer) I think history is in extricably linked to identity. If you dont know your history, if you dont know your family, who are you? (Mary Pipher) We are shaped by our thoughts, we become what we think. (Buddha)You cant change the past but you can change the way you view it. (Anon) To be yourself in a world that is constantly trying to make you something else is the greatest achievement. Ralph Waldo Emerson What a man can be he must be. Abraham Maslow Sticks in a bundle are unbreakable. Kenyan Proverb Yes, your home is your castle, but it is also your identity and your possibility to open to others. David Soul US writer We may have different religions, different languages, different coloured skin, but we all belong to the human race. Kofi Annan ex President of the United NationsBeing human signifies, for each one of us, belonging to a class, a society, a country, a continent and a civilization. Claude Levi-Strauss Man is made by his belief. As he believes, so he is. Baghavid Gita The value of identity is tha t it so often with it comes purpose. Richard R. Grant Our deeds determine us, as much as we determine our deeds. George Eliot Topic Sometimes we learn more about ourselves from our enemies than from our friends. When you know who you are, you know where you belong. Without connection to others there is no me. Having a sense of being different makes it difficult to belong.

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