Revision as of 19:06, 2 September 2006 edit70.68.228.208 (talk)No edit summary← Previous edit |
Revision as of 19:12, 2 September 2006 edit undo70.68.228.208 (talk)No edit summaryNext edit → |
Line 7: |
Line 7: |
|
*The title character of ''Rebecca'' in the ] is the only significant ] in the story, but nethertheless, despite being a title character, has very little to do, briefly appearing and just as quickly disappearing from the tale. |
|
*The title character of ''Rebecca'' in the ] is the only significant ] in the story, but nethertheless, despite being a title character, has very little to do, briefly appearing and just as quickly disappearing from the tale. |
|
*The character ] on ] is the only prominent female character on that series (and one of only two women, period) and is a parody of tokenism with her portrayal of a semi-stereotypical female ] ]: intelligent, but also vain, vindictive, condescending and ] when under stress. Since both female characters on the show are named Debbie, she is often referred to by other characters as "Black Debbie," in fact, the Sealab bathrooms are labeled "Men" and "Debbie." |
|
*The character ] on ] is the only prominent female character on that series (and one of only two women, period) and is a parody of tokenism with her portrayal of a semi-stereotypical female ] ]: intelligent, but also vain, vindictive, condescending and ] when under stress. Since both female characters on the show are named Debbie, she is often referred to by other characters as "Black Debbie," in fact, the Sealab bathrooms are labeled "Men" and "Debbie." |
|
*The character ] in the ] (who is ], while most of the characters are presumably ]) is sometimes considered to be an example of tokenism among newer fans, although ] insisted he had no political message and treated the character no different than the rest of the cast. |
|
*The character ] in the ] (who is ], while most of the characters are presumably ]) is sometimes considered to be an example of tokenism among newer fans, although ] insisted he had no political message and treated the character no different than the rest of the cast. |
|
*The character Diana in the ]. The only black member of the cast, and one of the only two females. |
|
*The character Diana in the ]. The only black member of the cast, and one of the only two females. |
|
*The self-referential character ] on ], the only black friend of the main cast except the adult ]. He was originally named Token Williams, though his first name still makes his role fairly clear. |
|
*The self-referential character ] on ], the only black friend of the main cast except the adult ]. He was originally named Token Williams, though his first name still makes his role fairly clear. |
|
*The multi-]al cast of ] is sometimes seen as consisting of token characters. However, as all the major characters are meant to represent diversity none can truly be called token charcters. |
|
*The multi-]al cast of ] is sometimes seen as consisting of token characters. However, as all the major characters are meant to represent diversity none can truly be called token charcters. |
|
*The cast of ] has been called into question as an example of tokenism. |
|
*The cast of ] has been called into question as an example of tokenism. |
|
|
*The African-American character "AJ" on ] is the only prominant black character on the show. He is portrayed as being the smartest kid in school, which may be an example of using token characters to offset traditional stereotypes. |
|
|
|
|
|
==See also== |
|
==See also== |