Erika Alexander was once told that science fiction isn't for Black people.
This exchange took place in a meeting with a major Hollywood studio president,Arnold Reyes Archives where Alexander — an actor known for the likes of Get Outand Wu-Tang: An American Saga— along with ex-husband and collaborator Tony Puryear, was pitching a science-fiction series starring Black actors. The response by the white studio executive startled and angered her.
"[He said] Black people didn't like science fiction because they didn't see themselves in the future," Alexander tells Mashable.
The evidence against that theory is vast. Black voices have soared through the spaces of science fiction and futurism for decades — just look at afrofuturism as a prominent cultural movement in itself. Black sci-fi writers like Octavia E. Butler, N. K. Jemisin, Nnedi Okorafor, Justina Ireland, and Troy L Wiggins to name a few have long penned evocative tales in the genre across novels and comics, championing sci-fi despite some experiencing racism in the industry, as Alexander did.
Representation and perception matter, and mainstream science fiction is rooted in Eurocentric tropes and myths. Sci-fi writing has a long way to go to address its tangible lack of diversity and inclusion. In 2016, a study found that less than two percent of published speculative and science fiction stories were written by Black authors.
But fantasy, magic, and speculative storytelling can be reclaimed and reenvisioned.
"The fact that he didn't understand that science fiction or the idea of science fiction, or futurism, was something that was uniquely built into the DNA of African Americans because their past had been taken away from them, was absurd," says Alexander. "They had no name. We have no name. We have the name of our oppressors and our kidnappers. We definitely have everything around us recreated in of the form of what could happen in future because the present was so painful."
Alexander and Puryear were fueled not only by the bigotry they experienced, but by those Black writers who have paved the way in science fiction, moving to release their own passion project: the sci-fi graphic novel series, Concrete Park.
Launched in 2014, the comic series' story is one of exile, struggle, and perseverance. Published by Dark Horse Comics, the superpower behind Sin City, Concrete Parkfollows a young outcast from Earth who finds himself on a far-off desert planet plagued by violence. Themes of darkness and light, good and evil, and the path to redemption are the backbone of the tale, which has accumulated awards and acclaim.
"We thought we should create a multiracial, non-homogenous, grassroots movement and satisfy the demand for change. That is Concrete Park," says Alexander. She emphasizes the worlds of science fiction and its facets — comic books, cosplay — are spaces that Black people belong in.
Come 2021, Concrete Parkhas found new ground. Alexander looked towards the future once again, finding it to be in blockchain. The creators of the graphic novel partnered with Curio, an NFT platform focused on entertainment collaborations. Alexander and Puryear released "Concrete ParkBangers", a collection of thousands of unique non-fungible tokens that represent the characters (or "Bangers") from the comics. Ten percent of the profits from the drop will go towards Black Girls Code, a group devoted to teaching Black girls computer programming and coding in order to establish equal representation in the tech sector.
The first drop in the Concrete Parkcollection, in April of this year,sold out within minutes of its release. "I keep saying the power of the pixel is fascinating," Alexander laughs. The collection of works in the Curio drop were drawn by Puryear, in his distinctive, provocative, vibrant style. The characters are the "heart and soul" of their series, representing the values of sacrifice and transformation that Concrete Parkholds close.
"It's revolutionary. But ultimately, it comes down for us to art and life and storytelling," she says. "And [with NFTs], you get to be a person who has a piece of it and say I was there and here's my piece of it. And it means something and it has value."
But even within the NFT market, there are issues of diversity and inclusion.
Curio COO Rikin Mantri tells Mashable that collaborating with creators like Alexander and Puryear, ones that carve space for diverse voices, aligns with the company's own ethos. "In the blockchain community, there’s a lot of underrepresentation," he says. "[That's why] we want to look at creators and artists who are pushing the edge."
In the blockchain space, stories of discrimination and inequality have indeed emerged in the past few years. The New York Timesunveiled the case of Black workers leaving cryptocurrency startups like Coinbase, explaining that they'd been tokenized, bullied, and faced lack of support within the tech institution. Meanwhile, CryptoPunk NFTs have been flagged for price imbalances within the collection depending on race and gender — CryptoPunks that skew white and male, Bloomberg reports, are selling for far more than their counterparts.
SEE ALSO: Sick of NFTs? Insiders insist they're just getting started.Aside from the environmental concerns and brand bandwagon-jumping apparent in the NFT space, there are some benefits — especially for creators. Though Mantri found that the NFT space began with a sort of "bro culture," the market could further expand by diversifying its artist base, for one. NFTs has been a golden ticket of sorts to the art world, bringing back contemporary art sales, sprouting entire museums, and revitalising the industry worldwide. When Mantri first heard of NFTs, back in 2017, he said he couldn't sleep at night. "I was just like, this is gonna change the world," he says.
In such a booming, lucrative space,inclusivity for marginalized creators must be forged. When asked how this representation can be facilitated, Mantri turns to the example of the Concrete Parkcollection, and how it evolved from comic book to collectible. "We think to ourselves: let's create a new environment and use this technology," he says. "What does it enable, in terms of storytelling? What can we do that's new and different?"
As for Concrete Park, the creators appear to just be getting started. A television show is in the works, and plenty more NFT drops are on their way, too — the last drop in December was a one-off collaboration with Queen Latifah.
This Tweet is currently unavailable. It might be loading or has been removed.
The future is bright.
'Quordle' today: See each 'Quordle' answer and hints for November 29Watch Ivanka Trump awkwardly try to converse with world leaders at G20Google Doodle celebrates the gaming legacy of engineer Jerry LawsonAustralia vs Denmark livestream: How to watch FIFA World Cup Group D liveGoogle is suing scammers that prey on small businessesSocial media use connected to higher acceptance of cosmetic surgeryPeople are really getting into 'social experiment' surveys on TwitterWatch Ivanka Trump awkwardly try to converse with world leaders at G20Jake Paul and Tana Mongeau got engaged and no one is sure if it's realDonald Trump Jr.'s worst moments of 2019 (so far)Adam Rippon on Trump, Taylor Swift, and coming outICE doxes thousands of immigrants seeking asylum on its websiteTwitter Blue's relaunch has been delayed again, this time to avoid Apple's 30 percent feeElon Musk suspends Kanye West's Twitter accountYouTubers only get canceled when everyone's boredWordle today: Here's the answer, hints for December 1Ecuador vs Senegal livestream: How to watch FIFA World Cup Group A liveMermaid Parade returns to New York as summer 2019 kicks off: PhotosBad Bunny is Spotify's top global artist of 2022Entertainment seats have a plus Apple removes 25,000 illegal gambling apps from its Chinese App Store Tiny, probably grumpy bird looks a whole lot like Bernie Sanders Apple Store in Amsterdam reportedly evacuated after iPad explodes Twitter was a confused, hot mess this week Ken Jeong talked some kids into seeing 'Crazy Rich Asians' — and Jon Chu got it on film Peter Kavinsky from Netflix's 'To All the Boys' is a perfect boyfriend Watch a very cute dog husk some corn on the farm EEC fillings appear to confirm 6 new Apple Watch models Man seriously injured after blast in New York's Central Park Watch Elon Musk's softball interview with Marques Brownlee 'Stranger Things' Season 3 will be inspired by an '80s Chevy Chase movie These are the 10 best platforms for building a mobile app New Zealand politician casually cycled to hospital to give birth Jennifer Lopez thinks we need more romantic comedies in our lives Huge fire tornado revealed in new videos from California Kid loses his stuffed elephant, so photoshoppers give him a trip around the world Can you ID these '00s summer jams from just one video frame? The #DeleAlliChallenge has the internet making a weird hand gesture Make Burning Man suck again! David Hogg has plans to run for Congress when he’s 25
1.3942s , 10161.296875 kb
Copyright © 2025 Powered by 【Arnold Reyes Archives】,Warmth Information Network