Challenge
Cultural Appropriation: can a white writer ever create minority characters?
When is it okay for a white writer to create a black character? For instance, I'm white, but writing an urban fantasy featuring a bi-racial (black mother, absent white father) jazz musician who's down-on-his-luck... because he's a heroin addict like many jazz musicians. It's set in 1978, and (like me back in the late 70s/ early 80s) he's a huge P-Funk fan so he slips P-Funk-isms into his thoughts, like calling the antagonist, a white drug dealer he owes money to, as "Sir Nose d'Voidofunk."
My question is, would folks see that as cultural appropriation?
I'm interested because I'm a huge social justice progressive and yet often feel stymied by political correctness. My intent is to embrace Jimmy (who I really, really like despite his flaws). In fact, of all the characters in my urban fantasy world, Jimmy's the one most like myself (though I've never tried heroin and am a middling jazz guitarist at best).
Thanks in advance.
PS. Everyone wins. But in payment, I'll read your most recent work and comment. Please tag me in your comments.
What’s Stopping You?
I'm an atheist writing a series of stories featuring demons and angels. I don't believe that a god, a heaven, a hell, a devil, angels, or demons, or any the like exist at all. And yet I write a series featuring them. What's stopping me from writing this?
Absolutely fucking nothing.
You wish to write a fantasy about a bi-racial character. My question for you is this: what's stopping you?
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