Nothing Is Apolitical
Not long ago, I saw a comment online that made me squirm. Someone was complaining that an actor had “gotten political,” and the commenter was quite indignant about it. “Why can’t entertainers just entertain?” they asked. It’s a sentiment that pops up regularly. Actors shouldn’t talk about politics. Musicians shouldn’t talk about politics. Writers definitely shouldn’t talk about politics. Apparently the moment a creator expresses a view about the world, they have somehow stepped outside their lane. I’ve never quite understood this expectation. Stories don’t come from nowhere. They come from the air we breathe, the systems we live under, the values we were raised with, and the moment in history we happen to inhabit. All of that is shaped by politics. Even the decision to avoid politics entirely is, in its way, a political stance. As writers, we know this instinctively. A novel about class is political. A novel about war is political. A novel about family roles, justice, poverty, gender, ...