Reykjavík Grapevine


Reykjavík Grapevine - 19.05.2017, Blaðsíða 60

Reykjavík Grapevine - 19.05.2017, Blaðsíða 60
60 The Reykjavík Grapevine Issue 08 — 2017 Riley. Riley, Riley, Riley. Do you know Riley? She’s an Icelandic main charac- ter in the hit Netflix show ‘Sense8’. Ri- ley is not like a single Icelandic woman I know, but she is the embodiment of every preconception of what an Icelan- dic woman is—and I know all about those preconceptions, because foreign men with IGF (Icelandic Girl Fetish) have mansplained it to me many, many times. Riley is a Manic Pixie Disc Jockey. Though even I can’t deny the cliché of Riley’s profession—I can think of seven female Icelandic DJs that I know personally, just off the top of my head. Iceland is legitimately lousy with them. Riley even speaks with a soft-spoken lilt- ing accent that I sometimes put on for foreigners as a joke, when they tell me I don’t sound Icelandic enough to them. Maybe, I wonder, what nags at me is that Tuppence Middleton, the actor playing Riley, isn’t actually Icelandic? We’re cool enough to portray, you see, but not cool enough to cast in the lead. But just as I reach peak bitterness, it hits me. This rage has revealed to me my staggering privilege. Before now, I’ve never had to contend with how my culture, how people from my country and my culture are depicted by Holly- wood, because we’ve been flying under the radar so long. Turns out, it sucks to have your culture reduced to a wildly overrated kind of yoghurt and drone shots of lava fields. And before the Icelandic Skyr Lobby comes after me and my family, let’s just agree to disagree, and no one needs to burn my house down. Luxury problem What a luxury it is, to complain about Riley. Meanwhile, Sun, the Korean martial arts genius, certainly lives up to a trope or two about Asian charac- ters. The single black lead, Capheus, lives in a Nairobi slum with his mother who’s dying of AIDS; Africa, CHECK! And of course the brainy Indian wom- an trapped in a loveless “love match.” By comparison, Riley is practically an example cultural of appreciation, not cultural reduction. Still, here I am, using my national platform to complain about this show. Why? Because this is the kind of pain that a fan feels. Because believe it or not, I love ‘Sense8’. I fucking love it. Despite its problematic stereotyping it gets so much right—the show’s trans protagonist Nomi, for example, is a tri- umph. In a world of superhero movies and endless reboots it’s a beautifully shot and inclusive sci-fi show. It wants to show that cultural barriers are brittle, that we can break them. That people all over the world have more in common than not, that we can share our skills. That’s a message I can get behind. It might have been cool, too, if that message included an African biochem- ist or a Korean cop and maybe an Ice- landic martial arts genius. But maybe I’m asking too much. Could the Wachowskis have sold this pitch to Hollywood ten years ago? Probably not—even with stereotypes it’s a progressive show. Maybe we Ice- landers should just be grateful to be invited to the party and not look too hard at the price of admission? Either way, I really hope the Skyr Lobby don’t burn down my house. OPINION CITY SHOT Is This All We Are, Hollywood? ‘Sense8’ stereotypes Icelandic women Hvalreki is the Icelandic word for a beached whale. It comes from the words hvalur, for whale, and reki, meaning something washed up on shore. In the olden days, it also referred to an unex- pected surprise, though it seems rather outdated, given that the handful of young Icelanders I polled did not know that the word had an alternate mean- ing. Presumably, a beached whale was a delight for Icelandic settlers, who could use the corpse for variety of different purposes, including meat and oil, as well as use the bones for building materials. These days, whale is only consid- ered a treat for unaware tourists. Only 1.7% of Icelanders reportedly con- sume whale meat regularly (compared to 18% of tourists), but Iceland re- mains one of the few countries around the world stil l hunting for whales. Sometimes, the whale doesn’t always wind up on a beach. Just north of Rey- kjavík is a fjord called Hvalfjörður, which means whale fjord. According to legend, there was a fisherman who pissed off an elf maiden, who turned him into a whale. He was wearing a red cap, so the people named him Rauðhöfði, meaning red head. Rauðhöfði turned into a rather mean mammal, wreaking havoc and sink- ing ships left and right. Two of his vic- tims were the sons of a pastor. The pastor grieved deeply for his lost chil- dren and vowed revenge. He baited the beast into swimming further and fur- ther into the fjord. Now there is a lake there called Hvalvatn, or whale lake. The pastor went further inland, even- tually leading Rauðhöfði to a waterfall. The frenzied whale tried to climb up the waterfall, but being a whale, and also having chased the pastor for some time now, he died of exhaustion. The whale’s remains were later found in Hvalvatn. Fort unately, contemporar y Ice- landic whales are not known to be so vicious. Over twenty different spe- cies of whales live around Iceland, and many of them can be spotted fre- quently on whale watching tours. SHARE: gpv.is/words Every Single Word in Icelandic (http://every- singleword.is) is a pictographic exploration of the Icelandic language. I find an interest- ing compound word, then deconstruct and illustrate it as icons. The goal is to express how Icelandic can be deadpan literal and unex- pectedly poetic at the same time. Whale Tales WORDS OF INTEREST Words: & Art: Eunsan Huh Words: Nanna Árnadóttir Photo: Netflix Sense8's Riley, objectifying the shit out of Reynisdrangar “Icelandic people are cool enough to portray— but not cool enough to cast in the lead.” Icelandic high school graduates celebrate by going green. Photo: Art Bicnick. West-Iceland
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