Why Are There So Many Confederate Vampires?

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  • čas přidán 27. 12. 2022
  • In the late 2000s and 2010s, the three major vampire series of the time: True Blood, The Vampire Diaries, and Twilight-all featured male vampire characters who were members of the Confederacy. Bill Compton, Damon Salvatore, and Jasper Hale. We are going to try and figure out why? Why those character backstory decisions were made, the legacy of the Confederacy in cinema, and most importantly, what it says that all these choices were made and primarily uncritically dealt with in or outside the universe.
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    Time Stamps
    00:00
    01:12 What Was The Confederacy?
    07:10 Jasper Hale
    15:07 Bill Compton
    19:45 Damon Salvatore
    23:53 How Did We Get Here?
    28:15 Oh Hey, Firefly
    38:00 TL;DR
    40:35 Announcement & Book Recommendation
    Gone With the Wind Video: • The Wind Can GTFO [A G...
    Sources:
    The Confederate Flag and the Meaning of Southern History by Kevin Thornton (www.jstor.org/stable/26235412)
    The Civil War at the Sesquicentennial: How Well Do Americans Understand Their Great National Crisis? By GARY W. GALLAGHER (www.jstor.org/stable/26062064...)
    Lost Cause Motherhood: Southern Women Writers by Glenn Robins (www.jstor.org/stable/4233937)
    stepheniemeyer.com/2009/11/ne...
    rsc.byu.edu/civil-war-saints/...
    "The Fall of the House of Dixie"
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Komentáře • 4,3K

  • @SetzerValorin
    @SetzerValorin Před rokem +29376

    My wife asked me this a few months ago, and I thought the answer was pretty obvious: because the vampires in the North were all hunted and killed by Abraham Lincoln.

    • @theelectricprince8231
      @theelectricprince8231 Před rokem +2268

      That's absurd, he couldn't have killed all of them. That's why there are so many confederate vampires, they joined the south.

    • @Legba85
      @Legba85 Před rokem +949

      That is the best answer of them all

    • @Iamjustherek
      @Iamjustherek Před rokem +608

      There’s a whole book and movie about it!

    • @jermainegrays
      @jermainegrays Před rokem +55

      Nice

    • @lochofmceo
      @lochofmceo Před rokem

      You a fool

  • @fee6362
    @fee6362 Před rokem +2313

    Tara: Did you owned any slaves?
    Me a white woman (who has not seen the show): Fair question, you go girl.
    She was meant to come across antagonistic.
    Me: what???

    • @Princess_Weekes
      @Princess_Weekes  Před rokem +729

      It is so wild!

    • @sunsun5005
      @sunsun5005 Před rokem +506

      That clip was wild. I’ve never seen the show so pure surprise. Those are Tara’s friends?? Bc a real friend would have told off everyone in that room

    • @lpchambers3681
      @lpchambers3681 Před rokem +415

      I have never seen Trueblood and I sat there agape when they made it seem like asking if you enslaved people was some outrageous thing to ask

    • @ladyorapma
      @ladyorapma Před rokem +407

      I watched the show and it seemed like a totally fair question to me.
      I never understood why it was supposed to be seen as antagonist and why Sookie reacted like she shouldn't ask that. Girl, I know you like this vampire, but you really don't want to know the answer to that? You should be asking questions! Your best friend is black and you don't know if this guy is still super racist.

    • @petrmaly9087
      @petrmaly9087 Před rokem +33

      Well... Yes, even though it is a perfectly fair and logical question, it is very antagonistic. What the hell am I saying? Look at this perspective: I'm a Slav, the ethnicity the word "slave" comes from and considered subhuman by the nazis and neonazis. My ancestors, some 80%-90% living at that time were killed by the nazis because they fought against them as resistance members or Czechoslovak soldiers in allied armies. I grew up among my surviving family members who fought against the nazis, in the mountains, in the cities, gun in hand. I grew up meeting old Germans who fought for the nazis, some (few) are still alive to this day. However when I talked to a German old enough to serve the 3rd Reich, I wouldn't just ask "did you kill any Slavs?" Such a question would be antagonistic. Fair, logical, but antagonistic.

  • @thevampirefrog06
    @thevampirefrog06 Před 5 měsíci +638

    I never got very far into the Vampire Diaries but the whole time I just felt so so bad for Bonnie, the one black girl in a town with like 75 confederate re-enactment based holidays. Like even without the vampires, RUN GIRL.

    • @LifesNeverHumDrum
      @LifesNeverHumDrum Před 4 měsíci +67

      In so many ways, Bonnie deserved better.

    • @anonimoose165
      @anonimoose165 Před 3 měsíci +55

      It has a Get Out type beat

    • @landofthehazymist
      @landofthehazymist Před 3 měsíci +9

      a sundown town?

    • @HaleyStark.
      @HaleyStark. Před 3 měsíci +22

      Apparently the cast and directors were awful to her too.

    • @picahudsoniaunflocked5426
      @picahudsoniaunflocked5426 Před 3 měsíci +28

      @@LifesNeverHumDrum Jenny Nicholson taught me all about this despite me never seeing the show. Her Bonnie segment made it clear how badly they treated her. Just the difference between both her + Caroline's actress having real-life music careers too, while only Caroline got to perform music on the show made it so clear to me me. May all the Bonnies everywhere get to shine unobstructed.

  • @NotAvailable-_-
    @NotAvailable-_- Před 10 měsíci +1050

    Shout out to Wolverine for fighting for the North. Not a vampire, but just an old Canadian with a heart of gold.

  • @theeducatedfool
    @theeducatedfool Před rokem +6276

    It’s kind of funny how the most prominent defenses for the Confederacy can essentially be boiled down to “they’re not evil, they’re just stupid.”

    • @MrJibbajabbawocky
      @MrJibbajabbawocky Před rokem +981

      "They weren't evil, they were just OK with evil happening to other people"

    • @ealusaid
      @ealusaid Před rokem +581

      Weaponized incompetence strikes again! (And it's also just. So weird. "I don't care about this issue so bad that I'm going to actively keep fighting in this hellish hellish war! It's definitely not because I'm fighting for a terrorist state that will do terrible things to me if I desert... no, I'm just gonna be noble and wade into atrocity after atrocity. Because of my indifference!")

    • @amandasunshine2
      @amandasunshine2 Před rokem +219

      @@MrJibbajabbawocky more that they were wilfully or otherwise ignorant of the evil happening to people. Which is far more applicable today. I can't believe that ANYONE during that time, poor or wealthy enough to own slaves, was not aware of slavery as a practice. They may not have known the extent of the abuse, but they would have seen human beings being sold in markets, and anyone that doesn't immediately realize that's evil is themselves evil. So the argument that they didn't know is incorrect. They were absolutely aware, whether they fought against it or not is the issue.
      Today, it's all too easy to ignore the abuse black people go through daily.

    • @youareaspook5897
      @youareaspook5897 Před rokem +41

      why assume malice on every count when incompetence will do - an old saying, not sure who said it

    • @happytofu5
      @happytofu5 Před rokem +86

      Seriously, we have to get rid of the idea that people can be divided in "good" and "evil". People can do good to some people and evil to others. We can do evil and not even recognize it as such. Its better to call out peoples behaviours, help them recognize whats wrong and also help them change the behaviours for the better.

  • @katherinelynch4193
    @katherinelynch4193 Před rokem +7810

    Abe Lincoln: Vampire Hunter has a surprisingly thoughtful take on this idea. The Confederate leadership were vampires and they wanted to keep the slave trade going so they could have an everlasting supply of people to eat. It's not a perfect parallel, but slavery and the vampire myth are both based on stripping people of their agency and identities to become commodities and fuel for the powerful's gain.

    • @muntu1221
      @muntu1221 Před rokem +884

      The only major issue that story has, in my opinion, is the glorification of the North and Lincoln as heroic figures fighting strictly for moral reasons rather than economic and political. While the North and Lincoln found slavery distasteful, they still didn't particularly care for the well-being of black people and Lincoln even wrote about how he wanted to maintain white supremacy (as he, supposedly, believed racial superiority was inevitable, so he preferred to be on the winning side).
      This element was sort of touched on, but very weakly, and it's presented as if it was resolved. However, at the end of the day, it should've opened the door to Civil War era supernatural fiction starring black heroes and abolitionists. I admire the movie for how transgressive it is on vampire fiction and media overall, especially today when pro Confederate sentiment seems to be getting stronger.

    • @louisdarden108
      @louisdarden108 Před rokem +506

      I'm really happy Abe Lincoln: Vampire Hunter did that. About halfway through this video, I realized that I actually quite like the idea of a Confederate vampire (with some strings attached): I think a Confederate vampire can very effectively underscore that plantation owners were a class of people whose existence relied on exploiting other people that they saw as their intrinsic inferiors; the comparison to Dracula-style vampires, who need to drink blood from comparatively under-powered humans (whom vampires in a lot of fiction regard as livestock) in order to survive, is very apt, I think.

    • @beeaggro2593
      @beeaggro2593 Před rokem +251

      Honestly considering how the cotton plantation system operated. An allegory to a vampiric meat market is inspired.

    • @taylordanielle1232
      @taylordanielle1232 Před rokem +90

      💯 Interview with a Vampire the mc is a plantation owner and he preys on the slaves of neighboring plantations. The material needs are met as well as a population to feed upon.

    • @exquisitecorpse4917
      @exquisitecorpse4917 Před rokem +1

      My problem with Abe the vampire hunter is that the text basically blames the Confederacy on vampirism. So - rather than slavery being an economic institution that very normal, very nice white people maintained because it was profitable and the status quo - slavery becomes the work of a secret cadre of evil monsters.
      And we can all agree that evil monsters are bad and need to be destroyed. But - as this video shows - there are still a lot of (white) people who want to believe in the gentility and spirit of the Confederacy. All ALVH does is flip the binary so that soldiers who would be shown as uncomplicated heroes are reinterpreted as uncomplicated villains. Which completely avoids the actual historical discussion we need to have about the Confederacy: That they were ordinary people. Not heroes, not villains, not especially special in any way. Ordinary people who owned ordinary people as a way of life. THAT is the discussion that no one wants to have.

  • @andscifi
    @andscifi Před rokem +1556

    What's most sad about this to me is that slave owners are a fairly good analogy for vampires if you wanted to actually dig into it. They use the lifeblood of others to survive. But it's hard to examine that when you want to make your vampires good guys instead of the vicios and morally depraved creatures that were in the early stories.

    • @Greenicegod
      @Greenicegod Před rokem +136

      I was thinking exactly this! Most of the problems come when you want to make the bloodsucking parasites sypathetic and tragic rather than horrifying.

    • @MCArt25
      @MCArt25 Před 8 měsíci +79

      Considering that the modern vampire is literally an analogy to old feudal aristocrats, yea that tracks.

    • @MilkyWayGrump
      @MilkyWayGrump Před 7 měsíci +37

      ​@@GreenicegodThe tragedy angle mostly comes from when vampirism became popularly understood as an (often unwillingly) contracted affliction by bite victims who all maintain autonomy, rather than a demon/monster that just so happens to look human, hypnotizing people into being slave/blood bank fusions.

    • @richardfarley5469
      @richardfarley5469 Před 7 měsíci +10

      Like Abraham Lincoln Vampire Hunter!! The book, not the movie

    • @wadespencer3623
      @wadespencer3623 Před 5 měsíci +11

      @@MilkyWayGrump Or the Vampire the Masquerade take that the tragedy is that you almost certainly turn from an unwilling victim into a monster that just happens to look human, because being an immortal, blood-drinking creature ingrained in a culture run by people who have lived for thousands of years will inevitably destroy your moral core.

  • @Vinc3mint
    @Vinc3mint Před rokem +3156

    I find it fascinating that, from what I understand, Anne Rice made her vampires confederate slave owners to show that they're inhumane and don't care about humanity, and then everyone else after just took the idea of vampires during that era and just made them confederate propaganda. Very great video! as a non-american who knew nothing about the civil war and just likes vampires, I found it very informative and easy to understand!

    • @ShieldMaiden452
      @ShieldMaiden452 Před 9 měsíci +44

      But Louise from Interview with a Vampire was a slave owner and held onto his humanity. Lestat was not southern.

    • @PrincessNinja007
      @PrincessNinja007 Před 9 měsíci +203

      ​@@ShieldMaiden452I mean he was the one telling the story, he's gonna make himself one of the good ones

    • @ShieldMaiden452
      @ShieldMaiden452 Před 9 měsíci +15

      @@PrincessNinja007 OOMG you've got to be kidding me.. ITS FICTION! Ance Rice was telling the story ffs, the characters are NOT REAL. Although Anne Rice and TVD are better character's then Fucking Twilight.

    • @jeanetteblankenship6107
      @jeanetteblankenship6107 Před 8 měsíci +62

      There’s a whole he sees then slaves humanity in them after being turned bit in interview. I always wanted Louis to be subtly racist, like just more suspicious, very some of my best friends are black type. I always imagined that he makes a real concerted effort every time a person of a different ethnicity is around. In my head he’s trying but he isn’t there yet and never will be.
      I think that Bill in True Blood has a very casually racist vibe to him. Every interaction he has with Tara or Lafayette has a tone from him. He saw her with that guy who was torturing her and ignored it. I don’t think he would have if it was a white person he knew.

    • @ShieldMaiden452
      @ShieldMaiden452 Před 8 měsíci +15

      @@jeanetteblankenship6107 he and Louis didn't seem to mind eating Creole women, who were black and Spanish decent.

  • @danieltobin4498
    @danieltobin4498 Před rokem +2043

    I think Logan from the X-men series is the only immortal fictional character I’ve seen who fought for the Union in the Civil War.

    • @grell5108
      @grell5108 Před rokem +494

      Conclusion: Logan > vampires.

    • @erraticonteuse
      @erraticonteuse Před rokem +403

      And he's Canadian.

    • @SuperZez
      @SuperZez Před rokem +100

      Aiden from the American Being Human also did.

    • @vivianhall5259
      @vivianhall5259 Před rokem +30

      Canadian too!

    • @aspieanarchist5439
      @aspieanarchist5439 Před rokem +68

      That`s because he`s Canadian and you can`t get much more Yankee than Canadians despite many Southern plantations being based on British Northwestern ones in Logan`s native Alberta.

  • @Human_Enthusiast
    @Human_Enthusiast Před rokem +2290

    “My black friend keeps asking my vampire boyfriend if he owned slaves 🙄🙄 God she’s so embarrassing!!” Is such an absolutely buck wild tone to take about something so serious. I feel like if there was a possibility my sexy boyfriend was like….a slaveowner, I’d want to know ASAP!! ????
    I think the parallel between vampirism and slavery is theoretically interesting (as other comments have mentioned) but only in a more thoughtful piece of media because it runs into a bit of a snag when your vampires are cool and sexy and #damaged while also being proxies for *gestures broadly at the history of American exploitation, slavery, and colonialism*

    • @katharineeavan9705
      @katharineeavan9705 Před rokem

      Honestly, the whole thing would hit differently if the "vegetarian" vampire types were positioned opposing not only eating people, but exploiting people in general. The whole point of the angst and guilt ridden whiteboy vampire who hates having to feed on people would be far better made (if far more tricky to execute) if the issue were parallelled with, say, the white guilt of the abolotionists. The whole "you don't get a cookie for not eating/enslaving people as that is the bare f*cking minimum" theme could be super effective if done right

    • @TheNumnutRandomness
      @TheNumnutRandomness Před rokem +171

      "Oh my god Tara, you can't just ask a vampire if he owned slaves! 🙄"
      "I did own slaves, actually. Also, I was a Confederate."
      "Well, I'm sure he is SUPER contrite about the whole thing. We all had mistakes in our past, right?"
      "There was the one who cleaned our house, one who cleaned out the stables. Good times. Anyways, still need someone to bring pie to the next Descendants of the Confederacy meeting, babe?"

    • @nolanlong1979
      @nolanlong1979 Před rokem

      If vampires were real they would 100% take advantage of racism and fight for the confederacy to own slaves to get free blood from said slaves only seen this idea explored really in a few works of fiction one being a manga called blasters knuckles give it a read it's good..... Mostly

    • @kevinhengehold4387
      @kevinhengehold4387 Před rokem +40

      Yeah - I didn't make it that far into True Blood because of the very heavy handed metaphor of vampires being gay people. Glad I didn't, because gay people also being southern apologia would have just been too much.

    • @TheNumnutRandomness
      @TheNumnutRandomness Před rokem +56

      @@kevinhengehold4387 In the paraphrased words of Jenny Nicolson, "In this world, vampires are metaphorically gay and (Tara) is metaphorically homophobic."

  • @andyggjhjkl
    @andyggjhjkl Před rokem +344

    I can't believe Abraham Lincoln Vampire hunter portrays confederate vampires more responsibly than most other vampire media.

    • @oldstump1628
      @oldstump1628 Před 6 měsíci +3

      It’s incredibly irresponsible to paint half a country as cartoonishly evil while making a tyrant your hero.

    • @andyggjhjkl
      @andyggjhjkl Před 6 měsíci +53

      @@oldstump1628 but they were cartoonishly evil, and he was a hero.

    • @kevinprzy4539
      @kevinprzy4539 Před 6 měsíci

      kind of, he didn't free the slaves due to morality even though he painted it like that, read a verified and historically accurate book with no bias and you'll see he used "freeing slaves" as just a front for something else, what he was trying to do wasn't morally correct but a morally correct thing happened as a result of it, that doesn't make him a hero imo. @@andyggjhjkl

    • @user-xq2gw5jk6w
      @user-xq2gw5jk6w Před 6 měsíci +25

      @@oldstump1628but what about when that country as a whole and for a fact only under 20% of white people saw all people of color as human? It brings sense

    • @stumpyalex503
      @stumpyalex503 Před 5 měsíci

      ​@oldstump1628 I'd say even today, half the country is cartoonishly evil. And I'm not even talking politics. People just go out of their way to be horrible to eachother, and every time there's a big political issue, call for violence are common. If any group is morally lower than even the common modern man, they ARE cartoonishly evil.

  • @GrandArchPriestOfTheAlgorithm

    Here's an interesting question for True Blood: Did anyone sue the vampires that hold slaves? The main argument against reparations for slavery is that "it was a long time ago", which carry even less water when the slave holders are still alive.

    • @cuttleb0nes
      @cuttleb0nes Před 8 měsíci +32

      ooooo now that’s a fascinating premise

    • @rosita3528
      @rosita3528 Před 7 měsíci +38

      Suing a vampire would sound so funny if Hollywood never romantised them. Imagine someone trying to sue Nosferatu or Dracula lol

    • @maritareads5229
      @maritareads5229 Před 7 měsíci +5

      I want someone to write this lol

    • @kevinprzy4539
      @kevinprzy4539 Před 6 měsíci

      no, the argument against reparations isn't just "a long time ago" it's the fact that people that had nothing to do with slavery (ie the millions of Americans be they white or non white hispanic) will have their tax money used on something that doesn't help their community when they or their ancestors had nothing to do with chattel slavery, there's over 120 million Americans that their ancestors didn't arrive until the 1920's, that's not exactly fair.

    • @BarryHart-xo1oy
      @BarryHart-xo1oy Před 5 měsíci

      Good question.

  • @Twix_loves_domo
    @Twix_loves_domo Před rokem +7368

    It’s also really weird to me that Jasper served in the confederacy because he has the power of physical empathy. Like, would not the suffering of slaves immobilize him or drive him to fight for the union? ESPECIALLY after reading Midnight Sun where we see not only can he effect the emotions of others, but other peoples emotions physically effect him 🧐🧐

    • @rationalcynic8416
      @rationalcynic8416 Před rokem +373

      Jasper joined the confederacy before he was turned by Maria, and he didn't have his abilities until after he was turned. Just because he was part of the Confederate Army, it does not necessarily mean he was for slavery. Many fought on both sides because it was expected of men back in those times to fight in wars during war time; if they were of age and physically able. It is what a boy did to prove himself as a man. It's like how not all German soldiers during WWII agreed with H*tlers ideology. War is not black and white. There are so many nuances, circumstances, and grey areas when it comes to war that to assume everyone fights on a certain side for only one reason and no other is closed-minded and naive. Also, Jasper's job in the Confederate army was to escort women and children out of battle zones to safety, which was hardly a position that advocated for violence. Keep in mind that Jasper was born and raised in Texas, so the South is all he had known at the time, and he was only seventeen. And due to how expensive slaves were to own, his family was unlikely to have owned any. Slave owners made up the minority of the population, as most could not afford to own slaves. Jasper also seemed to take no issue with Maria, who was a Latina woman. I don't get why people lose their sh*t over the Civil War backstory. The same people that complain about Confederate soldiers also have complained about Union soldiers.

    • @rationalcynic8416
      @rationalcynic8416 Před rokem +149

      @Twix I read Twilight 20 times over. I know Jasper was extremely empathetic when human. Your comment suggested that it was odd that Jasper would be a Confederate Soldier if he was so empathetic. He could only feel the emotions of those in his presence. Your comment also suggested that you think all Confederate soldiers joined in the fight because they were for slavery, which isn't true.

    • @Twix_loves_domo
      @Twix_loves_domo Před rokem +540

      @@rationalcynic8416 either you didn’t watch the video or you are a lost cause sympathizer 😂

    • @angelic..9906
      @angelic..9906 Před rokem +98

      @@Twix_loves_domo omg u are not even reading what he wrote.? wtf are u not comprehending..

    • @rationalcynic8416
      @rationalcynic8416 Před rokem

      @Twix Either you're playing dumb or you never learned basic reading comprehension. It must suck to only see one side to things and to not at least try to understand why people choose to do certain things, regardless of how much you disagree with their choices.

  • @sethk5396
    @sethk5396 Před rokem +4142

    Part of why Anne Rice hits so different is because she's literally writing gothic horror. Her vampires are monsters. Complex characters but still monsters. The 2000s pop vampire era is def bringing the Anne Rice angst but seem to drop the strict horror element and lay right into teen romance. They are usually edgy enough for the angst factor, but the Edward style vamp is still supposed to be read as a hero, not a monster. Really loses the thread of what a character like Louis is supposed to be imo. Vampirism is inherently exploitative - and I'm glad that the new show didn't want to touch the slave owner stuff for obvious reasons, but still had him wrestle with the morality of his exploitative career as a human.

    • @Princess_Weekes
      @Princess_Weekes  Před rokem +419

      💯

    • @beth7935
      @beth7935 Před rokem +287

      THIS! It's gothic horror, not romance! I grew up before Twilight, & my teenage vampire obsession was with Bram Stoker's Dracula. PROPER vampires! So I liked the Interview With A Vampire movie; it had that same inhuman, monster-ish, truly dangerous edge to the vampires, the way they lose their humanity. The rpg Vampire: The Masquerade also had that element, but I hate Buffy, & everything I've seen & heard about Twilight makes me mad. I've read a couple of short gothic horror stories set in the pre-Civil-War South, & I think it just works as a gothic, spooky, eerie setting somehow- kinda the decayed "aristocracy", & the landscape in places like Louisiana. That's my non-American perspective tho.

    • @questionablebackyardmeows
      @questionablebackyardmeows Před rokem +158

      Also, honestly? There's stuff to explore *with* writing a vampire (or godlike/immortal being in general) that doesn't need to portray them as complete monsters/make them racist or Confederate, but that *can* explore the nature of *humanity itself* as needing to eat once-living plants and/or animals to survive, the need to change views and opinions over time (and not, say, hold what one believed as progressive in 1500 as just fine now), how to balance power differences or whether they are so inherently imbalanced one must forever remain a distant, celibate hermit, etc...
      It's like, there's SOOOO much stuff to explore for both angst and food for thought without having to have a super long-lived character or one that inherently has to survive off others be a racist or unrepentant murderer etc and it's like... for people to just make them intentional enslavers or kidnappers etc is bad enough, and to fetishize that and glorify that is so much worse.
      I just want a vampire that struggles as much with feeding as most of us humans that are SOMEWHAT aware of things like animal suffering and planetary collapse and the impacts of what we do eat on our health etc... do with eating without guilt.

    • @nielsjensen4185
      @nielsjensen4185 Před rokem +59

      And then there's the Sandman adaptation that brings it up and deals with it by having the inhuman character tell the human character that humans should be respected. Every piece of fiction that put this sort of behaviour on the inhuman characters to make a point fails at making the point and is objectively garbage.
      White Wolf Studios understood this and explicitly put a section in their Vampire: The Masquerade Core Book that while a lot of vampires flocked to and exploited various atrocities, none of them engineered it. WW2 was fully on the human Hitler and his cronies, etc.

    • @tcrijwanachoudhury
      @tcrijwanachoudhury Před rokem +56

      @@nielsjensen4185 Sandman is very different, he most certainly does not at first -- as hes captured _by humans_ , however the reasons why he gains respect for humans is because he serves them- hes not a vampire, hes the King of Dreams.
      This is why Its simply different.
      As someone who loves Anne Rice id say its really went written and the show well executed, not garbage at all.

  • @Tarbtano
    @Tarbtano Před 6 měsíci +78

    ... Holy shit you're right. If someone wanted to make a Civil War era soldier who is sympathetic, there's so many options to explore besides this problematic one. A former slave who escaped that horror and fought back against a very personal tragedy, a volunteer from another country who sympathized with the slaves, a southerner who remained loyal to the Union for any number of reasons and might well have wound up fighting their relatives. So many options to explore!

  • @tortellinifettuccine
    @tortellinifettuccine Před 7 měsíci +396

    As a Romanian, the idea of vampires spawns from our folklore of moroi (basically twilight vamps) and strigoi (basically dracula monster esc) and they were always propsed to be the rich or royalty, thoes in power essentially. Even in its base structure, vamparism has always been about lableing thoes with unequal amounts of power as "blood suckers" of the rest of the population. I assume the usa took this historical meaning, and like it does to most things, took its meaning non seriously but also in a positive sense, essentially trying to make the far right vampires seem "romantic" or "powerful". Classic propaganda taken from actual history and distorted. Dracula was always supposed to be depicted as a dying disgusting foul wealthy man, that barley even looks like a man, he meerly has power in money and mystery, but powerless in everything else.

    • @StrawberriesinnSummer
      @StrawberriesinnSummer Před 5 měsíci +6

      Vlad Tepes, aka Vlad the Impaler, aka Vlad Dracula, was not powerless. He was a cruel, unwavering concurer that stuck heads on pikes to warn his enemies of what their fate would be should they cross his path. I think in the US we took that interpretation of Dracula and ran with it. Not the other versions of Dracula.
      Nosferatu on the other hand...... definitely decrepit and powerless aside form the horror of looking at him 😂❤ said with all love for the original film monster❤

    • @Crimson50
      @Crimson50 Před 5 měsíci

      Women will get obsessed over anything, look at all the serial killers who have fanclubs full of women dreaming about them. Vampires are almost always made to be sexy, charismatic and dangerous/violent. Thus they appeal to young girls and women. I don't think it's so much "right-wing propaganda", but more just fanfic

    • @pjmisley
      @pjmisley Před 5 měsíci +3

      How does far right associate with confederacy vampires? More like Democrat confederacy vamps

    • @tortellinifettuccine
      @tortellinifettuccine Před 5 měsíci +9

      @eMe933 Vlad Tepes is an inspiration for Dracula. Dracula in the folklore, is exactly what I said.

    • @tortellinifettuccine
      @tortellinifettuccine Před 5 měsíci

      @pjmisley dude don't bring your stunted American politics here. Your "republicans" and "democrats" are in the same party benefiting the rich and keeping everyone else poor.

  • @scott2k23
    @scott2k23 Před rokem +3592

    What’s crazy is that they didn’t need to be Confederate Soldiers they could have just been Soldiers from any other era on any sides. Having Confederate Soldiers in these stories as vampires kinda symbolizes this “Long Live the South” message. It’s was disappointing to see Jasper to not only feel any regret or remorse for being in the Confederacy but to be proud of it. These Pro-Confederate written color blind authors don’t see the problem these characters could represent to racism.

    • @PerpetualCalamity
      @PerpetualCalamity Před rokem +517

      Right? Since Gone with the Wind was so normalized despite its pro confederate rhetoric, a majority of white audiences, specifically women, were entranced by it. The film tries to make the audience feel bad for Scarlet and what she lost from the war aka her wealth, power, and home provided by slavery. White female authors wanted to replicate the Southern romance between Scarlet and Rhett, but with a vampiric twist and a 200 y/o former confederate male protagonist 🤷🏽‍♀️

    • @ealusaid
      @ealusaid Před rokem +238

      I was going to say that having a character be a vampire who fought for the Confederacy and had to learn in really sharp and painful ways that they were deeply deeply DEEPLY wrong would be a GREAT setup for angst and internal conflict! But then I realized that honestly that sounds really exhausting and I am full up on stories about how haaaaaaaard it is to not think other people are subhuman anymore. Maybe other people would love it, but not me.

    • @onbearfeet
      @onbearfeet Před rokem +123

      @@ealusaid It could be a good arc for a side character. Particularly in a vampire story that was very much about reckoning with history in general, having some dude in the background undergoing that kind of radical transformation could make a good way to say, "Yeah, this kind of change happens and it's possible, but THE STORY IS NOT ABOUT YOU AND YOU SHOULD REMEMBER THAT." Make the dude, say, a foil for a vampire villain who remains proudly colonialist.

    • @13realmusic
      @13realmusic Před rokem +148

      Right, why are there no revolutionary soldiers? That's one war most people don't mind seeing romanticized!

    • @timothymclean
      @timothymclean Před rokem +57

      And it could be done _so_ much better! Vampires are creatures that maintain their inhuman power at the expense of human life. If you can't think of a way to turn that into an allegory for slavery, or the persistence of vampires' lifestyles into the 21st century (despite black lives now theoretically mattering) as commentary on how racism has persisted through the centuries, I'm not sure you should be writing vampires at all.

  • @whothewu
    @whothewu Před rokem +1159

    How does a film titled “Abraham Lincoln: Vampire Hunter” handle this better than all of these other media? The confederate slaveholding vampire does work on the level of “this dude was a vampire even before he was turned into one” metaphor but so few of these media want to confront this.

    • @EmyN
      @EmyN Před 10 měsíci +17

      I see you are a person of culture with that profile pic

    • @loaflad
      @loaflad Před 7 měsíci +1

      Ye

    • @Azulakayes
      @Azulakayes Před 7 měsíci +7

      That movie is amazing.

  • @Alresu
    @Alresu Před 7 měsíci +168

    It literally never occured to me, that Tara was supposed to look antagonistic when confronting Bill there. I thought it was supposed to show, that many people (including the Stackhouses) are ignorant about the past and that Bill is able to handle it...
    I always just saw it as an understandable reaction from Tara. I will watch this scene with more intent the next time around. :)

    • @CarpeNoctem1864
      @CarpeNoctem1864 Před 6 měsíci +6

      Tara already knew the answer, she was just stirring the pot IMO, especially because Jason had already been reprimanded and she was gone over him

    • @Alresu
      @Alresu Před 6 měsíci +23

      @@CarpeNoctem1864 I mean, even if she knew the answer, that would still not make it unreasonable to bring it up and let him speak for himself. But I still haven't rewatched, so I might be missing the point of the Jason context you brought up.

    • @CarpeNoctem1864
      @CarpeNoctem1864 Před 6 měsíci +2

      @Alresu Tara I feel meant well, being protective of her friend. But she also had a long history of being unnecessarily combative.

    • @Alresu
      @Alresu Před 6 měsíci +13

      @@CarpeNoctem1864 She is an aggressive character, sure, but that's makes it difficult to determine, if she was depicted here as unreasonably aggressive or just as herself. I always just saw it as Tara being Tara and being in the right.

    • @laurensimendinger8887
      @laurensimendinger8887 Před 6 měsíci +25

      Literally I was like "Yeah girl get his ass"

  • @gwammeh
    @gwammeh Před rokem +221

    Dominic Noble’s review of Interview With the Vampire has him say something along the lines of “Fortunately, his vampirism made him realize that there was no real difference between black people and white people and they’re all human; *unfortunately,* this comes with Louis no longer having respect for *any* humans”. And I still think that’s a really interesting way to handle this whole subject, honestly.
    I was a Twilight kid when the books were cool, but being European I had basically no historical context for the Confederacy, aside from “US south?” and “Fought in the civil war”. It came as a shock when I found out more about them later and realized during the Twilight Renaissance a few years back that none of this was ever addressed at any point.

    • @TheLastSane1
      @TheLastSane1 Před 7 měsíci +21

      Wanna know why? Because she is bad at research. In Eclipse Jasper explains his backstory which is at the Battle of Galveston he was escorting civilians from the city and then was taken my Maria. Well the Battle of Galveston in 1963 happened on New Years day, and was the Union held city vs the Confederates bombing them from the port. 3 months earlier in the Battle of Galveston Harbor (1862) in Oct it was the Confederacy held city vs the Union taking the harbor.
      So mixed both of those together. While Jasper never mentions its literally New Years Eve or thats its the dead of winter, he states his side held the city. Which would have to mean he was a union soldier not a confederate. But Meyers wanted the "Southern Gentlemen" trope and so she just went with Texas=Confederacy even though about a 4th to half of the Texas military went AWOL after the vote to join the confederacy and joined up with the Union to fight the confederacy. So she could have still had him be from Texas just have him be a union soldier who rebelled against the state army.

  • @rootsmudge
    @rootsmudge Před rokem +5461

    I think Jasper being an empath would be an incredible form of divine punishment. Imagine being involved in the deadliest war in American history and all that raw pain surrounding you. Then all the pain and suffering from the people you helped to suppress during the horrors of Reconstruction and you have to feel every bit of that suffering. If they had framed it as an ordinary man who stood by and did nothing to stop or uphold the cruelty around him then made unable to die and forced to feel all that pain he was apathetic to, that would actually be a really interesting character and story. But alas we didn't get that.

    • @shainaelise2694
      @shainaelise2694 Před rokem +617

      That would have given Jasper SO much depth omg. Especially since he also feels the fear and pain of his victims as a vampire.

    • @RoseyVamp
      @RoseyVamp Před rokem +115

      Honestly like this perspective a lot and who knows maybe at some point we’ll get a spin off. I do think out of all the examples in this video Jasper is by far the most complex and interesting characters to explore in this context, but it’s also worth noting he plays the most minor roll out of all the examples too so his story isn’t the focus for the primary narrative of twilight.

    • @totallynameless8861
      @totallynameless8861 Před rokem +91

      Please write that fanfic, and link it in the comments.

    • @staceysteinhoff608
      @staceysteinhoff608 Před rokem +11

      Excellent post. I throughly enjoyed it. Thank you

    • @everberry51
      @everberry51 Před rokem +99

      Too bad Stephanie Meyer didn’t have the depth despite having a great story in her hands

  • @DameUtaI
    @DameUtaI Před rokem +172

    I still have FEELINGS about The Vampire Diaries. They are:
    1. Bonnie

    • @wikilover66
      @wikilover66 Před rokem +32

      Emily is definitely called her servant once or twice - but later she reveals she was indebted to kath, and that’s why she was “bound” to her.

    • @gidi3250
      @gidi3250 Před 10 měsíci +13

      2 they where using it to blend in, as was seen during the handmaiden seen, it was Katherine's reply to a guy asking her who the black woman was, easier to explain it away as a servant than a free person, free person's would have been lynched, as for the 3rd point, the story doesn't pain the confederacy in any light other than it's the side Virginia was in during the civil war, Damon joins his state milita to get away from his father. And then while on leave he at a family gathering during on flashback mocks his dad's understanding of the conflict, can't remember the exact words but his dad goes on about how the south is winning and Damon replays with I wouldn't call throwing young men away as wining the 2 then starts arguing. But that's part of the cast picking Virginia as the backdrop for the show, I'm guessing filming in New York was ether to expensive or they felt it was over done already, also the director's keeps talking about how beautiful the Virginian background/nature is during early seasons, can be seen when you watch the bonus feature of directors talking about what's going on in the episodes and giving some more personal information on what the actor was doing that day of filming.

    • @Cyb3r.Vxmp16
      @Cyb3r.Vxmp16 Před 10 měsíci +10

      I do like that they made Damon and Stefan grow with the years I mean Damon hated being a solider but he was so scared of his dad that he couldn’t say no

    • @CarpeNoctem1864
      @CarpeNoctem1864 Před 6 měsíci +4

      I liked that Harper (one of the tomb vampires) was a union soldier

    • @graceglo6638
      @graceglo6638 Před 6 měsíci +1

      To your 2 and 3rd point- this is all stuff added by Julie and Kevin, the Salvatore lived in Italy during the Renaissance and no one has salves (in fact there’s an entire plot of Damon and Elena and co freeing slaves in the books version of hell but that’s a whole other tangent). It’s all very very unneeded and added for what I’m assuming is Julie Plec’s idealism of what the civil war era south was while ignoring the very racist and horror of the reality of that time period.
      This is my biggest issue of the book to show adaptation is the added racism and then never ever addressing it again in the show and having their black female protagonist be participating in celebrations of that era. All of it is a big yikes, and I say this as someone who adores the early seasons of tvd.
      I’d love to know your thoughts on how the show The Originals handles similar issues with Marcel and his childhood before Klaus took him in.

  • @LadetteM
    @LadetteM Před rokem +247

    This was so interesting. As a Brit, I wasn't ever taught about the Civil War, outside of the Confederates were racist, so I never understood HOW confed vampires KEPT being a thing.

    • @MCKevin289
      @MCKevin289 Před rokem

      What’s funny is that we learn about your civil war. We’re taught that Cromwell was the evil love child of Osama bin laden and Caesar who hated Irish people and Christmas. I’m also a history teacher lol

    • @twujstary8680
      @twujstary8680 Před rokem +11

      wdym you werent ever taught about civil war .. in an english speaking country .. im from eastern europe and our silly curriculum covered that. i had to learn the names and dates and everything (not like i remember a lot but we definitely covered that). im really surprised

    • @MCKevin289
      @MCKevin289 Před rokem +22

      @@twujstary8680
      I’m a history teacher. It is indeed weird lol. We talk about the English civil war in American classes.

    • @LadetteM
      @LadetteM Před rokem +30

      @twuj stary I can only assume its because we lost - colonialists generally don't like to dwell on failures 😅😅

    • @MCKevin289
      @MCKevin289 Před rokem +40

      @@LadetteM
      I mean the Brits low key supported the south in the war so textile manufacturing would be cheaper.

  • @darkmelodies2694
    @darkmelodies2694 Před rokem +2789

    The thing that gets me about Jasper in particular is because the Mexican-American war happened not too long before the American Civil War, and would have made far more sense given that he was turned by a Mexican trio of vampires. Literally nothing would have changed about his backstory, except you know, not a Confederate soldier.

    • @tosinakin2508
      @tosinakin2508 Před rokem +253

      Wait, this is a really great point! Meyers seems to have truly taken the path of (unfortunately) least resistance at the expense of interesting storylines and genuine consideration for the struggles of others.

    • @darkmelodies2694
      @darkmelodies2694 Před rokem +146

      @Tosin Akin Thank you, and yeah. Looking back on Twilight through a critical lense really makes you realize just how surprisingly low effort it feels, especially in terms of Meyer doing any research or development of characters.

    • @lupo987
      @lupo987 Před rokem +1

      Funny enough part of the reason for the Mexican-American war was because the Americans residing in Texas wanted to keep their slaves and that was against mexican law (in paper any person had their right to be free just by standing in mexican soil, but the mexican government made many concessions so american slave-owners could keep them a 'little' cof30yearscof longer).
      So... Yeah

    • @darkmelodies2694
      @darkmelodies2694 Před rokem +2

      @Lupo98 fair point

    • @lupo987
      @lupo987 Před rokem +12

      @@darkmelodies2694 yeah... But I still agree with you that it would actually be a better plot point

  • @MattieAMiller
    @MattieAMiller Před rokem +2777

    My church had a class on helping people escape abusive relationships, and there is one line that really stuck with my from the whole thing: "The abuser's story will ALWAYS be better than the truth." When it's people we know, we always want to believe that it all is just a misunderstanding or an accident. That we don't live among monsters.
    The Lost Cause rhetoric is the same thing on a cultural level. It is painful to realize exactly how depraved your ancestors and your country was, so instead people continue to believe the cultural abuser. The Lie is much prettier than the truth. There will be people who believe it as long as we let them.

    • @bnhalemon7098
      @bnhalemon7098 Před rokem +67

      This is it, right here

    • @LillyTheLonelySock
      @LillyTheLonelySock Před rokem +98

      If you don't mind my asking, what kind of church do you attend? That sounds like one of the most practical and useful classes I've ever heard of taking place at a church. Besides AA meetings and similar such support groups.

    • @MattieAMiller
      @MattieAMiller Před rokem +107

      @@LillyTheLonelySock we are technically non-denominational, but we have ties with the evangelical free and the baptist church groups. I think the fact that we are located in the city instead of the suburbs also plays a big part on our awareness and involvement in issues like that.

    • @LillyTheLonelySock
      @LillyTheLonelySock Před rokem +56

      @@MattieAMiller Okay, good to know. I didn't mean to offend or anything. I just know that some religions and churches strongly urge married people to stay together and work things out, so I was impressed by what you said.

    • @sasentaiko
      @sasentaiko Před rokem +34

      This class sounds amazing. We need a lot more of that in the world. Bonus points if they teach that romantic relationship aren’t the only place this plays out. Abusive parent/guardians, teachers, and bosses can have the same dynamics and the survivors there need a lot of help too.

  • @LunamFlore
    @LunamFlore Před 8 měsíci +69

    This is still one of my favorite video essays out there covering this weird trend in Vampire fiction. That being said, I would absolutely kill for a video essay unpacking all the messed up sh*t in True Blood specifically, especially when it comes to the disproportionate amount of violence and torture that characters of color had to endure, the odd framing of positive masculinity (in the form of Werewolf Love Interest beating the crap out of some other guy with the confederate flag hanging behind him), the bizarre handling of the show's first gay couple (featuring a black man and a latino man) whose lives are brutally devastated by a Sad White Woman -- and whose ghost then gets babied and forgiven into reaching heaven??? Not to mention just... Tara in general. All of that. Oh, Tara.

    • @oldstump1628
      @oldstump1628 Před 6 měsíci

      Why do you idiots watch so much media that you obviously don’t actually care for?
      Art isn’t there to agree or disagree with.
      Did the show make you feel something?
      If yes that’s a good thing.
      Not everything is supposed to be a happy fairytale.
      Sometimes shit sucks.

    • @hxavens4227
      @hxavens4227 Před 5 měsíci +3

      i love true blood but yes, it's very important to discuss these topics. very well said

    • @fernandacouto4396
      @fernandacouto4396 Před 4 měsíci +7

      Them turning Tara into a vampire after all the shit she went through, at the hands of vampires, made me give up on the series

  • @daco8160
    @daco8160 Před rokem +61

    I always hated Jasper being a uniformed man, bc I’m Chilean I had NO IDEA that he was a confederate and what it meant. Thanks for explaining ✨

    • @TheLastSane1
      @TheLastSane1 Před 7 měsíci +8

      Its worse when the backstory she gave him would have made him a UNION soldier not a confederate one but she didn't do her research right. She says he was turned in 1863 at the battle of galveston (which happened on Jan 1, 1863) and it was the union who held the city. So he would have had to be union to escort civilians from the city.

    • @mariavillarroel5385
      @mariavillarroel5385 Před 5 měsíci +1

      It really is a shame that THE only piece of media ive seen that includes a chilean MAPUCHE character also has...that

  • @Lele-kb3hk
    @Lele-kb3hk Před rokem +1080

    I always loved Tara and could never understand how some of my friends quite literally despised her. Now 10 years later it all makes sense.

    • @Aelffwynn
      @Aelffwynn Před rokem +188

      Tara is my favorite character on that show, and it's weird to me she isn't high on everyone's list. She's amazing and almost no one ever gives her credit for it.

    • @ohdarah
      @ohdarah Před rokem +16

      same!!

    • @morley364
      @morley364 Před rokem +319

      Sookie sitting there GLARING at her for asking if he owned slaves...like, girl, how was that NOT the question immediately at the front of your mind when you found out he was a Confederate soldier? Tara is just saying what you all *should* have been thinking.

    • @TreeDwellingShrimp
      @TreeDwellingShrimp Před rokem +211

      ​@@morley364 Because she either didn't care, didn't see that much of a problem with it, or didn't want to know that so she could continue liking him without feeling guilty/having to question if he's a good person or not since she mostly already made her mind up. She's super attracted to him and Tara bringing that up is morally inconvenient for her. Not to mention, her 'wonderful/kind' gran is clearly a confederate sympathizer who's proud of her lineage, so that might've impacted Sookie's view of the whole thing. Anyway, none of the above are good and Sookie sucks so badly.

    • @morley364
      @morley364 Před rokem +150

      @@TreeDwellingShrimp Definitely! When it's more offensive to ask if someone owned slaves than it is to own slaves...you might have a problem with your morals

  • @emf4888
    @emf4888 Před rokem +1042

    Speaking as someone who dug into their ancestry and discovered that I have an ancester who was a slave owner...it's really telling to me that Ben Affleck would pay to have that information suppressed. He could have pulled an Anderson Cooper and disavowed his ancester, but he'd rather hide the information than make a stand. Really gross, but not surprising.

    • @emf4888
      @emf4888 Před rokem +117

      Also: Justice for Tara!!!

    • @M-WG
      @M-WG Před rokem +79

      I know he should do that… but as a non famous person I also wonder if I could buy this service. I already spend my time disavowing my living relatives so burying the rest of the family trash within the internet sounds great.

    • @ealusaid
      @ealusaid Před rokem +49

      @@M-WG Geneaologists are real people you can hire! A lot of public libraries also help you do genealogical work yourself as well. Though if you also wanna get video of you looking good while you do it, that gets a little more expensive.

    • @M-WG
      @M-WG Před rokem +44

      @@ealusaid I want to re-bury the confederates my living racist relatives dug up. Can genealogists reverse their work?

    • @lakacialloyd9027
      @lakacialloyd9027 Před rokem

      Look at Ben Affleck. He looks like a perpetually drunk frat boy. Handsome guy, but smarmy-looking. I would never expect him to do something thoughtful and responsible.

  • @knogne5073
    @knogne5073 Před rokem +777

    Woah as someone who’s been obsessed with twilight, true blood, vampire diaries and firefly I needed to see this. One of the best analyzes I’ve seen in an insanely long time. I never realized that so much pop culture had romanization of people who were pro slavery. I’m Danish so American history is not something I know a lot about, so in fact my first introduction to this part of American history was through twilight’s Jasper as a thirteen year old. Imagine how much of an impact Meyer could’ve had if she’s actually written about Jasper being a former confederate soldier in a critical and honest way. Cannot imagine how frustrating it must be as a black American to see this romanticization of fucking pro slavery soldiers. Yikes. Thank you for this video.

    • @XiomaraReyes1
      @XiomaraReyes1 Před rokem +13

      Bill Compton did not support slavery tho in later seasons u can see a flashback of his when he was helping the slaves cross to the north to be honest I don’t remember what was the reason for him to become a soldier but I know for fact he didn’t fight for the south cuz he was pro slavery (I’m going based on the tv show not the books if bill was pro slavery in the books I apologize)

    • @gidi3250
      @gidi3250 Před 10 měsíci +8

      Vampire diaries take place in Virginia, a state that was a slave state and declared for the south during the civil war, union settlers that settled in western Virginia rose up and declared themselves their own state, West Virginia, and for vampire diaries their is little to no info on the civil war, only that one character joined the state milita to get away from his over bearing father as this was during the civil war, he joined the Virginia militia thus being a Confederate soldier.

    • @sylvaineg6804
      @sylvaineg6804 Před 9 měsíci +11

      Also Damon quitted the confederate army because he did not agree with slavery

    • @sylvaineg6804
      @sylvaineg6804 Před 9 měsíci +7

      Also slavery and civil War happened its shameful but it did. Having every character be " good" is not realistic. If you want a true and Real story you gotta agree that a lot of people back then were very racist.

    • @katgreer6113
      @katgreer6113 Před 9 měsíci +7

      why do people act like only black americans went through slavery...? Like same with the black french people too...smh

  • @impposter560
    @impposter560 Před 10 měsíci +78

    I'm so grateful to my mom for putting so much effort into teaching me history. I remember her sitting us down for lessons, and she had two books; one a newer, sanitized, 'kid-friendly' version about the Trail of Tears, and the other an older book and not at all 'friendly' edition. She read us excerpts from both, really driving home the fact that no, there was no 'giving their land up' or 'moving away'. She made sure that we knew the facts and were aware of what it really was. She did her best to lay out all the reasons on every side, and how most of those reasons didn't justify anything, even if it explained why it happened. Sure, all her ancestors (except the native ones) were fleeing discrimination and/or death, but early americans as a whole bought their independence and lives through theft and murder. And the very, very least we can do is acknowledge the truth, and never ever romanticize it. I don't think any of the confederate stuff should be scrubbed away or hidden from sight, because it needs to be there and be acknowledged for what it was, which includes the evidence of their delusions of grandeur. But the romantization of that lifestyle is just weird and, worse, deeply disrespectful

    • @oldstump1628
      @oldstump1628 Před 6 měsíci

      It’s unfortunate she was an idiot and wrong on most everything

  • @TheRealHermioneW
    @TheRealHermioneW Před rokem +939

    Tara was truly the voice of reason in True Blood. The way the show sidelined her (and Lafayette) was criminal!

    • @tcrijwanachoudhury
      @tcrijwanachoudhury Před rokem +42

      I just started this show damn, they're doing such a good job on season 1 I defo see her as the voice of reason, seems like somewhere along the like they fucked up :/

    • @hannahm.j.7595
      @hannahm.j.7595 Před rokem +101

      Not just sidelined - straight up tortured. Over and over. Just repulsive on the writers part.

    • @maurinet2291
      @maurinet2291 Před rokem +26

      @@tcrijwanachoudhury I didn't finish the series, made it through season 2 maybe; but what struck me was they really dove into the elements the books only touched on, and had that complex conversation. Later they leaned into the horror and Sookie's romantic entanglements too much and stopped saying much of anything.

    • @tcrijwanachoudhury
      @tcrijwanachoudhury Před rokem +6

      @@maurinet2291 really? :/ shame on HBO really, honestly youd expect that kind of frivolity from CW

    • @Ihchkciyiyhgifuofyr555
      @Ihchkciyiyhgifuofyr555 Před rokem +36

      Fun Fact: In the book, Lafayette would have died at the end of season 1. If anyone remembers the death scare at the end of season 1, the start of season 2, when everyone thought he died in that car... that was how he died in the book, and the show initially planned it that way in script, too. But the actor had gotten so beloved by the audience that they couldn't kill him and wrote another character to kill off instead. From season 2 on, everything about Lafayette is from the show writers. He was definitely a favorite on the show, too.

  • @heathermclaren9901
    @heathermclaren9901 Před rokem +1763

    Twilight specifically has always annoyed me for these reasons. It was at the height of its popularity when my family was moving my grandfather into a care facility and cleaning out his and my grandma's house. He was from Ohio originally, and his parents were older when they had him. He was also a bit of a hoarder from a long line of hoarders. Therefore the house was full of stuff, including tons of old letters that dated from as far back as the 1890's.
    What really struck me reading through a lot of those old letters is that there was A LOT of disgust towards the confederacy / former confederacy. Like lots of stuff about how they were traitors, could not be trusted, etc. It was all over the place in those letters, I remember there was even a children's book along those lines my grandfather had kept.
    Esme was from the approximate area in Ohio my grandfather grew up, and she was born around the time a lot of those letters were written. And it therefore bothered me that she seemed so okay with Jasper. Like her parents and grandparents might have been involved in that conflict, might have been killed by Confederates. Certainly there would be people in her town who'd known people lost in that war, certainly people would have talked about it. Wouldn't Jasper's presence disturb her? Why would she treat him as a son?
    It's just interesting reading through those letters. The people who actually lived through those times and the generation that lived directly after them had no reason to sugarcoat what the Confederacy was.
    Reading through those letters, I really got a sense of how much lost cause propaganda and bullshit has managed to infect American culture in the last 150 years. Because if you drive through that same area of Ohio now, you will see the occasional Confederate flag. It's honestly deeply depressing how successful lost cause propaganda has been.

    • @beth7935
      @beth7935 Před rokem +126

      Sadly, for a lot of people, it seems like if they didn't live through it, they don't care about it- it's so irrelevant it's almost like it didn't happen. This is partly me being a grumpy history nerd (& a total hypocrite, cos there are a LOT of subjects I'm really ignorant about), but people are amazingly good at not even _considering_ the past & how it affects us today. So yeah, it's really easy for people to straight-up deny history, or revise it & make people believe your revised version, like the "lost cause" narrative. Australia has a pretty poor record too- rewriting our national story to one of glorious white explorers & settlers, & skipping or denying literal wars & genocide against Indigenous Australians.
      That's really interesting about the old letters, & what some people actually thought of the Confederacy a lot closer in time to the Civil War! Imagine if sources like that were used in education! (It'd be nice to learn about your family too). For me, that's one of the big fails in historical fiction- totally missing the _very_ different ways that people thought in other eras & cultures, & making them think like modern Westerners- or like our stereotypes of that era, without checking if they're accurate.
      Like, were there _really_ loads of poor Confederate soldiers who had no clue what they were fighting for, & no clue that slavery was even involved? Did they genuinely believe it was purely about state rights? Were they somehow _not_ actually racist or in favour of slavery? Where's the proof?... It may exist; I don't know that much US history, but it sounds very lost-cause-y & I'm not going to just accept it unquestioningly.

    • @MatthewChenault
      @MatthewChenault Před rokem

      Of course they’d complain about how south man was bad. They fought them.
      It’s the same reason why southerner despise Yankees, except it’s far more pronounced as Yankees are a persistent problem. Namely, they move to the south, complain about how we’re all evil, and then try to dictate to us how to live.
      The north’s hatred of the south was not truly justified, but the south’s disdain for the north is constantly proved time and again.

    • @beth7935
      @beth7935 Před rokem +117

      @@MatthewChenault I... I'm sorry, did you just say hating the South cos of SLAVERY was "not truly justified"?...
      Why can't people admit that their country & their ancestors did awful things? I'm a white Aussie, & I can admit that my country & my ancestors did shit things, AND that I still benefit from it today- it doesn't mean I hate myself or my ancestors; it just means I can admit their & my faults, & try to do better, like learning the history I wasn't taught at school, cos instead of the "lost cause", we had the "glorious white explorers" narrative, covering up what was done to Indigenous people- but ofc you guys have that too, on top of slavery...

    • @MatthewChenault
      @MatthewChenault Před rokem

      @@beth7935, that’s presuming they solely fought for slavery and nothing else. The south was ultimately right to leave the union as they were being wronged by that union on multiple levels.
      Why the north hated the south stems from them “dissolving the union” and not remaining loyal to a government, not over any institution. The “slavery” argument is more of a post-war argumentation proposed by the abolitionists as a means of giving the north a “noble cause” to fight behind rather than their more direct reasoning: their disdain for the south for daring to “rebel” (leave of their own volition) against the federal government.

    • @onyx7273
      @onyx7273 Před rokem +5

      Propaganda from the other side has been very strong too. It’s narrow minded to only believe one side.

  • @KevinStriker
    @KevinStriker Před 11 měsíci +28

    Funnily enough, the only Confederate vampire I could think of before starting this video was Lance Henriksen as Jesse in 'Near Dark' (awesome underrated movie btw).
    The extent of his backstory was "I fought for the South. We lost", without a hint of romanticism because the point of that movie is that being a vampire would be miserable.

    • @niamhfox9559
      @niamhfox9559 Před 7 měsíci +2

      I was about to mention Near Dark (1987! I would have thought it was from the 90's) as well, he says it while spitting up bullets and threatening the human characters (iirc) and absolutely not the hero. I wonder if that movie inspired the later characters?

    • @CLJlovesmal
      @CLJlovesmal Před 3 měsíci

      Yes, thank you! Jesse was exactly where my mind goes when I think Confederate vampire.

  • @Mea_Sententia
    @Mea_Sententia Před rokem +135

    From my perspective as a Roman historian / philologist, I have a different interpretation of the “brother v. brother,” framing of the Civil War. This trope is common in Latin literature in discussing the prevalent and traumatic civil wars that plagued the late Republican era. Many viewed these violent periods as traumatic repetitions of the original fratricide of Remus at the hand of Romulus that led to the founding of the city. I don’t see it as minimizing the trauma, but rather integrating collective trauma at the individual level. It’s particularly telling that the trauma of enslaved persons is left out of this narrative processing 😬

    • @oldstump1628
      @oldstump1628 Před 6 měsíci

      Because no one gave a fuck about the slavery issue when there were jackboots coming and burning down churches filled with noncombatants.

    • @user-xq2gw5jk6w
      @user-xq2gw5jk6w Před 6 měsíci

      I don’t think Roman mythology even works for this instance cause they enslaved the shit out of us

    • @ZipplyZane
      @ZipplyZane Před 6 měsíci +10

      Yeah, that claim seemed very strange to me. The whole point of saying something is "brother vs brother" is to talk about how horrific it is. In most conflicts, families tend to stick together.

  • @vatsilvsgi8606
    @vatsilvsgi8606 Před rokem +886

    First off, amazing video as always! But, while you're technically correct, I would argue the Civil War wasn't the last war fought on US soil - Wounded Knee happened in 1890. The genocide of Native people wasn't an "official" war but, as far as I'm concerned, it was one of the longest bloodiest wars in human history.

    • @Princess_Weekes
      @Princess_Weekes  Před rokem +354

      Thank you for this reminder!

    • @GeteMachine
      @GeteMachine Před rokem

      It was made of up of several small wars from the colonials and tribes as far as I know, and Columbus pretty much just wanting to exploit their tolerance for their cohabitance to just enslave or gradually kill them off. Its then the really racist people claim that the native Americans, are "Indian givers" claiming they were the ones that started all the wars because "they gave land and took it back", when it was the colonials that broke their agreements and used racism to excuse themselves.

    • @vatsilvsgi8606
      @vatsilvsgi8606 Před rokem +140

      @@GeteMachine yes, there were official wars between the colonizers - then governments - and Native people, for sure. I'm Eastern Cherokee and we had an official war with the colonizers before the death marches started. But the savagery inflicted on Native people was... warlike consistently until Wounded Knee. After that they switched to residential schools, enforced poverty, outlawing culture, and repeated land seizures. Aka: the wars never REALLY stopped, they just used lies, erasure, and starvation instead of bullets.
      Indian giver is such a bullshit phrase, because history has proven who the liars and thieves are, and it sure as hell wasn't us. It's literally projection, ain't it?

    • @onyx7273
      @onyx7273 Před rokem +1

      It shows the hypocrisy of the Union while they fought to end slavery they were still massacring indigenous out west.

    • @austintrousdale2397
      @austintrousdale2397 Před rokem +1

      A penchant for not “official” wars that this country’s prosecuted has continued, unfortunately.

  • @AlexClementine
    @AlexClementine Před rokem +592

    YESS after rewatching True Blood over the summer this thought has been lingering in my mind. I also hate how everyone thought Tara was wrong for bringing it up 🙄 Tara deserved better than that and her ending

    • @gvirusqueen3559
      @gvirusqueen3559 Před rokem +87

      I dropped the show back when it was still going because of how badly they were doing Tara. She was always in Sookie’s shadow and used and abused by everyone except Lafayette.

    • @SLYKM
      @SLYKM Před rokem +50

      Don't get me started on Tara, I will always be mad about it.

    • @imanicartwright4463
      @imanicartwright4463 Před rokem +79

      All the black characters, especially Tara, deserved better.

    • @katherinealvarez9216
      @katherinealvarez9216 Před rokem +35

      Yeah, she had a point and a right to ask about that.

    • @darkopacity
      @darkopacity Před rokem +29

      I stopped watching the show after what they did to Tara and Sookie's passivity to it all.

  • @DuchessDelphine
    @DuchessDelphine Před rokem +111

    This video was so good and academic. As a black person AND vamphile (is this a word?) I’ve definitely recognized and acknowledged the depictions of historical backstories of iconic vampires AND the erasure of black voices within the vampiric power structure has always bothered me although, like many others in the comments, I couldn’t articulate it.
    I love LA Banks’ series but I read it years and years ago and didn’t see it as problematic then. Perhaps I need to read it again 😳

  • @EchanteDante
    @EchanteDante Před rokem +21

    So the intro you said Tara was being antagonistic as if they were trying to portray Tara in a bad light while portraying Bill and the white characters in a positive light. But I think the black characters in True Blood are some of the best in the series and some of the most likable.
    Tara being blunt and calling people out is what makes her enjoyable and likable to the audience in my opinion.

  • @WiiMan1133
    @WiiMan1133 Před rokem +1651

    The way that True Blood and The Vampire Diaries appropriated the language of civil rights from POC and LGBTQIA+ communities was always bizarre to me, mainly because it was always straight white men who usually acted morally outraged when humans came for them, despite their tendency to gleefully murder innocent people and, also, that a large subset of them used to own slaves in the American South.
    Interestingly, these and other shows rarely call out vampires for what they are: parasites that just eat and hide. The Netflix series Castelvania seems to be one of the few that actually does this, and forces vampires to ask questions they should be asking themselves: what's the point of living forever?
    Loved this video btw :)))

    • @thrawncaedusl717
      @thrawncaedusl717 Před rokem +137

      I felt the same about True Blood. I was confused when I started watching it because at first it seemed like vampires were queer analogs. But then it’s revealed that they really are very shady, manipulative and predatory and I wondered if vampires were meant to represent how conservatives saw queer people. I gave up without finishing the first season, so I never really figured out what it was about, but it’s always stuck with me as really odd.

    • @animeotaku307
      @animeotaku307 Před rokem +72

      Dracula’s speech to Godbrand was so on-point.

    • @WiiMan1133
      @WiiMan1133 Před rokem +48

      @@thrawncaedusl717 I think you can retroactively argue that point, but Trueblood was never a clever show imo. There were times it came close, like with Godric or when Edgington and Lilith seemed to have these grand villainous plans, but those stories died before they went anywhere

    • @WiiMan1133
      @WiiMan1133 Před rokem +110

      @@animeotaku307 agreed. Also Lisa’s speech to Dracula, where she convinces him to teach her how to make the world better with science and medicine. Ironically, being benevolent is the most logical way to live an immortal life. Sure it’s fun to be hedonistic…but all the time? Forever? That sounds absolutely awful

    • @justanawkwardnerd
      @justanawkwardnerd Před rokem +46

      @@WiiMan1133 Their hedonism wasn't sustainable either. Even if the human farming did happen, how did they expect to keep the population up to be able to continue feeding despite their clear want to gorge, gorge, gorge?

  • @jrchanchu3895
    @jrchanchu3895 Před rokem +1282

    Rice's choice of the south as ground zero for her series is obvious when you consider that she was seeking to revamp the Vampire genre for a new world audience.
    The Old World Vampire stories, epitomized in Bram Stoker's Dracula, had certain traits that made it iconic:
    1. An ancient reclusive aristocrat in a castle and sprawling estate.
    2. Servants and peasants whose feudal fealty made them expendable and powerless - the perfect prey for the serial killer that is a Vampire.
    3. A place with people predisposed to superstition - after all Dracula is born of Bram Stoker imagining what it would be like if all the rumors about the infamous Vlad the Impaler were actually true.
    Put that all together and what do you get: *an upperclass wealthy man who moonlights as supernatural killer.*
    Growing up in the flush of the 'Golden Age' of the Serial killer, Anne Rice saw the parallels between the Vampire and the names from the 6 o'clock news that gripped the nation with horror.
    And like any good writer she sought to capitalize on this. But how do you do so, when the Vampire is (at the time)as firmly tethered to the Old World as knights to Europe and Ninja to Japan?
    Simple: you identify the iconic vampire elements listed above, namely a rural place prone to superstition, with lots of poor helpless and a powerful aristocrat.
    The slave south was the perfect fit.
    New Orleans in particular is the *one place* where African traditions commingled with religious superstition to create a unique occult vibe.
    That this mosaic was born of slavery was even better, for slavery by design is a predatory practice. The many toiling for the few, with no rights to their labor, time, freedom, food, even their own children. What more the very blood in their veins?
    Louis de Pointe du Lac was born.
    Everything that followed - Twilight, the Vampire Diaries, True Blood - was just pale and shameless imitation, like the dozens of bootleg magic school stories that sprouted in Harry Potter's wake.
    And like the counterfeits they are, all these stories miss the point of Anne Rice's slave owning, slave eating Vampire: *telling an audience gripped with fear of serial killers tales about an ancient unstoppable murderer from the voodoo infested south.*

    • @xxChainingHeartsxx
      @xxChainingHeartsxx Před rokem +105

      Oh my gosh you explained this way better than I could ever attempt, mind if I can save this for convenient referential purposes?

    • @jrchanchu3895
      @jrchanchu3895 Před rokem +28

      @xxChainingHeartsxx kind words! Please, feel free to save it ;)

    • @sarahisatitagain
      @sarahisatitagain Před rokem +97

      As an Anne Rice avid fan since my teens, I started reading your comment with the prompt feeling that I was gonna see misinformation and God.. I was wrong.
      You did an AMAZING explanation. And if you read more books of Anne Rice you will see that the first vampire's on her books come from Egypt. I'd like to point out that her vampire's are very disturbed and Louis is BY FAR the most aware or how wrong and fucked up everything they do is, and YET he had slaves because he is the owner of a plantation and it was the norm at the time.
      I would love to point out that Anne Rice have a Witch series too, and you can see black characters' portraits with fidelity to their cultural backgrounds. You have one family of white witches, and you have black witches that come from an African background with religious traditions of their countries (I don't remember if she specified countries).
      At one point, the black witches and the white witches are aware of each other, and they keep their distance (for multiple reasons, but let's just say... one of them didn't know what they were doing...)
      You also see the witches finding out about the Vampire's at the 90's if I'm not mistaken...
      Anne was a wonderful writer, she lived in Louisiana and was raised in Catholicism, what further explains her choice for this kind of folklore. But sometimes she took things a bit too far for my taste (like in Memnoch)

    • @anylove370
      @anylove370 Před rokem +69

      Your breakdown is very interesting, but also I feel like Anne rice isn't that interested in the plight of the slaves she depicted Louis owning. It's actually very interesting bc for all he rejects his vampiric urges and his supposed monstrosity bc of them, he never looks back on his slave owning as something as evil as drinking blood

    • @elbruces
      @elbruces Před rokem +40

      @@anylove370
      Flawed characters do not equal flawed authorship.

  • @ThePrincessUmbrella
    @ThePrincessUmbrella Před 10 měsíci +194

    Similar to this- my sister and I went to rewatch what we remembered as the best Scooby Doo movie, Zombie Island, and were disappointed at the treatment of the confederate zombies being "good guys" who warned the gang about the real villains and tried to protect them. It definitely falls under the romanticized version of the south you discussed, and the ways that supernatural creatures are used to further the "the confederacy lives on" message.

    • @hayleygrace9137
      @hayleygrace9137 Před 7 měsíci +17

      I loved that movie so much as a kid and watched it many many times and I never even noticed that. But what an unnecessary yuck. I mean they literally could have been anyone and they chose that.

    • @TheLastSane1
      @TheLastSane1 Před 7 měsíci +15

      It wasn't JUST confederate soldiers (it was all the werecats victims) and they do show them as the bad guys (marching people into the gator filled swamp) they where just the trapped souls there.

    • @tmlawson751
      @tmlawson751 Před 7 měsíci +11

      I mean, they were human before being confederate 😂 being a confederate soldier doesn't invalidate that they would want to warn living people not to become like them... which is even more poetic.

    • @aprilbennett4161
      @aprilbennett4161 Před 6 měsíci +1

      There's romanticizing the South, but there's also stripping people of their humanity. Both are wholly unrealistic. Being from any side of a war doesn't mean someone's going to want random people to be preyed on by werecats.

  • @tchristensen81
    @tchristensen81 Před rokem +19

    My step-father, a trucker, was someone you could probably classify as a good ol’ boy. Throughout my life, I saw him do nothing but stand up for minorities and women whenever they were being bullied or threatened with violence. But he also was absolutely a Lost Cause fanboy. It was culture when he grew up. I can tell you from so many conversations he genuinely believed in that myth, while being ignorant of reality. He was self taught but an avid reader.
    We only really started having these conversations at least outside of academia after he passed on.
    I would’ve liked to address this with him. I would like to believe that he would have come around and regretted. But I have no way to know now.

    • @tchristensen81
      @tchristensen81 Před rokem +5

      Also, to add to this, he drove city busses for a while after he married my mom. I don’t say “he had a lot of black friends”, though he might have said that since he was pretty chatty. But I can tell you that he absolutely only came home and shared stories about the awesome black folks he met that day. He didn’t like white churches. Honestly, I don’t think he really liked white people that much.
      Yet, Confederate Fanboy. 🤷‍♀️
      Thanks for talking about that so well.

    • @yzfool6639
      @yzfool6639 Před 5 měsíci

      Fascinating and insightful.

  • @HelenaIsis616
    @HelenaIsis616 Před rokem +239

    People thought I was a hater when I said quite a few parts of Twilight made me uncomfortable, including a Confederate vampire being a good guy.

    • @katherinealvarez9216
      @katherinealvarez9216 Před rokem +20

      For me, it was the South American vampires.

    • @Uiuiooo
      @Uiuiooo Před rokem

      And ?

    • @elysiabarr425
      @elysiabarr425 Před rokem +34

      Twilight has always bugged me. Edward is controlling to Bella, and most of the characters have no personality. Bella has no life goals after meeting Edward, only to marry him. She acts stupidly when they break up.

    • @ashleysmith746
      @ashleysmith746 Před rokem +28

      The fucking grooming between Jacob and Renesme💀 people LOVE to defend that one

    • @samaraisnt
      @samaraisnt Před rokem +18

      Classic Hater move!
      *thinking critically about problematic content.*

  • @snorpenbass4196
    @snorpenbass4196 Před rokem +193

    Fun detail: In the vampire horror action "Near Dark", Kathryn Bigelow had the fact that the "father" of the vampire murder family (and several of his "children") were Confederates as a sign of them having been evil _before_ they became vampires. Which is why they don't get redeemed at the end.

    • @jujutaylor2186
      @jujutaylor2186 Před rokem +4

      👍🏿

    • @gingerdoll
      @gingerdoll Před rokem +2

      Near Dark, yay!

    • @bebel1478
      @bebel1478 Před rokem +8

      It was definitely used as a way to make them seem scarier and more monstreous, love that movie!

  • @yoknom
    @yoknom Před rokem +42

    I loved learning more about this from you (I'm European and only learned very little about American history in school). But we have a similar thing here I think, with how people talk about the Nazi time, for example how the story "The Boy in the Striped Pyjamas" assumes that a high ranking officer wouldn't indoctrinate his son with his own hateful ideologies.

  • @NOPEFROG
    @NOPEFROG Před 10 měsíci +17

    Never heard of this channel before - used to be quite far right, now reformed. Love finding new content creators that cover stuff like this! Will be binging a bunch of your content at work today.

    • @cult_of_odin
      @cult_of_odin Před 7 měsíci

      You spelled "indoctrinated" wrong.

    • @peppermintgal4302
      @peppermintgal4302 Před 7 měsíci +1

      ​@@cult_of_odin Buddy, direct descendants of slave owners poured loads of money into propaganda campaigns, even having history books stamped with the phrase "unjust to the confederacy" on them. Who is doing the indoctrination, here?

  • @879SCSP
    @879SCSP Před rokem +863

    What's funny too is that if you want to set your story in that time period making your vampire a "slave-owner killing" badass is literally the easiest way to add some "good guy" points considering all of them are, in some way or another, the "good" guys. But nah, let's just add some racist history that we are never going to do anything with, especially since you can't consider vampirism a "punishment" considering they all seem to be relatively enjoying their lives.

    • @beeaggro2593
      @beeaggro2593 Před rokem +1

      Just once it would be fun for them to be like "Uh. Did you fight for the-?" "OH HEAVENS NO. Traitorous scumbags. I marched my way to Sherman's army and burned Georgia and those parasites to the gawdum ground."

    • @lindenshepherd6085
      @lindenshepherd6085 Před rokem +95

      One of the best ways I’ve seen the vampiric “punishment” play out is the use of vampiric decay, especially in a non-Christian context. The idea that all vampires start off looking and acting mostly human, but eventually they all decay into soulless, inhuman monsters. The final form could even feed on vampires, since they are so starved of sensation and memories of humanity that they’ll even eat the already-dead vampires. Vampires might enjoy their recent conversion and centuries following if they can stay on top of things, but the demonic future always hangs over them as a sort of worse “death”.

    • @Patrick-jd1ku
      @Patrick-jd1ku Před rokem +22

      @@lindenshepherd6085 is this referencing a specific story/series? Sounds interesting.

    • @CreatureNamedGrace
      @CreatureNamedGrace Před rokem +37

      @@Patrick-jd1ku Vampire: the Masquerade has this exact trope. It started out as a TTRPG in the same "vein" as Dungeons and Dragons, though it also has videogames, visual novels, and apparently a tv show in the woodworks. If you are a fan of rpgs and Critical Role, I recommend watching VtM: Los Angeles by Night and the ongoing VtM: New York by Night.

    • @talynhastime9343
      @talynhastime9343 Před rokem +51

      It would be so cool if there was a story about a vampire who aided abolition during the Antebellum period. It would create an interesting contrast between an undead creature of the night (something demonic) assisting in the emancipation of slaves (an unequivocally good thing), and human preachers/slave owners (normal) espousing how slavery is “God’s plan” (i.e. using religion as reasoning for evil). You could really twist good and evil, faith and impiety, abominations and God’s supposed chosen around in that way by making the “virtuous” the damned and the damned the virtuous solely by their actions done on Earth, not the state of their souls.
      People never want to actually dissect how a vampire that was turned during a time of overt intolerance and prejudice for certain groups might, I don’t know, follow them throughout their immortal existence? I guess authors figure that once you’re a vampire, all humans become food, but on the other hand, I’ve seen a handful of interpretations people have made of Dracula where he never let his hatred of the Turks die. He still hated them and would liked to have seen them burn, though maybe that’s just a case of his personality being a vengeful one.
      There just seems to be a black hole where discussion of the implications of long-lived former humans, their perspectives, their perception of the passage of time and the changing of values around them, should be in the public imagination of vampires. To the creatively bankrupt, Vampires apparently are progressive, blandly traditional in a way that doesn’t overtly offend anyone, or apolitical and see people only as food without any greater reason given as to WHY they think that way or what processes led them to feeling that way.

  • @emmie9469
    @emmie9469 Před rokem +1668

    A month ago, I watched the twilight movies for the first time with my friend, and I was honestly so shocked at the reveal of Jasper’s background as a confederate soldier. I’m pretty sure, if I’m not mistaken, that there was another confederate soldier vampire introduced as a background character in one of the last films, so it’s obviously not a coincidence within the franchise which makes the whole situation even worse.
    On top of that, I was also was unsettled by the colonialist undertones behind the relationship between the vampires and werewolves in the movies. The vampires (essentially white colonialists) invade the land of the werewolves (Native Americans) and tried to deprive them of their land ownership and natural resources, and treat them in derogatory ways in all of the movies. I think what disturbed me most was how tone deaf these inclusions were, and how obviously disconnected they are from actual historical events. So, placing the vampire characters in a sympathetic position is honestly very messed up :(

    • @xoyouaremysunshinexo
      @xoyouaremysunshinexo Před rokem +299

      Adding to those colonial undertones: after the movie craze thousands of tourists flooded the actual Quileute reservation with no regard for the Natives living there. They were walking all over sacred sites. I remember GMA doing on a story on it.

    • @emmie9469
      @emmie9469 Před rokem +116

      @@xoyouaremysunshinexo Oh god, That’s awful! I had no idea. That just makes it even worse. Thanks for letting me know.

    • @sashalynn6087
      @sashalynn6087 Před rokem +1

      With the writer being Mormon, it didn't surprise me but still nonetheless I hate her work.

    • @leahscontemporary
      @leahscontemporary Před rokem +56

      @@xoyouaremysunshinexo As a poc I wish yall would realize that its important that advocacy doesn't equal handicapping actual indigenous voices. The quileute tribe was relatively unknown and underfunded up until twilight and with the help of the sagas notoriety the government granted them several acres of additional land owed to them not to mention tourism that helped to fund their tribe move out of a tsunami zone. Members of the tribe been having this conversation 15 years ago

    • @Rawnblade13
      @Rawnblade13 Před rokem +61

      Put on top of that that Jacob was played by a white guy...

  • @matthewsanchez1108
    @matthewsanchez1108 Před rokem +8

    im from MN and my partner is a black woman from TN, i was the first person in her life to tell her about Bleeding Kansas. One of main events that sparked the civil war to start and they dont teach in in most southern history classes.

  • @ShirleyTimple
    @ShirleyTimple Před rokem +1230

    I've never considered this question, but it immediately makes sense. Treating humans as property is no different than treating them as food. In each instance, your very livelihood is dependent on the blood and sweat of others.

    • @morley364
      @morley364 Před rokem +117

      See, that's why I think there'd be some interesting possibilities for commentary with Confederate vampire characters, but all these shows immediately throw those possibilities in the trash by either dismissing/outright ignoring the whole slavery bit. At least with Anne Rice, you can see those possibilities being acknowledged and touched on.

    • @tto198
      @tto198 Před rokem +50

      Exactly my thoughts. Vampires have long been associated with the gentry in Europe, so if you’re transplanting them to the United States, making them Confederates makes a lot of sense, if it’s a considered decision.

    • @flaviac6556
      @flaviac6556 Před rokem +26

      Makes sense, Jasper never really understood why the Cullens don’t eat humans he just did it for Alice

    • @shemjaza
      @shemjaza Před rokem +8

      Of course Lestat liked him... Louis was already a vampire.

    • @MatthewChenault
      @MatthewChenault Před rokem

      Except that perspective does not work as there were rules of conduct concerning how slavery was to be practiced; rules that have existed for thousands of years in each and every culture that has had some form of slavery.
      In the American South, there was a social expectation on masters to treat their slaves well as this is reflected in the Christian faith in Ephesians 6:9, which applies many of the same ground rules slaves were expected to follow onto their masters (I.e. slaves treat their masters with respect and masters treat their slaves with respect). Treating them with cruelty or exacting abuses upon them was frowned upon as this was seen as a violation of those social expectations just as we frown upon child abuse.
      The only issue was this wasn’t solidly grounded in the legal system, but that has more to do with the original nature slavery found itself in during the 18th century more than anything else (i.e. the law could not govern the frontier territories) and, in turn, left much of it up to the individual master.
      Even so, the social expectations were usually reinforced by the majority of masters as the majority were small-time plantation farmers with a small number of slaves working under them. This meant there was a tightly-knit community within the plantation environment that often obfuscated many of the major cruelties seen on large plantations (I.e. plantations with 100 or more slaves). Most of the cruelties witnessed took place on large plantations where there was a need to have overseers paid to help discipline and manage the slaves on the plantations, which is where many of the stories about cruelties come from.
      In most cases, the overwhelming majority of slave owners (masters) did not commit any such cruelties against the slaves under their charge. They were “property” in the sense that they were legally owned by someone, but this does not mean a master could do whatever he wanted with them without it reflecting upon his own character.
      In southern society, the kinder you were to the slaves under your charge - the more you treated your slaves with respect and humility - the greater the chances were that you would be seen as virtuous.

  • @petertierney586
    @petertierney586 Před 5 měsíci +8

    I thought it was because that the "southern gentleman " is as close as an idle aristocrat America can get. Aint no vampire with a job

  • @zenobiafenrick9603
    @zenobiafenrick9603 Před rokem +297

    I LITERALLY WAS GOING TO DO A PAPER ON THIS FOR MY CULTURAL STUDIES CLASS. Such an odd thing that three vampires in the 2000s/2010s were all confederate soldiers at some point. 💀 WILDT.

    • @beeaggro2593
      @beeaggro2593 Před rokem +17

      It was a parasite of the southern gothic genre

    • @EverybodyKnowsWithChuckUFarley
      @EverybodyKnowsWithChuckUFarley Před rokem +3

      i think in this specific case, the ppl running these shows weren't thinking it through per se, but rather just in a cycle or ripping off each other and ann rice. but i think political overtones are actually almost more interesting when they creep in, when they aren't well considered.

  • @calderfly4004
    @calderfly4004 Před rokem +607

    the way you explain the inclusion of louis being a slave owner and that being a factor in why lestat targets him made so much sense to me. after watching the show, watching the movie, and now reading the original book, why anne rice decided louis should be a plantation owner has been a question that has like. plagued me. because up until now i just couldn't understand it. it's no question that both louis and lestat are bad people, and the story is very much influenced by louis's perspective and how he views things. i think it's a super interesting idea that lestat targeted louis because he was a slave owner and had no issue with seeing other humans as lesser than. something that lestat believes since one needs to strip humans of their humanity in order to kill them for selfish purposes. the issue that louis faces is exactly what you said, louis now needs to confront that slaves are humans and he doesn't want to take human life. it's interesting that becoming a vampire was the only way that he would see that. you hit the nail right on the head and this has me thinking of this book and aspect of it in a whole new light, thank you so much! this video is awesome

    • @dismurrart6648
      @dismurrart6648 Před rokem +41

      That was such a great point I'd never thought about. You're right, its a real deep cut that the only way Louis could see slaves as people is to become a monster. I wonder if that was foreshadowing that he'd succumb and eat humans. Maybe that wasn't intentional foreshadowing but it works really well

    • @AishiCheemo
      @AishiCheemo Před rokem +4

      @@dismurrart6648 Agreed

  • @e.w.9351
    @e.w.9351 Před 10 měsíci +14

    I think it has a lot to do with themes of decadence and mystery within the southern gothic genre.
    A lot of these writers were probably heavily inspired by Anne Rice, a New Orleanian whose books were also set here in New Orleans. Anne herself would have grown up hearing stories of the Carter Brothers, Jacques St. Germain, and the Ursuline Vampires.

  • @Hellohellonada
    @Hellohellonada Před rokem +14

    I believe the changes were made in TVD were to link Katherine more distinctly to Mystic Falls and the arc planned for the Originals. Also still angry about Bonnie in the show, she deserved more.

  • @CaptainPeregrin
    @CaptainPeregrin Před rokem +344

    I recently did some research on Les Misérables, and discovered that it was very popular in America at the time of the civil war...but it was abridged in the South, removing any reference to slavery (prison labor is kinda an important inciting incident), and publishers defended the decision by saying that what Hugo was commenting on had nothing to do with "race-based slavery". (spoiler: it had a LOT to do with that!)

    • @ealusaid
      @ealusaid Před rokem +57

      Wait... if it had nothing to do with race-based slavery, then why did they take it out? I mean, I know that excuses for bigotry frequently don't make logical sense, but that one ESPECIALLY doesn't make logical sense.

    • @morley364
      @morley364 Před rokem +79

      @@ealusaid It's probably like how people want books with gay characters banned for being ''inappropriate for children" but claim it's not homophobia. The loopholes people find to excuse their own prejudice are rarely logically consistent. "We're banning this for criticizing slavery, but banning it has nothing to do with *Black* slavery, of course!"

    • @samaraisnt
      @samaraisnt Před rokem +27

      @@ealusaid bc reading a thought out book that clearly states slavery=bad might lead some confederate dingbats to think critically. It's a long shot but that's the fear lol.

    • @GeteMachine
      @GeteMachine Před rokem

      God, if we ever get to a point of removing racism from American slavery, we know we're in a bad time for propaganda, when racism primarily was the basis of the defense of slavey and proceses in the plotting in western colonialism.

    • @GeteMachine
      @GeteMachine Před rokem

      @@ealusaid They cant deny it, because from the Confederate letters directly from them, they said the civil war was a spiritual one that was a fear of and percieved entitlement of owning black people. They would conspire that if they lost, it would doom the white man, and that their rationality was that black people were a race they needed to punish and break in, as the "white man's burden." Its why I hate the bad argument that "all cultures had slavery" when it wasnt politically the same everywhere.
      Similar stuff to the undertalked about enslavement of indigenous Americans as well. They were very conscious of how they wanted race to essentialize slavery for their framework.Thus the demonization of both groups via race, was supposed to rationalize slavery for them (that was really for mostly profit that they thought was a goldmine to keep.)

  • @miscalotastuff733
    @miscalotastuff733 Před rokem +686

    When I was a kid my mom took us to monticello and mount vernon. She had seen the slave quarters before they eventually mowed them down. She took us to where they had been and described them to us. She made us aware of slavery and how disgusting it was. Then she told us about the trail of tears. Something that affected me personally as we had family that had died. It was a very interesting and thought provoking trip.

    • @TevelDrinkwater
      @TevelDrinkwater Před rokem +80

      The slave quarters are the most historically important parts of those old plantations! It's what makes them historically important. Otherwise they were just big old houses.

    • @williamthomas1
      @williamthomas1 Před rokem +3

      You should visit the graves of the 600 Thousand plus who died fighting the war, if you are looking for thought provoking insight. All those young men dead who never had the chance at life.

    • @miscalotastuff733
      @miscalotastuff733 Před rokem +71

      @@williamthomas1 I have sir. I had family die in that war as well. Some of them butchered and burnt alive for running the underground railroad. I have zero sympathy for the losses the south experienced during the civilwar for those that fought for the south. As far as I am concerned they had it coming.

    • @katharineeavan9705
      @katharineeavan9705 Před rokem

      @@williamthomas1 Do you also have sympathy for N*zi's? Or Stalin's men? Or all the other absolutely horrific regimes people voluntarily lost their lives under? I couldn't care less if it was brother against brother. If one brother wanted to protect slavery then he had it coming. End of. I have sympathy for the other brother who had to find out his kin was a pos and kill him.

    • @williamthomas1
      @williamthomas1 Před rokem +1

      @@katharineeavan9705 I imagine you didn't try out for the debate team.

  • @danielasarmiento30
    @danielasarmiento30 Před rokem +34

    I didn't originally know what the confederacy was the first time I read twilight. Once I found out and read it again, it made me feel that Jasper is a very easily swept with the flow kind of character. He fight for whichever army those around him are joining, being the confederacy or Maria's newborn group not really thinking of what he's doing. He truly given no thought to the feelings of those around him outside of the feelings of the dominant person in his life (Maria) even though he feels bad for the negative feelings of those around him. He truly doesn't think until his friend Peter runs away. And didn't think about the possibility of him not fighting until Peter returned for him. And while he's with Peter and Charlotte, he still feels bad but doesn't think he can do anything about it until Alice shows up.
    He's weak willed, go with the flow, and defeatist through the backstory. Alice is 100% his will and backbone. Alice says jump and he asks "how high ma'am". And it takes her about 100 years to show up! I doubt that's how SM planned to portray him, but that's how I read him

    • @gizachick
      @gizachick Před 10 měsíci +9

      Yeah, I always felt like Jasper’s empathy was more of a problem for him than Meyers let’s on because it seemed like he was hugely influenced by whoever happened to be surrounding him at a given time.
      A lot of her characters lack much personality though.

  • @NotAShawn
    @NotAShawn Před rokem +4

    went from ur true blood video 11 years ago to this... wow the internet really is a time capsule.. im glad you kept making content

  • @TeroTheShortOne
    @TeroTheShortOne Před rokem +120

    Interestingly enough, my (Mexican/Native) dad taught me about how the prison system has become a legal extension of the chattel slavery system using Gone With the Wind.

    • @tsdobbi
      @tsdobbi Před rokem +1

      Stupid laws were created that it was essentially understood didn't apply to white people, for the sole purpose of being able to arrest black people and throw them on a chain gang. Thats essentially what "sun down towns" were. Essentially made all these laws about things you can't do after sundown. Like very benign crap, but again, only enforced against black people.
      Many of these laws can still be found on the books in many states, they are just not enforced anymore.

  • @normal6483
    @normal6483 Před rokem +301

    Another thing I can't help but notice is that there's a huge connection between the Civil War and ghost stories in Southern culture. Not only did ghost stories rise in prominence after the Civil War due to all the casualties, but the infamous Klan outfit was explicitly designed to look like a ghost costume, to evoke dead Confederate soldiers. The narrative of the Civil War, especially in the American South, has always invoked undead soldiers as a way of justifying itself. And I think the switch from "Confederate ghosts" to "Confederate vampires" is a modern take that carries all of the same flaws and biases that it did when the Klan told the story.

    • @ealusaid
      @ealusaid Před rokem +50

      You could almost say the South has a few skeletons in its closet.

    • @plantlover3741
      @plantlover3741 Před rokem +12

      @@ealusaid that closet needs to lead to narnia with the amount of skeletons in there

    • @MatthewChenault
      @MatthewChenault Před rokem +1

      Well, considering everywhere outside of Richmond was littered in the bones of the dead that had been left out in the open for years… then you might have an understanding of where those ghost stories come from.
      The big example I can think of is Cold Harbor National Battlefield Park, which is northeast of Richmond. The battlefield is (allegedly) haunted, which seems to be attributed to the brutality of the fighting there, the two-week stalemate that mimicked trench warfare during the Great War, and the fact everyone around there was stumbling upon the skeletal remains of the men from the Battle of Gaines’ Mill, which was fought nearly two years prior on much of the same ground as Cold Harbor.
      The National Cemetery has two trenches for the mass graves of nearly 1,000 union soldiers recovered from the battlefield through two search expeditions conducted in the post-war years (it’s where the iconic “burial team” photograph comes from).
      So, when strange occurrences began being reported there, it’s not hard to connect the dots to get a ghost story from there, particularly that of the “phantom fog.”

    • @MatthewChenault
      @MatthewChenault Před rokem +3

      The invocation of ghost stories recalls the horrors of war to remember the tragedies that took place there. It was the living memory of those men who survived and witnessed the massive piles of corpses and the skeletons lying all over the place that would live on in some form; the ghost story being one of them.
      It’s also not exclusive to the south as Gettysburg has a rich ghost story scene as the result of the sheer level of carnage that took place there and warped the living memory of all who lived in the town or the soldiers who clashed there and recalled those terrible days.
      It’s simply an expression of the horrors they faced; the living on of the trauma of those horrific days; the legacy of the reaper that is war.
      There’s no need for any other explanation.

    • @normal6483
      @normal6483 Před rokem +14

      @@MatthewChenault While not quite exclusive to the South, the South still used the trope of "undead Confederate soldiers" as the face of America's largest hate movement - it's a very prominent symbol with very prominent meaning.

  • @cassandrayorke583
    @cassandrayorke583 Před rokem +27

    I really appreciate hearing your take on all this. I'm writing my own Gothic series and it includes a few characters who were alive to remember the Civil War. Even though it was a bit different in my own timeline, you've given me a lot to think about. I really don't want to play into Lost Cause stuff by glossing over real suffering, no matter how good my intentions are. Thank you. ❤

  • @sleepysadpoet
    @sleepysadpoet Před rokem +4

    I don’t remember how you came up on my timeline, like what channel I watch that made the algorithm choose your video but I’m for once thanking the algorithm. This is such an interesting topic and I’ve asked that question myself

  • @theoneandonlymichaelmccormick

    If I wanted to make an excuse, I would say it’s because Antebellum slavers are an American analogue for parasitic European nobility, a la Count Dracula.
    I will say, however, that this is a very weak excuse, considering that all of the examples of confederate vampires I can think of (Interview with the Vampire, Twilight, True Blood, Vampire Diaries, etc.) are meant to be sympathetic.

    • @erraticonteuse
      @erraticonteuse Před rokem +148

      Yeah, to echo Hbomberguy's Lovecraft video: there's a reason why Christian Grey, the BDSM mundane AU version of a vampire character, was just a billionaire. It's the closest mundane parallel to vampirism we have.

    • @atreides213
      @atreides213 Před rokem +2

      Confederate vampires are the antagonists in Abraham Lincoln vampire Hunter. In fact, vampires in that book serve as a metaphor for the parasitic and predatory nature of slavery.

    • @theoneandonlymichaelmccormick
      @theoneandonlymichaelmccormick Před rokem +42

      @@erraticonteuse I believe Dan Olsen said something similar in his 50 Shades of Grey reviews.

    • @thrawncaedusl717
      @thrawncaedusl717 Před rokem +105

      I think you are 100% right. This is what happens when we try to reclaim monsters without looking at why they are monstrous. The point of a vampire was that they stole the life from others for their own pleasure. European lords with serfs becoming American slavers just makes sense. However, somewhere along the line, this desire was no longer viewed as evil, leading writers and culture in general to sympathize with the monsters without thinking through what exactly they are tacitly endorsing.

    • @AllTheArtsy
      @AllTheArtsy Před rokem +55

      Yeah, you can pretty much say vampirism is just shorthand for slavery being about a select exalted few literally feeding on the live blood, vitality and energy of the entire population. But, as you point out, all these confederate vampires are not only meant to be sympathetic, they're the (romantic) lead of the story. And often going against even older, usually European vampires -- without noting that they're one and the same breed of evil.

  • @ChrisBrooks34
    @ChrisBrooks34 Před rokem +427

    Honestly I would be super interested in reading about Mexican or even South American vampires fighting against invading European vampire armies. That is super fascinating to me, alternative history through the eyes of Native American vampires. Someone write this book!

    • @brushdogart
      @brushdogart Před rokem +36

      I think authors might not want to do that one in the current climate. A well done depiction of a Aztec vampire would be a truly horrific monster give their history of brutally subduing the surrounding kingdoms and demanding the heirs of non-Aztec noble houses as blood sacrifices. After all, the Spanish conquest was more of an assisted civil war than an outsider invasion. While a story of an ancient Aztec vampire would be interesting, if I were a writer I would be worried about being considered racist for depicting an ancient Aztec blood-lord in a realistic way.

    • @roselarsen9263
      @roselarsen9263 Před rokem +32

      World of Darkness has this rattling around in the setting with Huitzilopochtli as a vampire sleeping under Mexico City and influencing things.
      Honestly, WoD, I’m general, is killer for this sort of thing.
      For example, They had a sourcebook entirely about the holocaust dead that they made with survivors and Jewish historians with the specific intention to refuse to glorify nazis and one of their signature clan characters is an utterly badass former slave who escaped and helped on the Underground Railroad and is now one of the most powerful members of his clan.

    • @richardarriaga6271
      @richardarriaga6271 Před rokem +19

      There's stories of Native American werewolves confronting European werewolves. Don't know the names but the stories are over 20 years old. My uncle read them.

    • @andrecarpenter2432
      @andrecarpenter2432 Před rokem +3

      American vampire has an arc of American and native vampires fighting the European vampires

    • @Fankas2000
      @Fankas2000 Před rokem +3

      Have you ever herd of the Vampire the Masquerade? It's a table top game series that often reads like a series of novels. In it, the yung(ish) European vampires escaped Europe for South America to get away from their oppressive elders and formed their own organization, taking elements from the local cultures.

  • @redmistbluemiss
    @redmistbluemiss Před měsícem +2

    Imagine how interesting it would be to have a Vampire that was from Africa having witnessed everything from the birth of civilization, to the rise of Hannibal and Carthage, the golden age of Ethiopia, to slavery, liberation, colonization, and civil rights. There's a genuine gold mine of potential storytelling.

  • @aubigney
    @aubigney Před 7 měsíci

    i just scrolled back through your videos and you've been uploading for FOURTEEN YEARS? more like Princess Decades. you are one of the OGs of this platform, and i have so much respect for you

  • @RyokoEarth
    @RyokoEarth Před rokem +482

    Ok finished the vid and all jokes aside I really love your content. As a bi black dude who was also a ton of ‘nerdy’ stuff growing up I love seeing another black person who was cut from the same cloth discussing these things with a lens I hadn’t considered. Like when I watch true blood I was in my teens, and during that time I really hadn’t even considered how they were framing the topic of slavery. As someone who hasn’t watched it in a long time, I had forgotten it was even a thing.
    Having you speak on these trends really opens my eyes to them (I never made the confederate vampire link) and allows me to better analyze the media I view in a critical fashion. And on top of that I think you’re just really funny, vids are super entertaining on top of being informative.

    • @Princess_Weekes
      @Princess_Weekes  Před rokem +132

    • @plutoh9958
      @plutoh9958 Před rokem +16

      @@Princess_Weekes this is exactly why I love your commentary so much! You speak to this feeling of "am I crazy‽ Am I in a bizarro Twilight Zone world‽". Love your humor and thoughtful commentary. Please keep it up!

    • @oldssierra
      @oldssierra Před rokem +5

      Wholeheartedly agree with everything that's been said. Thank you

  • @tinymxnticore
    @tinymxnticore Před rokem +141

    Amazing timing because I just started True Blood last night and was wondering why this is a thing?? They really wanted us to think TARA was out of line for asking Bill if he had slaves!

  • @Chowlife
    @Chowlife Před 9 měsíci

    Thank you soooo much for covering this ! Great job

  • @MastarNinja
    @MastarNinja Před 9 měsíci +4

    For Emily Bennet (and as neither POC, American, or natively anglophone myself) I always assumed the Master-Servant thing was just "for show" given the time period. Pretty sure I remember that Katerina, while on the run for her life from the Mickaelson for the past few centuries, saved Emily's life at one point and they teamed up to help each others out. Katerina, being white and with the ability to compel humans, would have kept Emily out of trouble with the locals, and in exchange, Emily would have provided her witch abilities when needed and made her (and the brothers) daylight rings. To me, they were essentially just traveling together so the other could keep them safe from their respective enemies.
    I would probably have to re-watch her scenes now, but seeing how she's arguably the 2nd most powerful Bennet witch in TVDu history (Bonnie obviously being the 1rst) and could easily remove Katerina's ability to walk in the sun anytime she wanted, I never saw her truly being "a white vampire's slave". Then again, it's Julie Plec's work here. My understanding of Emily and Katerina's relationship could have been an unintentional one, but I definitely prefer it over the possible "Plec" alternative.

  • @laurenjohnson5941
    @laurenjohnson5941 Před rokem +216

    The Originals, which is a part of TVD, actually has a main character in the main cast who's a former slave-turned-vampire (who's also the son of his owner, which is a whole other thing). It's kind of strange now that I think about it more. The fact that Marcellus is habitually disrespected and dehumanized by others is something that Klaus (the big bad evil hybrid who does all the atrocities, but he's handsome and has mommy and daddy issues so it's ok) relates to. Klaus has been abused before, and he sees something of himself in Marcel when he sees the kid try to fight back against his oppressors. He ends up emancipating the kid (, adopting him as his own son, and Marcel ends up asking to become a vampire like the rest of the Originals who raised him.
    It's even weirder when Klaus meets him and asks for his name, and the enslaved kid says his mother 'wouldn't name him' until he was 10 because she was concerned he'd die. But then she died first, leaving him an enslaved person without a name. Klaus *gives* him the name "Marcellus," since it has this meaning of strength and resilience, or something like that. It's uncomfortably romanticized and feels very White Savior.
    Despite everything we know about Klaus and the Originals, who are unafraid of violence, they have been alive long enough to have some discomfort with the concept of slavery. They treat people like objects, but they're also weirdly self aware, which makes it hard to explain. Goddamn, TO was a fever dream...

    • @annushankar3032
      @annushankar3032 Před rokem +22

      I agree - I liked the show but this White Saviour line was something I picked up on too.
      I liked seeing Marcel making something of himself when he ruled over New Orleans, I just feel like some extreme fans ruin things cause they’re so hot for Klaus and will excuse anything he does (i.e when Klaus came back to New Orleans and thought he was entitled to the city)

    • @mijanhoque1740
      @mijanhoque1740 Před rokem +9

      The Originals has a ton of problems. For example they’re essentially meant to Vikings before Vampires so that means they’d essentially be Scandinavian and should have either Norwegian or Danish accents but instead have the generic British accents for some odd reason.
      Not to mention their religion is hardly mentioned as they should be worshipping Old Gods like Odin and their views on certain religions like Christianity is hardly talked about or mentioned.
      As for slavery the Vikings had tons of slaves so yeah their views on it should atleats be addressed or why exactly did Marcel stand out even though they been alive for centuries witnessing the brutal acts?

    • @kiramorrissette3838
      @kiramorrissette3838 Před rokem +1

      Yeah Klaus is one of my fave tvdu characters but I feel like him and Elijah always held Marcel's past over his head like he should’ve been grateful Klaus "saved" him. And when Marcel went on to be king of NOLA Klaus couldn’t stand it although I think that has more to do with Klaus abadoment issues and superiority complex.
      Although I do feel TO was an improvement compared to TVD when it came to black characters and historical racism it still dropped the ball a lot especially with it being set in NOLA. A city known to have voodoo and hoodoo roots for the show to hardly have any black witches or magic users. Which I think AHS coven handled better imo.

  • @PirvateerKurei
    @PirvateerKurei Před rokem +294

    YES! What's with the trope of a vampire being part of the Confederacy? Very rarely would we see a vampire of the same age from the North, but we'll see plenty of older ones from outside the Americas come over.

    • @beeaggro2593
      @beeaggro2593 Před rokem +30

      It's because Southern Gothic as a genre is all morose with decrepit houses. Good to put a vampire or two

    • @Sasu123456789x1
      @Sasu123456789x1 Před rokem +4

      Yeah, I always thought it was weird and I'm glad its being addresses in this video

  • @TheSoonyGirl
    @TheSoonyGirl Před rokem +17

    I think you’re right… it highlights the ignorance or genius of the writers. If the character’s a narcissist, so self-involved involved in the glory of war or family status that they are negligent of others suffering, then it’s a fitting choice. If they’re doing it because the they need an appealing lost cause, then it’s ignorance. There are plenty of examples of lost-cause wars of conquerors crushing rebellions to pick without being on the wrong side of history. In many ways the romanticism of the confederacy reflects the mentality of narcissist behaviour.

  • @greyweatherford-brown6762
    @greyweatherford-brown6762 Před 6 měsíci +3

    This is one of my new favorite channels!!! I'm a big fan of film commentaries, and the nuances and perspectives you give are consistantly brilliant and thought provoking.

  • @jennyrengood9875
    @jennyrengood9875 Před rokem +190

    I've never felt more connected with a stranger than when I heard that aggravated sigh before you said, "Julie Plec". I felt that in my soul. 🤣

    • @arriibacon531
      @arriibacon531 Před rokem +7

      Same 😭

    • @CrowTR0bot
      @CrowTR0bot Před rokem +2

      Speaking as someone who reads a fair bit...who's Julie Plec?

    • @jennyrengood9875
      @jennyrengood9875 Před rokem +37

      @@CrowTR0bot Julie Plec is the co-creator, executive producer, showrunner, and sometimes director of The Vampire Diaries. But her full-time job seems to be aggravating the show's fan base.

    • @Prof.SeverusSnape
      @Prof.SeverusSnape Před rokem +12

      ​@@jennyrengood9875 LMAO that last sentence.

  • @RiderOfKarma
    @RiderOfKarma Před rokem +627

    I was saying ‘and also Firefly’ to myself the whole beginning! This essay has hit so many points I have noticed over the years with this, right up to those GoT writers trying to do a Confederacy show. This motiff of the lost cause ideology has become an analogy for white male patriarchy feeling threatened. Replacement theory symbols for Red Pill Rebels.

    • @Murdermagictricks
      @Murdermagictricks Před rokem +5

      Yes they said the show cost too much to make and they don't have enough viewers. Fox is really bad about that

    • @jessicabrown1305
      @jessicabrown1305 Před rokem +34

      When I first heard about a potential show examining what modern day America would look like if the confederates won I was curious. With the right writers/showrunners it could be an interesting indictment of how things might be similar (America never truly abolished slavery after all) and explore the various ways that abolitionists continued to fight ... Then I saw that it was the GOT dudes pitching it and my brain stalled thinking of all the terrible things they could do with all their GOT glory 🤞 all their original ideas are equally terrible and they fade into irrelevancy 🤞

    • @oldssierra
      @oldssierra Před rokem +3

      Wow. I will continue thinking about this

    • @saraa.4295
      @saraa.4295 Před rokem

      I wouldn't really call firefly into this .
      I know, it is the looser of a civil war that were the heroes, and part of the inspiration was the battle of Gettysburg..
      BUT: just because the south calls the war for slavery a fight for independence, foes not mean every war for independence was shady..
      The world has known many civil wars, and in most of them there was no "right" side...just a winner. .

    • @andreabrown4541
      @andreabrown4541 Před rokem +1

      I believe Spike Lee already has been there and done that.

  • @novietakes9222
    @novietakes9222 Před rokem +5

    Incredible commentary. I love your energy and your delivery!

  • @MadTeaMarie
    @MadTeaMarie Před 4 měsíci +1

    This is the fourth video of yours I've watched today -- the same day I've discovered your content. I even stayed in my office for half an hour after my workday was done because I was too into it to pause it even for a second to reconvene in the living room. Just like the last 3 videos, I learned a lot, came away with tons of top-shelf brain food to digest afterwards, and am so happy to have found your content! I'm going to go make some coffee, shake off the day, and then once I've gotten some things done I strongly suspect I'm going to be ending the day watching another one of your videos in the living room. THANK YOU FOR THE BRAIN FOOD!

  • @NKMitch42
    @NKMitch42 Před rokem +64

    I always liked how Louis was handled, and it ends with the plantation being destroyed and abandoned. Always seemed pretty clear that the point was to show that he was actually more monstrous before being turned.

  • @rock_gamer_stig5188
    @rock_gamer_stig5188 Před rokem +194

    I've been thinking about this subject for a very long time. As a lover of vampire fiction, it always baffled me how so many pieces of media just casually had confederate vampires. I always just kind of had a vague sense that gothic vampire fiction often depicted their vampires as aristocrats to highlight class antagonism and that the American equivalent of the wicked aristocrat was the slave owner but that never really satisfied me. Thank you for this!

    • @katharineeavan9705
      @katharineeavan9705 Před rokem +16

      Honestly, American vampire 'mythos' always just feels a bit odd to me, as half the vampires are only as old as some (admittedly few, but still) living people at the time of writing. It makes far more sense in terms of the vampiric vibe to have immigrant vampires who fled aristocratic society when they got chased out with pitchforks, puritan pilgrim vampires who used the insecurity of life in the "new world" to feed indiscriminately without being noticed, vampires who lived through the founding of America but didn't bother to travel over until there were easier, quicker means of transport and a more heavily populated feeding ground etc. As for tragic vampires, pretty much any backstory works better than "thought slavery was worth defending less than 150 years ago; still doesn't really regret that part".
      Antebellum vampires is the kind of thing that was creative as a one off, but wholly uninspired for a trend.

  • @galaxy_whizard
    @galaxy_whizard Před rokem +13

    My only (tiny) critique was that although Kentucky wanted to secede, they technically didn’t. (I’m a Kentuckian and -disgustingly- I remember many people in my history classes being sad about this fact. Despite this technicality, Kentucky was very much associated with the confederacy. Jefferson Davis was born a Kentuckian.
    Btw this was a fantastic video and I really love the points you brought up. It sickens me how accepted this was, but I’m happy people are actually taking time to discuss it and the implications.

    • @galaxy_whizard
      @galaxy_whizard Před rokem +2

      Oops it crossed out disgustingly. I wanted to show a high emphasis that I was not a fan of my classmates opinions

    • @claytonlangley3605
      @claytonlangley3605 Před 10 měsíci +5

      I see you're point but jefferson Davis being born a Kentuckian doesn't mean much. Abraham Lincoln was also born in Kentucky

    • @AmphibiousGentleman
      @AmphibiousGentleman Před 6 měsíci

      That was only one of the inaccuracies in that sentence. Missouri never seceded either. And there wasn't a single state that seceded on the date of February 6th, 1861.
      Feb. 6th was the midpoint of the convention that formed the first provisional government of the Confederacy: the meeting started on the 4th, and a constitution was adopted on the 8th. But even if we broaden our scope to the full five days, the states present at the convention didn't secede during that time. They had _already_ seceded, weeks or months earlier; joining themselves to a new "national" government was a separate process. Other states didn't secede until weeks or months _after_ this convention.

  • @Pari_Pixie
    @Pari_Pixie Před 4 měsíci +1

    😂😂😂 the long pause and the sigh “….and a Julie Plec”
    🤣 Felt that. Felt that so much. lol

  • @inbach
    @inbach Před rokem +242

    Watching this video I kept thinking about morality in immortality. In the show The Good Place, Eleanor notice that Michael (an immortal being) doesn't have conscience because there's no point of having regrets if you have eternity to do things differently (and usually not bare any of the consequences of said actions). It really helped me understand why mythological gods are usually such assholes.
    And that could be a point in exploring vampire stories. How vampires lose their humanity over time, and the way their concept of morality changes.

    • @thegnome73
      @thegnome73 Před rokem +30

      I think Anne Rice's Interview With a Vampire does explore this pretty well thematically. A lot of the text of the book is Louis waxing on the evolution of his struggles with his morality in conscience, contrasted with Lestat who doesn't seem to be tortured by moral questions and just gives himself over to pragmatism and impulse.

    • @inbach
      @inbach Před rokem +1

      @@thegnome73 I was WAY too young when I read it (probably 3rd grade?), so I can't remember any of it. I should read it again sometime

    • @LiNestHetalia
      @LiNestHetalia Před rokem

      @@inbach you should, sincerely they're a bunch of horrible people (or well vampires) just ignore the weird Christian era where Anne Rice tried redeem lestat

    • @Lycaon1765
      @Lycaon1765 Před rokem

      Idk, I think that's just "sour grapes" coping for the fact we can't ever be immortal.

    • @MastarNinja
      @MastarNinja Před 9 měsíci

      I think that was the general idea behind the "Humanity Switch" in TVD. Can't remember who said it, but one of the vampires mentioned that the "switch" was a lie that new vampires told themselves to help them adjust to their new, monstrous life with enhanced emotions, and that as centuries pass they completely loose the ability to "turn off" their emotions.
      Your example with mythological gods is also why Klaus was branded as "The Great Evil" until The Originals (where his immortal life finally found a purpose). For a thousand years he was on top of the food chain. The only think able to kill him was thought to be extinct, the dagger used to neutralize an Original couldn't work on him, and werewolf venom had no effect on him. Up until modern day, the only possible consequence for his actions was getting Mickael's attention, so he barely ever cared about the damages he would cause. It's only when his mortal daughter came to be that he genuinely started to worry about consequences.

  • @SuperZez
    @SuperZez Před rokem +256

    What I found bizarre when I bought the book season 1 of TB was based on was that "did you own slaves" was STILL ASKED, but not by Tara, she wasn't there. It was just asked as a casual curious question by either Sookie or her grandma, can't remember which. It really reads like Tara was added to that talk just to have _someone_ being disturbed by the elephant in the room.

    • @TheSilverwing999
      @TheSilverwing999 Před rokem

      If you have read the books though you would know that Tara is a huge bitch in the later books anyway, so this doesn't really change anything

    • @coops9597
      @coops9597 Před rokem +44

      True Blood did Tara dirty at almost every opportunity

  • @moonled44
    @moonled44 Před 10 měsíci

    came across this video while cleaning my room and it has been a delightful piece to fold laundry alongside! i’ve been furiously nodding through the twilight sections and learning a lot ab tvd and iwtv 😊 love ur video art, excited to watch through your calatogue!

  • @meredithchambers8727
    @meredithchambers8727 Před rokem

    Here because of your Financial Diet ep and SO glad to have found you! This was great

  • @ameliaanderson4600
    @ameliaanderson4600 Před rokem +113

    see this is why Abraham Lincoln: Vampire hunter is one of the greatest films of all time. The confederate vampires in that film are portrayed as the vile, blood sucking villans they truly are.

    • @MatthewChenault
      @MatthewChenault Před rokem +1

      I often go to where confederate soldiers lie in state.
      I can safely say that they were not monsters nor vile people. If anything, modern man is the vile monster; the beast of its own making; the incompassionate creature that can only see himself and nothing else.

    • @Imxel21
      @Imxel21 Před rokem +3

      @@MatthewChenaultno they’re monsters and you’re sub human for defending them

    • @MatthewChenault
      @MatthewChenault Před rokem +1

      @@Imxel21, an eighteen year old kid who needed to have his leg amputated and died from gangrene is a “monster?”
      No, I believe you are more likely to be the monster for calling them “evil” for not supporting what you want.
      You call them “evil monsters.”
      I call them “the innocent.”

    • @carlterwedow5000
      @carlterwedow5000 Před rokem +2

      @@MatthewChenault The thing they didn't support was ending slavery. That's not some petty disagreement, it's a matter of human rights. A matter the confederacy was on the wrong side of. So no, there were no 'innocent' confederates.
      The confederacy stood for nothing but taking away the life, liberty, and pursuit of happiness from people who deserved them as much as any other. There wasn't a single good man who fought for the confederacy, only traitors.

    • @hysteriamv
      @hysteriamv Před rokem

      @@carlterwedow5000 Beautifully put.

  • @jasminewebb9935
    @jasminewebb9935 Před rokem +425

    A Rosalie and Emmet book would have been dope to be honest. They were the most interesting couple to me.

    • @fleacythesheepgirl
      @fleacythesheepgirl Před rokem +121

      Rosalie fell for Emmet because he reminded her of her friend’s baby. I’m not even kidding.
      Typical Stephanie Meyer😅

    • @jasminewebb9935
      @jasminewebb9935 Před rokem +83

      @@fleacythesheepgirl Yoooo I forgot about that shit🤣🤣Stephanie Meyers she needed some help low key bruuuh🥲🤏Just a little bit.

    • @soobindoll9561
      @soobindoll9561 Před rokem +4

      ​@@fleacythesheepgirl just crazy

    • @lanakat
      @lanakat Před rokem +5

      @@fleacythesheepgirl what… 😃

    • @Prof.SeverusSnape
      @Prof.SeverusSnape Před rokem +44

      Especially Rosalie who ended up as a doctor and mechanic -two distinctively male dominated fields that were inaccessible to her during the era when she was alive. Honestly her and Leah (and maybe Seth sans the Jacob idolization) are my favorite characters.

  • @CaroStar79
    @CaroStar79 Před 10 měsíci

    I have always wondered this personally so thank you for your amazing video and the book rec at the end!

  • @einherjar9364
    @einherjar9364 Před rokem +35

    I definitely agree with your take, Interview with a Vampire is different than the others because the whole point is to show that the lack of humanity lies with the Vampires/Slave Owners and not the slaves they harm and ignore. Its a criticism, showing that the beauty of the Antebellum South and the beauty of the Vampires is forged through the pain, suffering and dehumanization of others.
    It's a real shame that other series looked at that and only saw "pretty aesthetic, great fit for vampires!" and ignored the deeper meaning Anne Rice put into the situation.

  • @laurenburt8894
    @laurenburt8894 Před rokem +76

    This may be an aside but the fact that Harriet Tubman isn’t listed alongside civil war generals as an incredible strategist ON TOP OF everything else says a lot.
    I know it’s a smaller part of a larger issue but I’ve had to go back and completely re-learn Civil War history.

  • @runningcommentary2125
    @runningcommentary2125 Před rokem +53

    I found one comment on a video about the Vampire Diaries that said Damon Salvatore would have been marginalised and viewed with suspicion in the Confederacy because they would assume from his name that he came from a Catholic background. I get the impression these writers don't do much in the way of historical research which is quite the oversight if you're making a show about immortal beings that have lived for centuries.

    • @obsidianromance34
      @obsidianromance34 Před rokem +9

      yep his name does not sound waspy. He would definitely face suspension since he was apart of the southern upper class.

    • @moondivine2288
      @moondivine2288 Před rokem +2

      In the original book both Damon and Stefan were Italian. I guess the writers didn’t think much of it when they made changes from the book to the tv script

  • @therealmj113
    @therealmj113 Před rokem +3

    Amazing content. Your thorough analysis is great. I’m glad I stumbled upon your channel

  • @4bibimimi
    @4bibimimi Před 6 měsíci +2

    "Firefly" and "Serenity" were riveting. The doctor's sister who became a killing machine even solved their Reiver problem!

  • @sweetpary
    @sweetpary Před rokem +69

    Please talk about Firefly. That aspect of the show was wild to me.

  • @Mario_Angel_Medina
    @Mario_Angel_Medina Před rokem +139

    I think the fact that the wealthy whites of the antebellum South painted themselves as an American aristocracy was a part of why Anne Rice made her vampire protagonist an slaveowning southenern... I'm ok with that angle because, like Princess said, the morallity of vampires never gets lighter than grey, but is really a missed oportunity in most supernatural romance novels, this people shouldn't feel bad because they lost the war, they should feel bad because they were fighting for the evil side even before they were turned into human-eating monsters... man, "self-loathing vampire sadboys don't hate themselves enough" what a hot-take I just wrote

  • @sylviabergman509
    @sylviabergman509 Před rokem

    i've totally been boggled by this phenomenon, thanks for the awesome video!

  • @existingtm
    @existingtm Před 9 měsíci +1

    Thanks for reminding me of The Gilda Stories! It's been on my to-read list for a while.