Curator's Note
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While the WWE has been prominent in mainstream news recently due to racist comments in a leaked sex tape featuring Hulk Hogan, the entertainer who helped the WWE survive and attain mainstream success in the 1980s, and because of Nazi imagery in the social media accounts of former NXT diva and partner of WWE champion Seth Rollins, Zahra Schreiber, accusations of racism are nothing new. While the firings of Hogan and Schreiber included scrubbing the WWE website of each individual, accusations of racism in the company persist. For example, stories surfaced last year after the unexpected release of Mexican wrestler Alberto Del Rio that claimed that Del Rio was fired for slapping an employee of the company who made anti-Mexican statements.
While the company has publicly distanced itself and rightfully condemned Hogan and Schreiber, there remains a great deal of blatant and inferential racism in the past and present WWE. Many would argue that the company still relies on racist and sexist stereotypes when creating personas for their performers. For example, are the New Day and R-Truth at times performing a modern day minstrel show?
However, what continues to be more alarming particularly in light of recent controversies is the uncritical celebration of the 1990s Attitude Era, which not only featured performances of blackface, but homophobia, sexism, and misogyny. With the launch of the WWE Network the company introduced new programming including countdown shows celebrating top ten moments thematically. Referenced many times on the network as a touchstone moment is the infamous sketch featuring D-Generation X, fronted by Triple H who remains an on air character and current Executive Vice President of the company in blackface mocking the Nation of Domination headed by the Rock. Members of DX performed caricatures of the Nation including X-Pac mocking former Olympian and Nation member Mark Henry by donning dark face paint, a jheri curl wig, and a shirt that read Mizark. This incident of blackface is not alone, others including superstars, such as Goldust, donned blackface to perform racist stereotypes. While the WWE includes a disclaimer before all of its network content that these are performers and not meant to be representative of the company’s ideological positions, we have to question the company’s shifting “line in the sand” and regarding acts of racism and symbolic scapegoating as well as its continual celebration of its own racist histories.
Comments
Amazingly, I can recall a
Amazingly, I can recall a moment even more racist than this. Additionally, Havok (formerly of TNA) sort of blew her shot with NXT with a series of similarly awful tweets on social media.
Piper at WrestleMania VI
Amazingly, Rowdy Roddy Piper painting half of his body black when facing Bad News Brown made it onto WWF's largest stage at WrestleMania VI, and the reveal is just as awful as you imagine it to be. http://www.wwe.com/videos/roddy-piper-paints-himself-for-match-against-b...
The Hero's Quest
That histories contradicting their historical narrative have been literally erased (Benoit, Hogan) is less surprising than their embrace of the Attitude era in light of those erasures. And it's not just that embrace, but what they have chosen to embrace, as the faces of that era were more likely to engage racism and sexism (and homophobia, which even in this enlightened era is still a go to insult for most of their babyfaces), moves that at least now might be portrayed as more heelish. The worst offense to me is still post attitude era, in the run-up to Wrestlemania 19, where Triple H's heelishness against Booker T is pretty explicitly racist. As the WWF/WWE has typically preferred babyface world champions, their decision to put HHH pretty cleanly over Booker T upended the mythic hero narrative that most Wrestlemania championship level feuds had typically followed (prior to Wrestlemania 19, a heel had been victorious in the Wrestlemania main even only a handful of times, and when that was the case, the babyface may have still prevailed over them in a postWrestlemania rematch). A pessimistic reading of this result is that racism works. A pragmatic reading of that result is no better: just as in the real world, racist hegemony abides.
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