Barbie and Oppenheimer lack true representation of Indigenous populations, say advocates - Action News
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Indigenous

Barbie and Oppenheimer lack true representation of Indigenous populations, say advocates

Oppenheimer, which looks at the Manhattan Project and the creation of the atomic bomb, foregoes mentioning any Indigenous involvement or impact in the events it captures. Barbies Indigenous inclusion consists of a joke about smallpox.

Oppenheimer lacks reflection on impacts to Indigenous communities, while Barbie reduces them to a one-liner

This combination of images shows Margot Robbie in a scene from
The lack of true meaningful representation in Barbie and Oppenheimer has advocates in North America speaking up about what they say is part of Hollywood's legacy when it comes to Indigenous people. (Warner Bros Pictures/Universal Pictures/The Associated Press)

Advocates are speaking out about two of the biggest summer movies of 2023, which they say invalidate Indigenous histories and futures.

Oppenheimer, which looks at the Manhattan Project and the creation of the atomic bomb, foregoes mentioningIndigenous involvement or impact in the events it captures. Barbie's Indigenous inclusion consists of a joke about smallpox.

Frances Danger, an Mvskoke and Semvnole author and gallery curator from Oklahoma,saidthat kind of erasure is something that First Nations people deal with on a daily basis.

"It can never be a conversation when you're Native or First Nations, it's always a fight," saidDanger.

"Every fight we have is for our younger generation."

A first nation woman with glasses and beaded earrings looks up into the camera for a picture
Every fight we have is for our younger generation. says an Mvskoke and Semvnole Author and Curator, Frances Danger. (Submitted by Frances Danger )

Danger said youth should be able to see themselves represented in the media as they truly are. Dangersaid the entertainment industry dehumanizes Indigenous people, something that won't stop until there's true representation, "not just on the screen behind the screen as well."

Critiques anact of dignity, saysfilmmaker

Klee Benally, a Dine/Navajo musician, filmmaker and artist based in Arizona, saidit'sabout media justice, which he saidis an approach to understanding how narratives in media can impact marginalized communities.

Critiquing instances in mass media that dehumanizepeopleis an assertive action of dignity, he said.

"We have an important responsibility to our ancestors to stand up and resist the forces that degrade us, that tear us down, that perpetuate narratives that ultimately reinforce and legitimize ongoing colonial violence against us from the outside and from within."

A Dine/Navajo man in a suit stands in a desert landscape.
Klee Benally, who is a Dine/Navajo musician, film maker and artist based in Arizona, says he feels the narratives in both films can tell youth that they are worthless. (Klee Benally/Facebook)

In both the Barbie and Oppenheimer movies, Benally saidwhat's left outside the frame is important.

From the omission of the disastrous effects the atomic bomb tests had and still has on Indigenous people in Oppenheimer, to the insensitive one-liner in Barbie, Benally saidthe narratives tell youththey are worthless similar to how John Wayne or Billy Jack films do.

"This is part of the overall legacy of the film industry," Benally said.

"You know how it's been dominated by colonial forces and it's served those colonial interests."

'Let us ... have our criticism'

Yue Begay, a Navajo transgender woman born in Flagstaff, Ariz.who now lives in Los Angelesand is the co-chair of Indigenous Pride LA, saidshe doesn't remember seeing Indigenous people in mass media growing up.

"I was accustomed to view Natives as not screen worthy because I was always fed this," saidBegay.

Begay saidthis is an example of culture of povertyif youth don't see themselves reflected in mass media, they won't strive to do anything.

A transgender woman from the Navajo Nation, holds a cross and is wrapped in a blue blanket at a public event
Yu Begay is a Navajo transgender social media influencer born in Flagstaff, Arizona who now lives in Los Angeles, California. She says she doesnt remember seeing Indigenous people in mass media growing up. (Taken from Yu Begay's facebook)

"So many other Barbies were featured and included in that movie, but none of us were, and then you make the smallpox joke?" saidBegay.

Begay saidshe wouldn't be doing advocacy work to challenge the status quo if it wasn't needed.

Begay used their graphic design skills to whipup some slides about the issues with the movies.

Begay said the screenwriters should have known better before letting their films make it all the way through production before realizing that they were upholding settler colonialism values.

"For people to try and defend it and defend that, it's like, no.Let usNative and Indigenous peoples have our criticism," saidBegay.