The
Whoniverse means time travel, and, at least some of the time, that means
visiting the past. The subject of race
doesn’t come too often in this context since 1) including Mickey, Doctor Who has only had two companions
of color, and Martha’s the only one that’s been to the past, and 2) the main
characters on Torchwood and The Sarah Jane Adventures travel very
infrequently in time. That being said,
there are still some interesting episodes of note – Who today, and we’ll check out the spinoffs next week.
So, let’s
talk Martha, shall we? Series 3 has
three stories set in the past, two of which are two-parters, plus a brief
glimpse of our heroes in the ‘60s in “Blink.”
That’s a more-than-average emphasis on history, although consideration
of race is mostly light. I do like the
show’s recognition that race relations aren’t a straight line that’s always
marched forward (albeit slowly) towards progress. Instead, matters have gone back and forth, as
shown in “The Shakespeare Code.” Martha,
realizing she’s in 1599, asks, “Am I all right?
I’m not going to get carted off as a slave, am I?”, but the Doctor
points out that the Elizabethan era isn’t as different from her time as she
thinks. The times aren’t exactly
progressive – Shakespeare variously calls Martha a “delicious blackamoor lady,”
an “Ethiop girl,” a “swarth,” a “Queen of Afric,” and “Dark Lady” – but Black
people do exist in this era, and not solely as slaves. At other times, however, the show goes too
far in this kind of thinking. There is no way I buy the racially-harmonious
Hooverville of “Daleks Take Manhattan” / “Evolution of the Daleks,” where
everyone accepts a sagacious Black man as their leader. Part of it might be some writer disconnect
between race in the UK versus the US, but glossing over historical fact in this
way feels jarring.
The
strongest racial ramifications for Martha occur in “Human Nature” / “The Family
of Blood,” in which the Doctor is in hiding as a human without his real
memories and Martha has to keep an eye out for him. The TARDIS deposits them in a very
casually-racist 1913, where Martha is forced to spend three months working as a
maid in a prep school. Between the
outright racism (a student sneers, “With hands like those, how can you tell
when something’s clean?”) and the patronizing remarks about both her position
and assumed ignorance, (a number of adults, even the nice ones, lecture Martha
on her “place,” and the Doctor-as-John-Smith in one scene talks to her like
she’s an idiot and assumes she can’t tell the difference between fiction and
fact,) Martha gets put through the wringer
in this story. And that’s before you add
the aliens! It’s a fairly unsanitized
portrayal of the realities of racism in the Edwardian era, and after the pulled
punches earlier in the season, I was pleased the see the show acknowledge this.
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