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100% Stardust

@celestialily / celestialily.tumblr.com

~Hey, you with the pretty face: Welcome to the human race!~ | 26
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“I’m not afraid of death, but I’m in no hurry to die. I have so much I want to do first.”

And he did so much. He became an evershining star for humankind to look up to. Rest in peace.

Time And Space

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Wait wait our idea of dirty medieval peasants is based on a *tax aversion scam*??? Please tell me more I need to know this. *bounces excitedly*

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shortly after william the conquerer came to power he initiated something known as ‘the doomsday book’- he sent envoys to survey his new lands to record the properties he now controlled so they could pay accurate taxes. every acre of field, every mill, livestock, buildings and their relative size- all would be recorded to determine the wealth of each settlement so a percentage could be expected as rent. for an example of what this book meant;  the previous king was aware of and collected taxes from about 20 grain mills in england, william’s audit shot that number above 200. you dont know the meaning of ‘pedantic’ untill you start reading about medieval grain mills, theres a church that paved its floor with confiscated ‘illegal’ millstones to ensure that the town had to get its flour from the church’s official mill and one war simply about stealing the same millstone back and fourth for quite a few decadesof course word of these envoys traveled faster then they did, virtually every town they came to had time to claim they had far less taxable wealth then they actually did have by the time the audit arrived. in one of the more over the top cases an entire village pretended to have caught insanity- when the taxmen arrived they saw screaming laughing idiots with underwear on their heads so they left as fast as they could considering at the time insanity was thought to be literally contagious. it would be over five years before anyone tried to audit that town again. its safe to assume a large number of other villages also had sudden cases of strange diseases, mysteriously disappearing cows, or very large shrubberies and haybales shaped like buildings and you dont need to look over that hill either. thats not even touching how many small communities just plain didnt technically exist because they were too small, somewhere weird, or in legal limbo of who owned itof course when the feudal part of feudalism started moving its gears you found that the local lord of that village was unlikely to divulge the exact amount of rents they could collect to THEIR lord either, knowing that the more they admitted to receiving the more they were expected to hand over. this was not exclusive to england either, the more you learn about feudalism the more you have to ask how all these minor lords out in the boonies kept having the money and soldiers to do all the political intrigue bullshit, the answer is also tax evasion. each village kept claiming it had fewer people living in shittier houses with less land and fewer livestock then they actually had, and each local lord kept claiming they were receiving less rents then they actually took so were also adverse to an accurate audit.their knowledge of tax loopholes also extended to finding out that clergymen were either exempt from tax or received a far lower rate of tax, so proving you qualified as a clergyman was an endeavor that paid dividends. specifically to prove you were clergy you proved that you could read and write enough Latin to satisfy an official, so you could spend some money to hire someone to tutor you enough Latin to fake it. its estimated that due to this fully ten percent of medieval english households wrote ‘clergy’ on their tax forms.another and even more extreme example was the peasants revolt of 1381, london was swarmed by the unwashed masses from all sides instigated by an official trying to collect (a lot of) unpaid poll taxes, an angry mob driving a teenaged king Richard II to retreat to a boat in the river, and culminating with 1500 peasants being executed by an emergency militia. this doesn’t sound like a huge success untill you dig into some of the details- peasants from a large number of villages all arrived at london at the same time, leaving dedicated forces specifically to stop ships from acessing london to break the siege, the peasants executed a select number of court officials and started burning paperwork- but systematically only burning the ones detailing who owned plots of land, debt records, and a few criminal records. the peasants who besieged london and scared the king into the river had successfully purged a whole lot of debts and reclaimed a lot of land in one very ballsy and highly coordinated move that relied on them being seen as illiterate dirt farmers with no ulterior motives besides pitchfork mob riot and trying to kiss the queen mother while they touch everything in the tower of london with their grimy hands

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found it. this is… this is amazing. I did a BA in Medieval British History and we never, ever, once considered this. Not once. At a major Canadian university.

jfc this changes my entire brain

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gerard manley hopkins was gay, depressed, severely dehydrated and waxed poetic about the beauty of skylarks

despite being dead for 130 years I gotta say #big mood

between him and percy there's gotta be something gay about skylarks tbh

this is how english lit is supposed to go right

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mikeymagee

T’challa, Erik Killmonger, and Luke Cage: The African Diaspora.

 T’challa, Erik and Luke Cage, as characters, men, and representatives for their communities, represent such a wide breadth of the African Diaspora, and it’s really cool to see how that’s affected their characters, their worldviews, and their philosophies. But it’s also interesting to see the parallels that these three men, who’re each within varying stages of Diaspora, have.  

Now, I’m no expert on African Diaspora, and there’s a lot that I’m still learning, but I’ve had these thoughts in my head since I left the theater after seeing Black Panther.  

*Spoilers for Black Panther underneath*

T’challa

T’challa is a man who grew up on the African continent (Wakanda) so he’s never had to deal with any kind of diaspora. Whatever media he consumed (and I would assume Wakanda would have its own source of media and entertainment) was steeped in Wakandan tradition/culture/language. He never had to feel out of place in his own home country. And true, being heir to the throne of Wakanda probably warped his own sense of what Wakanda was, and gave him a more rosey-outlook on his home country, but for the most part, no one in Wakanda gave him any kind of grief for speaking Xhosa, or for having the name “T’challa” because he was “Home.” T’challa practicing his own cultural traditions was never looked down upon. 

Erik Killmonger/N’Jadaka

Then we have Erik “Killmonger” Stevens, who, for all intents and purposes, is the son of an immigrant. Erik grew up with his father’s stories of Wakanda. His father, N’Jobu gave his son everything he needed to be Wakandan. Despite Erik being born in America, N’Jobu wanted his son to have some connection to his heritage. from teaching him the language, to even giving his son a Wakandan name (N’Jadaka). And yet, despite being Wakandan (of both Wakandan and royal blood) Erik is still seen as an outsider to both Wakandans (due to his American upbringing) and Americans (due to his skin color). Through the film, Erik cites the atrocities against Black people throughout the diaspora had suffered as the cause of his crusade. Erik is a man who grew up with fairy tales of another world that he should, by all rights, be able to take part in, but can’t. Erik is the product of two worlds and not being able to take part in either one leaves him frustrated and angry. Even at the end of Black Panther, at the time of his death, Erik says “Bury me in the ocean where my ancestors jumped from ships because they knew death was better than bondage.” He associates himself, his family and his heritage, with those who could not be considered “African” but also refused to assimilate. Erik exists as something in between these two identities. 

Luke Cage      

Now, unlike the two previous men, Luke Cage isn’t the son of an immigrant, and he never grew up in an African society. He is the descendant of American slaves, and in so doing he is so far removed from any kind of “Traditional African” culture that he probably doesn’t even realize it. African-Americans (or Black Americans who’re descended from slaves) grew up with no knowledge of their cultural roots, and any kind of tradition that was past down to us was done in a way that was hidden or weaved into a Eurocentric package. African Americans, for the most part, had to start from the ground up and create an new culture. And Luke Cage is aware of this. He has an extensive knowledge of African American history, and a deep pride in the advancements and achievements that African Americans have made. From music, to language (African American Vernacular English) to fashion, and politics. Luke carries all of those aspects of being African American with him, into every conflict and every challenge he faces. Unlike Erik, Luke never grew up with stories of Africa because he’s too far removed from that land (but not so far removed from it that he doesn’t still deal with antiblackness/mass incarceration/biases in law enforcement that Erik cited. 

The past as the present

A people without the knowledge of their past history, origin and culture is like a tree without roots.     -Marcus Garvey

Carter G Woodson wrote The Miseducation of the Negro, and is the man behind Negro History Week which would later become Black History Month. Woodson noted that American schools systems not only taught history through the lens of white superirity, it also made it seem as if Africa as a continent was devoid of any kind of history or culture.  Black History Month was created so that African American children could learn that their fore bearers made large contributions to the United States, and to the world at large. Speaking from a personal standpoint, in the schools I attended, we never learned about the continent of Africa (not its history, religion, or mythology). Furthermore, American schools never teach about any other Black people across the diaspora. We don’t learn about the Haitian revolution, or the history of Afro-Brazilians, or the contributions of Black people to European art and literature, such as Alexander Dumas or Leopold Sedar Senghor. And the United States’ educational system runs with the narrative that for Black people life started in slavery, and ended with the civil rights movement. Luke Cage, being a man who grew up in America with no strong connection to his African roots outside of his African American heritage and upbringing, only really had African American history to hold onto when it came to searching for and understanding his identity. You can see within Marvel’s Luke Cage, how he calls attention famous African American figures (such as Jackie Robinson) how he reads great Black American authors such as Walter Mosely, and Donald Goines, and Nikki Giovanni. The music he listens to, Wu Tang, and Method Man, are all artifacts of the African American experience, and proof of their strength. When Luke Cage was imprisoned in Seagate and offered the position of gladiator and better treatment, he responds with:

“Slavery was always a good deal for the master.” Luke invokes a specific instance in his own history as a Black American to fortify himself against temptation. 

 This isn’t just limited to Luke Cage, all the major players in Marvel’s Luke Cage draw reference to Harlem’s great leaders, musicians and politicians as a way to chart a course for the future.  From Cottonmouth to Mariah Dillard to Misty Knight and Henry “Pop” Hunter.

Now, Erik Killmonger, having gone through the same educational systems as Luke would probably not only recognize how limited the western world views African history and culture, but also realize how hypocritical those history lessons are. 

Take for example Killmonger’s reaction to being in the museum, looking at all of those artifacts. He not only chastises the “expert” on how white people obtained those treasures (”How you think ya’ll got them in the first place? Did you pay a fair price for them?”) But he also reclaims them for himself, and uses them for his own purposes and empowerment. He takes that antelope mask (because he’s “feelin’ it”) and wears it for his next heist. 

Or how he scars his body to commemorate each kill he’s done which is an ancient African tradition called Scarification. And couple that with his knowledge of the Diaspora across the world (from how he cites atrocities and how Black revolutions never had the fire power enact real change). He uses both his knowledge of the African Diaspora, his training as an American, and his reclamation of African traditions as a means of gaining power and agency for himself. In these instances, Erik Killmonger acts as a bridge between two worlds. 

The World Where the Ancestors Rest

 In the film Get Out, one of the title songs, “Sikiliza Kwa Wahenga” which  is Swahili for “Listen to the Ancestors”, What makes this song so jarring is that the singers are constantly trying to warn the listener (and Chris, the main character of Get Out) to run away to safety. They are trying to warn Chris in a language that he doesn’t understand because he is so far removed from that aspect of his culture. Feeling disconnected from your cultural roots is another part of diaspora. Chris can’t understand the danger he’s in because he can’t “Listen to the Ancestors”.

However, T’challa, Erik and Luke subvert this in their respective journeys.  They “listen to the ancestors,” albeit in their own ways. They find wisdom in the past, and each man gains a different solution depending on who they invoke.   Each man calls up, and takes wisdom from a different “Ancestors” that represents his own respective place within the diaspora.

T’challa connects with all the great leaders of the Panther clan, the kings of old, the ones who never had to question their identities or change themselves in order to assimilate. Erik claims those who jumped from slave ships and chose death over compromising their own identities. And Luke connects with the many African American trailblazers who created a new identity in spite of their country’s racial animosity.

 When T’challa visits the ancestral plane for the first time, he is greeted by a beautiful purple sky and his father’s prideful smile. There is majesty in this space. A space when Kings come to gather. It’s not just the people T’challa calls on that is important, but the place where the exchange takes place. 

Erik Killmonger (who is of the royal line as well) however is greeted with a different scene. Instead of being surrounded by Savannah, his “ancestral” plane consists of his childhood home, a rundown apartment in the poor neighborhood of Oakland California. While N’Jobu did everything he could to teach his son about Wakanda,  and fill their living space with Wakanda/African art and culture, it was still a pale comparison to the real thing. In Erik’s astral plane, both son and father are banished from home, and are “lost”. 

  And while Luke Cage may not have ingested a heart-shaped herb, he too returns to the place of his ancestor. The church his grandfather founded, and the church his father ministered in. The venue for each man here is a reflection of where they are within their own diaspora. T’challa’s is traditional. It knows what it is and where it is. Erik’s is frustrated, rundown and exhausted, but still desperately clinging to its own culture. And Luke’s lacks any kind of majesty at all. It is without ceremony, or grand power, and is devoid of any “African” aesthetic, but it still boasts a strong and proud history founded upon African-American fortitude. And much like T’challa’s astral plane, Luke’s has a sense of identity and it knows who and what it is.

“When I Think of Home” -Dorothy, The Wiz

The place we live has the ability to shape us into the people we will become. There’s a reason we say “Home is where the heart is.” And the reason I used this quote from The Wiz is because the lyrics to the entire song are fitting to T’challa, Erik and Luke’s situations throughout their narratives. T’challa and Luke have learned to integrate themselves into their worlds. Luke has risen to become Harlem’s hero, and T’challa is the crowned king (through both blood and right). Erik’s situation, on the other hand, is very different. Erik acts as a man in between “homes.” Both Black Panther and Luke Cage did a phenomenal job of building up both character’s “homes”. And while Erik’s home of Oakland California did not get the same world building as Luke’s Harlem or T’challa’s Wakanda, its history, heritage, and influence is still evidenced through Erik and his actions.    

Wakanda

“What happens here determines what happens to the rest of the world”

-T’challa

Wakanda has always had control of its own culture, its own destiny and its own identity.  It has a culture that it is keen on protecting, even if it means turning its back on the rest of the world. Erik even knows of this lands wonder through the stories his father told him as a boy. And T’challa is the culmination of being brought up in this world. He is wise, he is strong, but he never allows his pride to control his actions. He is thoughtful and is averse to taking life when it can be avoided. However, through his film, he does deal with a crisis of conscious. He questions where Wakanda stands on international affairs, and what its responsibility is to the rest of the world. Both Nakia and Erik bring up Wakanda’s power, knowledge, and resources, and T’challa has to seriously consider what his role and his kingdom’s role is to the rest of the world. And then you have isolationist like W’Kabi who bring up the fear that Wakanda will lose its own identity and culture if it opens itself up to outside influence. Identity is an important part of Wakanda’s philosophy, and it’s clear that Wakandans pride themselves in holding onto who they are.

And later on in the movie, when he discovers his father’s hand in Erik Killmonger’s creation, T’challa experiences first hand the consequences of Wakanda turning its back on the rest of the world, and the rest of the diaspora. Erik Killmonger returns to Wakanda influenced by his upbringing in America, and actively destroys Wakandan culture (such as the heart shaped herb) and replaces Wakandan philosophies of peace and isolation with American philosophy of violence and destruction.     

Oakland California 

 “Can you believe that? A kid from Oakland, running around believing in fairy tales.” -Erik Killmonger

Erik grew up in Oakland California in a run down neighborhood. One can infer that Erik and his father grew up in poverty, with gang violence running the streets. Oakland is also the place where The Black Panther Party was founded. A party that was concerned for the well-being of African American people and were responsible for radical movements that worked to benefit Black Americans, and protect them against exploitation by corrupt police. N’Jobu was also of the mindset that Wakanda could do more to help Black people all across the diaspora, and he came to this conclusion while living in Oakland, and he passed this ideology onto his son, just like he passed on the stories of Wakanda. In this way, father and son become products of the two cultures they are a part of. Adopting the philosophies of the political party that also bore the namesake of their country’s royal family, of their family.  Erik was a kid during 1992, which means he probably saw the fallout of the Rodney King riots over in LA. A time where many Black Americans were dealing with the fall out of a bigoted, unfair policing system that exploited their lives and bodies with no consequence.  It wouldn’t be difficult to believe the chaos he witnessed during those times, and how it contrasted with the stories of a beautiful, wealthy Wakanda that his father told him of. 

Erik comes from fire, he joined the military and, as he admits in Black Panther, killed. He killed in Iraq, in Europe, in Africa, in America. He comes from a place that was forged from flame. And during his time as king, Erik brings that same flame to Wakanda. By burning the Heartshaped Herb, ensuring that there can be no other ruler to oppose him. By taking Wakanda’s resources for his own agenda. He, through his own machinations, turns Wakanda into Oakland. Through Killmonger’s tenure as king, Wakanda undergoes an identity crisis where it doesn’t know what it wants to be. But is also through Erik’s time as king that the voices of the Diaspora are heard, and Wakanda is forced to recon with its own complacency.

Harlem

 “[Harlem]…is supposed to be a shining light to the world.” -Luke Cage

Harlem is the main setting for Luke Cage, and is where the bulletproof hero calls his home. Harlem is a historic neighborhood for African Americans, being the birth place of some of the greatest works of art, literature and identity for African Americans. All throughout his show, Luke Cage (and many other characters) cite the importance of Harlem, the history of Harlem, and the future of Harlem. And while Luke loves his home and works to protect it (much like T’challa does for Wakanda) Luke Cage (at least in his Netflix series) isn’t a Harlem native. His home down is in Savannah, Georgia right where his grandfather built the church, and where his father used to minister. Luke Cage moved to Harlem as a way to escape the law and find a better life. His journey has many parallels to the Great Migration, a time when many African Americans migrated from the racist, segregated south to the north in search of a better life for themselves and their families.  Like Erik, Luke has his heart and history in two different places. And like T’challa, Luke recognizes the importance of his home’s (of Harlem’s) identity and what it means to the rest of the world.     

Conclusion:

Perhaps I’ve rambled on a bit too much with this post, but I don’t think I’ve ever seen such a well defined look at the African Diaspora so broadly. Especially in such an internationally recognized cinematic universe. 

I really responded with how Luke Cage used and touched upon African American culture and history. And seeing T’challa and the whole nation of Wakanda opened a way of seeing the Diaspora that I never thought was possible. And Erik Killmonger works as the perfect median for both of these perspectives. While Luke Cage and T’challa have come to terms with their varying Diasporas, either though having it ripped away for generations (Luke Cage) or never having it taken in the first place (T’challa), Erik is still coming to grips with his, and his place within it. 

 Erik Killmonger, while struggling to come to terms with his cultural, and racial identity has, inadvertently, created a new one. Being Wakandan-American, which gives him a perspective that is unreachable to both T’challa and Luke, his place within the diaspora gives him access to the experience of creating to survive, holding onto what was old, while also forging something new in the process.  And with this in mind, its ironic that Erik claims his ancestors as the “ones who jumped from the ship” those who are in the constant in between of two worlds. Those who never finished the journey through the middle passage and to America. In a way, there is strength to this identity, an uncompromising power that lives on, even in death.      

However, each person goes on similar journeys throughout their respective narratives, and there’s a lot of crossover between their experiences. Whether it is leading their communities, gaining wisdom through a shared history, or simply learning to use the tools we have to make change. T’challa, Erik and Luke are each different sides of the same narrative pyramid, and it is such a wonderful treat to see them wrestle with their own ideas of how to navigate in a world where Blackness is often times looked down upon, or ignored.  I think it would be really cool if we could get other perspectives in the MCU on the African Diaspora (such as Eric Brooks/Blade who is British, or Jericho Drumm/Doctor Voodoo who is Haitian). 

Regardless, I’m glad that there are narratives that showcase both the difference and the parallels of the African Diaspora, and I hope these new programs can inspire people (of all Diasporas) to look at their roots.   I know it’s been an inspiration to me.

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sseureki

I love how people are like “imma say it, Killmonger was right’ like that wasn’t the goddamn point. I mean, T’Challa literally listened to him and is doing exactly what he said Wakanda should do. Both at the end of the movie (buying up buildings in Oakland) and the post credit scene (offering their resources at the UN). Killmonger was right when he said Wakanda has the resources to help black people and T’Challa was wrong in thinking that they’re not ‘their’ people. It took [spoiler] one of their family members being on the outside his whole life and dealing with the way black people are really treated to realize that they can’t just do nothing. That they are all their people. He’s going against all the kings before him because of Killmonger. Because Killmonger was right. 

a valid villain

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residence is realizing you can just... do your laundry at 1am. who gives a shit. it all comes out wrinkly anyways might as well happen when nobody's around to witness it

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ok truthfully the idea of the host holding the guest hostage under the guise of hospitality while being a parasite to the "host" guest fits so well with Dracula it's scary

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