Avatar! <http://rajpatel.org/2010/01/29/avatar/> By Raj
<http://rajpatel.org/author/raj/>  on 01/29/2010 in Uncategorized
<http://rajpatel.org/category/uncategorized/> , featured
<http://rajpatel.org/category/featured/>  with 11 Comments
<http://rajpatel.org/2010/01/29/avatar/#comments >
  [The Resources Development Alliance mines Pandora]

Under what rock have you been hiding to miss the movie and ensuing
publicity storm around James Cameron's environmental parable,
Avatar? You've certainly not been cowering beneath a hunk of
Unobtanium: it floats. And in Cameron's epic, this strange rock is
the occasion for a future conflict on a world far away between the
organic, indigenous Na'vi who take a stand against the imperial,
profit-driven humans, looking to dig the very soul out of the hyper-lush
moon of Pandora.

The film is distributed by Rupert Murdoch's News Corporation –
the owners of right wing media across the world. They've caught
flack from conservative critics for peddling an "anti-corporate"
message, one that's hostile to the American way, imputing only
malign motives to corporations and only destructive impulses to
capitalism. One imagines the film's billion dollar earnings will go
some way to soothing Murdoch's right-wing conscience.

As for Cameron, it's clear that he courted these criticisms by
consciously producing an "environmental" film. In an earlier
`scriptment' – a term that Cameron coined as a hybrid
between a script and a more prosaic film treatment– the project that
became Avatar had a far richer back story. In it, Cameron's
explained, to use his words, the "basic principles of interstellar
imperialism, circa 2100 A.D.
<http://james-camerons-avatar.wikia.com/wiki/Project_880#Original_880_Sc\
ript> "

In the original tale, we see an Earth denuded of life. Half of the
planet's species are extinct. The rich live in Yosemite, an upscale
condo park. The poor are left to farm algae on the sea shores, eating
the only source of food left to humans. The hero, Josh (not Jake) Sully
is never promised his legs back. He's simply promised the
possibility of an avatar that can walk on a world that has greenery,
both of which are impossible for him on Earth. All of which was cut from
the final script.

Nation-states having been consigned to the dustbin of history, the
Avatar that made it to production begins on a colonial mining expedition
to a blue-green moon in the Alpha Centauri system. The company behind it
all is called the "Resource Development Alliance", and the
resource that RDA wants is unobtanium – a room-temperature
semiconductor that only exists on the Na'vi home world of Pandora.

To get the resource, the company is true to its name, and avails itself
of two bedrock concepts in empire-building, Development and Alliance. It
comforts the public and the shareholders on Earth to know that what they
bring to the colonized savages on Pandora involves both partnership and
progress.

Indeed, there's a scene at the beginning of the movie where the
company's representative bemoans the lack of gratitude and
cooperation from the indigenous people. "We build them schools and
teach them English … give them medicine … roads! But they prefer
mud."

On today's Earth, in contrast, when oil companies tear through
jungle, desert and tundra is search of oil, they don't trouble
themselves with the natives, much less bother to teach them English.
Martin John Boorman's Emerald Forest captured this all too well. The
mining companies come in with everything they need to extract the
resources from beneath the inconveniently placed communities of
indigenous people. So why bother to teach the Na'vi English, when
the profit motive demands they be killed or moved elsewhere? It's
tempting to think this a mere plot device, so that hero and his lover
can banter without subtitles to an audience suspicious of reading
anything on a screen (and with reason: I'm a little gun shy of
alien-language subtitles ever since Star Trek: The Motion Picture).

Back on Earth, Obama's education secretary Arne Duncan has the
answer to the English language conundrum. In responding to the crisis in
US education, Duncan explains why education funding is so urgent
<http://www.pbs.org/newshour/bb/north_america/july-dec09/duncan_07-24.ht\
ml> : "There's a real sense of economic imperative. We have to
educate our way [to] a better economy." Perish the thought that
education should have a social imperative – these days, the function
of education is to get labor to be more responsive and productive. The
purpose of education is to make money.

And so it is on Pandora. The reason the Na'vi are being taught
English is not because humans are friendly. The Na'vi are being
educated so that they can work in the mines for RDA. As Cameron explains
in the original scriptment, it's far too expensive to blast humans
four light years across space to a place where they'll perish
quickly without oxygen. When there's the making of a local workforce
right there, the economics speak for themselves. Hence the need to forge
an alliance, even if it comes through the barrel of a gun.

So, although analogies have been made with Native conquest, the Avatar
that was never made was a far more interesting movie, blending the
economics of conquest with the imperatives of the slave trade and the
concept of the modern developmental state. Sadly, all we see of this is
a thin Pocahantas in Space ably satirized by South Park in the episode
Dances With Smurfs <http://www.southparkstudios.com/guide/1313/> .

I wonder, though, whether a clearer exposition of back-story would have
left audiences readier for action after recycling their 3D glasses and
leaving the theater. Fan forums are overflowing with tales of depression
and hopelessness about our planet's prospects. The movie ends with
humans kicked out of paradise to "return to their dying world."
Stumbling out into a bleak parking lot after having been surrounded by
so much green, it's hard not to feel that happiness might be more
easily found in space than on Earth.

Certainly, the physical wrench from bluegreen moon to buttery multiplex
isn't easy. The change from a world that shuns capitalism to one
that embraces it couldn't be harsher.We learn in the scriptment that
the hunter-gatherer Na'vi have a Commons, a public space where all
of The People can talk. There's no such free speech in a multiplex,
and any environmental groups enterprising enough to see potential
recruits among Avatar's abject viewership would be swiftly kicked
out of the movie theater for leafleting.

There is, however, always space for resistance. What Avatar provides is
a language to explain the voracity of a system we're currently
living in, and a chance to point to resistance that thrives not light
years away, but right here on earth. It's an opportunity to talk to
everyday folk about the need for change in ways that use a common
language. It is, in short, an opportunity to open one's mind to how
we might live differently.

Like Octavia Butler <http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Octavia_Butler> ,
I've always thought science fiction's virtues lie not so much in
the future it foretells, as in the present it diagnoses, and the
prescriptions we might imagine together. So, if you're feeling blue
after watching Avatar and are thinking about what might be taken away
that isn't utterly nihilistic, consider these words, which end
Butler's essay Positive Obsession
<http://books.google.com/books?id=kXpHeqmws1gC&dq=bloodchild+and+other+s\
tories&printsec=frontcover&source=bn&hl=en&ei=5HxfS47xDorYsQOVn6nECw&sa=\
X&oi=book_result&ct=result&resnum=4&ved=0CB8Q6AEwAw#v=onepage&q=&f=false\
> :

"But still I'm asked, what good is science fiction to Black
people?

"What good is any form of literature to Black people?

"What good is science fiction's thinking about the present, the
future, and the past? What good is its tendency to warn or to consider
alternative ways of thinking and doing? What good is its examination of
the possible effects of science and technology, or social organization
and political direction? At its best, science fiction stimulates
imagination and creativity. It gets reader and writer off the beaten
track, of the narrow, narrow footpath of what "everyone" is
saying, doing, thinking – whoever "everyone" happens to be
this year.

"And what good is all this to Black people?"



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