View Single Post
Old 2022-07-26, 22:20   Link #1
Nymene
Senior Member
 
 
Join Date: Feb 2018
Question Why are many Fantasy Anime inspired from Europe but no Moorish Spain-like kingdom?

How come Japan makes many Fantasy and Isekai Anime inspired from Medieval Europe but we have yet to see any of them including a kingdom inspired from Moorish Spain yet ?

They can just use fictional gods and religions if Islam is too sensitive to be used ( for fear of offending ) as I care more about the cultures, skin color and musical representation.

It's fantasy, but when the only brown and black people are demihumans it might give the wrong impression to Japanese people not well versed in history that Europe doesn't have any brown folks living there at all in medieval times ( which is untrue as they were living mostly in Andalusia Spain at that time ).

Turks were light-skinned so I don't consider them to be "Brown people" so that leaves only Moorish Spain for me.

I think brown people should be represented too with their own kingdoms and Sultans even in Isekai. So what do you guys think ?

Obviously I'm a brown-skinned Asian from a southern Asian country so of course I'd like to see more characters that share my skin tone.

By the way, I like the Korean webtoons "Sultan's Love" and "Amina of the Lamp" as they had superb brown people and Middle Eastern/N. African representation so I wish Japanese Isekai/Fantasy/Villainess stories had more of those characters.

Having brown people doesn't mean all the characters have to be brown. There can be white people and brown people in the same Isekai/Fantasy story as there should not be a rule of segregation on the basis of race and skin color even in fiction. Let there be inter-religious(fictional religion), inter-cultural and interracial couples and diversity or whatever to make the story interesting because having only demons and demihumans as central plot could get boring.

P/S : By the way, the Moors's skin colors were mainly light brown as most were Arabs and Berbers, but a small number of them are pale ( some pale Arabs and Iberian European converts )and another small number are black people from West African regions ( around Mali area ). This is a fact you can check from a Google search, which stated that " From the Middle Ages to the 17th century, however, Europeans depicted Moors as being black, “swarthy,” or “tawny” in skin color", so their skin being brown/tanned/slightly pale to black is not for debate.
Nymene is offline   Reply With Quote