Colonialism and Occupation
Many critiques (both formal and informal) comment on the similarities between James Cameron's indigenous Na'vi and the American Indians. Many others describe it as "just another leftist Hollywood film" condemning the current conditions in Iraq, indicating American terrorism in resource wars. Personally, (though I think the parallels between "unobtonium" and oil resources in the Middle East are too deliberate to be discounted), I'd like to defend Avatar as not pointing to any particular war. Rather, by putting the Native Americanesque Na'vi in an Iraqi context (with scenery reminiscent of Vietnam), Cameron is not condemning any particular war, but the dynamic between militant capitalism and indigenous populations. In this way, Avatar is timeless; it is not about any war in particular (or adversely, it combines narratives from every pointless resource war), but about the recurring catastrophic consequences of capitalistic hegemony imposing itself on a beautiful, but delicate indigenous population.
Oppression Dialogues
Another critique that piqued my interest argued that Avatar perpetuated racist and sexist hegemony by making Jake Sully the white, male, heterosexual savior. I feel that Cameron invalidates these identities' relevance to the sequence of events in many capacities. First, I'd like to point out that Jake's human character is disabled, and part of his instrumental role in saving the Na'vi is his personal overcoming dialogue rather than an act of cultural domination. Secondly, in saving the Na'vi it is essential that Jake becomes one of them. Cameron does not have him westernizing the Na'vi, but rewards him with victory once puts down his guns and learns the ways of an indigenous culture (from a powerful woman, no less). Though uses his gun later, his role in winning the war is not as "marine" but as a diplomat who immerses himself in the Na'vi culture for their trust, but also knows the tactics of the oppressor.
Naming the planet "Pandora" was no coincidence either. Cameron named his mythical land after the goddess who accidently opened a box unleashing all evil, but retaining hope. This myth explains the presence of evil in the world, but also the presence of hope. Inspired by this, I feel that Avatar is about open-mindedness and counteracting evil through understanding the modus operandi of each character in a given conflict. In delineating a fictional war cross-pollinated from several familiar symbols (a prized resource, bull-dozing Holy Sites, feathered natives who fight with bows and arrows) Cameron uses Pandora as a metaphor to suggest that hope and will power towards justice can, in fact, counteract evil.
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Published by Anna Lekas Miller
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