Black Panther 2 Masterpost
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sovereignty (there go your hero)
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@bastetblessed
Black Panther 2 Masterpost
my ao3
the moment
sovereignty (there go your hero)
the pain in my blood is hereditary
sovereignty (there go your hero)
excerpt from fic
Riri is different now. When they were in that cave, Shuri hadn’t known if they would ever be released and there had been an air of unreality. The world faded away, it was just them and even if the situation was terrible, they had each other. That sentiment is much reduced when faced with the trappings and responsibilities of her station. Shuri is a princess of Wakanda and if the council had their way she would be Queen. Her mother served Wakanda for so many years, she deserved to rest and enjoy her retirement as a dowager. The only thing stopping her is Shuri. She isn’t ready yet, she never wanted to rule. She never expected to be the only one left.
“Why are you still awake?” Riri rolls over from under the covers, propping herself up with one arm and Shuri looks up from the small screen in her lap. Shuri didn’t notice when she woke up.
“Something came up.” Shuri had an idea and she wanted to record it before she lost it.
“Security or science?” Riri asks and Shuri can only smile. The best thing about Riri was her mind, unfortunately it made maintaining the façade of peace, hard.
“Both.” Shuri doesn’t give any more details, turning the display up and sliding up closer. Shuri can see the moment of hesitation, a slight hitch on Riri’s part before they kiss. She pulls away eventually, around the time when Riri’s hands start to go south.
“Do you really want to know?” Shuri doesn’t think she does. Riri didn’t like not knowing yes, but a little ignorance wasn’t always bad. Especially when your girlfriend was planning to overthrow your own country’s government or potentially kill thousands of people in defense.
“Well, when you say it like that…” Riri is smiling but it doesn’t reach her eyes.
“The news our intelligence is picking up is not good. We are worried about our neighbors.” The snap worsened a lot of things. Wakanda had helped but they refused to take refugees. They also refused to tolerate the many prejudices that the outside world tried to enforce on them and the way they did things. Shuri has been trying not to let her frustration and apprehension affect her actions but it’s hard.
“What? The beefed up security isn’t enough?”
“Nothing is impenetrable. The world hates us.” Shuri doesn’t know how much her girlfriend paid attention to the news before she came to Wakanda but Shuri did. She didn’t have a choice anymore. Every day foreign news and government slandered Wakanda and blamed their problems on Wakanda for refusing to give away wholesale their technology or their resources. When they weren’t trying to steal from their outreach centers or harassing their citizens.
“Not the world, people trying to jack your shit.” Riri’s response makes Shuri snicker.
“That is still too many people.” Shuri flops down on the bed.
“I have the keys to opening a door that will protect my family, and I don’t know if it’s the right thing to do. But nothing else has worked.”
“When you say keys, is that metaphorical?”
“No. I’ve replicated the plant that was lost. If I wanted I could raise an army.” Shuri doubts the council will agree with most of her ideas, but if Namor has proved anything it’s that there was nothing Wakanda wouldn’t do when it felt threatened enough. The Talokans were a threat, but so was the rest of the world. The rest of the world just didn’t have vibranium yet.
“Do you want to?” Riri’s voice is weathered by sleep, making the question all the more innocent.
“I am tired of fighting.” All this fighting and she couldn’t save her brother. All this technology and they couldn’t save her father. All this intelligence and no one but a retired field agent could find her for weeks.
“Then do something else.” Riri says as if it’s the obvious solution and Shuri is momentarily exasperated.
“Go to sleep.” She would face tomorrow's problems in the morning.
“Mmhm, you too.” Riri reaches forward to pull her arm and Shuri allows it settling both of them properly into bed. Back at the underwater cave she discovered the American was a not only a blanket theif but a cuddling fiend. It worked out well, Shuri’s body temperature ran low and Riri’s hot. Shuri’s last thoughts before falling asleep is hope that Riri would never hate her, because unlike her brother–she would never let go.
the moment
excerpt from fic
In hindsight, she should have seen it coming.
She should have realized when she begged Namor to take her instead. When she followed Namor down into Talokan and he made his offer. Because not once does she consider allowing him to kill her. Not once does she seriously consider the silent offer behind Namor’s call to war. She’s not stupid and the man doesn’t treat her like she is. Namor knew what he was doing when he respected her status as princess. When he gave her that beautiful dress and offered up his own mother’s bracelet.
As far as marriage proposals went, it was probably the scariest she’s ever received. But she didn’t want it. Even if Namor was as strong as her assessments of the city and his people suggested. She didn’t want it because the entire time, through her wonder and curiosity, an ever present worry ate at her. She worried if Riri was safe. She worried if she was lonely. Worried if Namor hadn’t just taken her away to allow his people to kill Riri without her intervention.
The relief she feels when Namor brings her back to the underwater cave is incredible. What’s more incredible is seeing that same relief reflected in Riri’s eyes. That night she reassures Riri that they wouldn’t let Namor take her, that Shuri would find a way. They don’t stay up much longer after that, and even though there are separate hammocks for them to lay in, the two of them squeeze into one.
Things hit a breaking point when Nakia arrives. Unexpected, miraculous. Shuri has about 10 seconds of elation before her brain kicks in with a risk assessment. Namor. Their guards. Riri. Wakanda’s future lays in the balance of her own decisions. Nakia tells her to move and Shuri refuses. She speaks in a voice that threatens to break on every syllable.
“Leave. Or I will let her slit my throat.”
She holds Nakia’s gaze for the duration of the command, tries and fails to quell the rage boiling up inside her. Nakia left them. She left Wakanda and then she didn’t even bother to come to T’Challa’s funeral. But now she was here, unannounced, unwanted–poised to destroy everything Shuri has worked for.
“LEAVE!” She screams and starts to lean towards the blade’s edge. Nakia lowers her weapon. The moment she does, Shuri focuses on their guards. Her Yucatec Maya is terrible but she tries.
“She leaves. No harm, she is leaving.” This time there’s no command in her voice, and her tone is a plea. To her captors, to Nakia–who she knew would understand better than she could speak.
“Your mother sent me. She is waiting for you.” Nakia has lowered her weapon but she is not leaving.
Shuri feels on the verge of another scream when Riri speaks up.
“She told you to leave.” Riri’s voice reminds Shuri of the first time she ever heard her voice. Gruff, low and direct.
Lupita Nyong'o, Leticia Wright, and Danai Gurira for Elle Magazine, Nov 2022
BLACK PANTHER: WAKANDA FOREVER 2022, dir. Ryan Coogler
riri williams drawn by joshua "sway" swaby on the bhm variant of iron man (2022) #17.
should i edit shuri more? 🤔
T’Challa and Killmonger concept art by Vance Kovacs
Millions of years ago a meteorite made of vibranium, the strongest substance in the universe struck the continent of Africa affecting the plant life around it. And when the time of man came five tribes settled on it and called it Wakanda.
Tribe Origins Meta
The Tribes as we see in the movie might be ancient, but some are older in unity than others. The youngest might be Border Tribe. Mining and Jabari Tribe somewhere in the middle. River and Merchant Tribe would perhaps be the oldest Tribes amongst those in Wakanda. Timeline of formation of tribes could be as early as 500-1000 BC.
River: fishing, farming, live around the river, floodplains, valleys
Border: (originally a nomadic highland shepherd tribe, that was one of the most martial of the tribes) (edited)
Merchant: originally several tribes, all wealthy enough to have cultivated art, textiles, and other craftsmen and trade goods, AND a nomadic tribe/culture of traders.
Mining: a tribe like those that collapsed/joined into merchant, but they were the most advanced in metallurgy
Jabari: several mountain-dwelling and high-forest dwelling clans, highly martial and steadfast in their devotion to a god other than Bast.
Excerpt from World-building bible
A big part of writing for Black Panther is bringing the comics, MCU, and various tidbits we get from interviews, cast/crew and the art-book into something tangible. Afro-futurism as we see presented in Black Panther whether it’s in the comics or MCU gets funky.
I started a Google Doc with the help of my editor which I update regularly with things I found helpful for building a cohesive world to play in that also held the values we saw in the 2018 BP movie. Here is an excerpt timeline!
Wakandan Civilization Timeline
Keep reading
Why is Wakanda Exceptional? (Part One: Leadership)
When we think of Wakanda, the first thing that often comes to mind is vibranium. Vibranium is the most precious metal in the Marvel Universe. It is a material that, in the canon, can be seen as being able to do anything; often attributed for Wakanda’s technological marvels, utopia-like setting and prosperity. However history shows that a monopoly of precious resources is often not enough to guarantee sovereignty or long lasting prosperity.
For enlarged picture
We believe, for Wakanda to become so advanced not just technologically but on a socio-economic level the society needed to possess characteristics outside of their resource rich land. Thus Wakanda is exceptional not because of its resources and it’s monopoly of Vibranium but because of its leadership, its history, and the collective future it inspires us to imagine.
For enlarged picture
Wakanda’s leadership is exceptional in part due to its spiritual nature, its governance and its familial and tribal structures. Wakanda is not the only nation to exhibit the tenants of divine right, however the divine right is unique because it’s shown to effectively unite, protect and serve its people. This divine contract held by the nations’ leader the Black Panther and Bast’s avatar the Damisa-Sarki, must be upheld; if it is not such a leader can be replaced or overthrown as shown by the tradition of the challenge for Kingship and the importance of Bast’s own favor in canon. Also relevant is the cultural exchanges present in comic and MCU canon represented by the major Gods and cultural norms within Wakandan culture.
For enlarged picture
Corresponding governance thus falls under such divine leadership and is dependent on the people’s well-being. Governance is based in responsibility and accountability. This kind of leadership should espouse egalitarian norms and mitigate abuse of power. This is contradicted in some canon but overall the nature of Wakanda’s governance seems to be one that not only fosters stability but encourages constant innovation and improvement. This is particularly interesting to note, because it is not a democratic government; yet the leadership is able to commune in part through the sacrificial nature of the position with existing familial and tribal structures for the Wakandan citizens’ benefit. Even with the differences inherent among the tribes and people, the union is based in compassionate collaboration and mutual respect.
For enlarged picture
While conflict is inevitable, the union is such that the foundation remains unshaken.
- Writing Wakanda
This post is continued in Part Two. Link to Part Three
Why is Wakanda Exceptional? (Part One: Leadership)
When we think of Wakanda, the first thing that often comes to mind is vibranium. Vibranium is the most precious metal in the Marvel Universe. It is a material that, in the canon, can be seen as being able to do anything; often attributed for Wakanda’s technological marvels, utopia-like setting and prosperity. However history shows that a monopoly of precious resources is often not enough to guarantee sovereignty or long lasting prosperity.
For enlarged picture
We believe, for Wakanda to become so advanced not just technologically but on a socio-economic level the society needed to possess characteristics outside of their resource rich land. Thus Wakanda is exceptional not because of its resources and it’s monopoly of Vibranium but because of its leadership, its history, and the collective future it inspires us to imagine.
For enlarged picture
Wakanda’s leadership is exceptional in part due to its spiritual nature, its governance and its familial and tribal structures. Wakanda is not the only nation to exhibit the tenants of divine right, however the divine right is unique because it’s shown to effectively unite, protect and serve its people. This divine contract held by the nations’ leader the Black Panther and Bast’s avatar the Damisa-Sarki, must be upheld; if it is not such a leader can be replaced or overthrown as shown by the tradition of the challenge for Kingship and the importance of Bast’s own favor in canon. Also relevant is the cultural exchanges present in comic and MCU canon represented by the major Gods and cultural norms within Wakandan culture.
For enlarged picture
Corresponding governance thus falls under such divine leadership and is dependent on the people’s well-being. Governance is based in responsibility and accountability. This kind of leadership should espouse egalitarian norms and mitigate abuse of power. This is contradicted in some canon but overall the nature of Wakanda’s governance seems to be one that not only fosters stability but encourages constant innovation and improvement. This is particularly interesting to note, because it is not a democratic government; yet the leadership is able to commune in part through the sacrificial nature of the position with existing familial and tribal structures for the Wakandan citizens’ benefit. Even with the differences inherent among the tribes and people, the union is based in compassionate collaboration and mutual respect.
For enlarged picture
While conflict is inevitable, the union is such that the foundation remains unshaken.
- Writing Wakanda
This post is continued in Part Two. Link to Part Three
Why is Wakanda Exceptional? (Part Two: History)
Another exceptional characteristic of a Wakanda is its ancient uninterrupted history having retained its sovereignty over its geography and resources within it. This is very important because we note in our history, most african nations have not been able to retain their sovereignty or experienced uninterrupted history. So for Wakanda to manage that epic feat as well as cultivate a culture of meaningful symbiosis with their environment is incredible.
That knowledge is what helped them in part to ensure their continuing survival and success when faced with internal and external conflicts. The accumulation of such vast knowledge leading to more straightforward advancement based on what they already know; which according to canon, is a lot.
For enlarged picture
Wakanda’s history is checkered with internal and external conflicts spanning most of known civilization. The unification of the country taking place somewhere around 4-6000 years ago. Issues of internal sovereignty include the role of the Black Panther within Wakandan society, changing dynasties of ruling families and the role of the tribes; externally conflicts would include establishing their borders and protecting Wakandan way of life as well as their resources.
For enlarged picture
Their success in the preservation of history, knowledge and sovereignty is in part due to the egalitarian norms present within Wakanda society. Some of the most effective tactics used by colonizers and imperialists governments are ones that separate or divide people. Wakanda’s cultural basis in meeting basic needs, communal propriety and reproductive health made them almost impenetrable, when it really mattered. The strife that normally made a group of people vulnerable is not seen to be present in Wakanda.
Finally by negotiating standards of living and equal access Wakanda and its governance decided what was most important to them. That being the continued survival of the state and continued advancement.
For enlarged picture
- Writing Wakanda
This post is continued in Part Three.
Link to Part One
Why is Wakanda Exceptional? (Part Three: Collective Future)
Wakanda reveals a host ‘What-Ifs?’ Beyond colonialism’ lasting influence, beyond western imperialism and all the other bits of history that make up current events. What could have happened if an African nation was able to build on its foundations, uninterrupted by outside interference and going on to create a society and culture beyond what we know. Wakanda as presented by Coogler and the MCU is perhaps the first afrofuturistic society put on the big screen. Afrofuturism is a thriving genre in contemporary science fiction literature exploring a future constructed by and for black people intertwining the black identity and culture across the diaspora. Here, Wakanda serves as a door to the genre showcasing its richness and all the possibilities that it inspires.
For enlarged picture
For the interested content creator, Wakanda is a world full of possibilities, and this blog hopes to invite discussion and content that are not just based within the world of Wakanda but go further with the elements that have been presented. The implications of Wakanda’s existence, its citizens and its history is ripe to interpretation. This blog will usually start by presenting canon materials from the 2018 Black Panther movie, as well as the numerous comic runs. The canon will sometimes contradict or retcon itself, those conflicts will be addressed as well as potential solutions. Sometimes, the solution may be to disregard certain parts of canon. Particularly if it is offensive or not conducive to the ideals of afro-futurism.
For enlarged picture
The 2018 movie directed by Ryan Coogler brought much of Wakanda to life, giving us old and re-imagined characters like N’Jadaka (Killmonger) and M’Baku leader of the Jabari. The comics, particularly the 2016 run ‘World of Wakanda’ by Roxane Gay and Ta-Nehisi Coates gave us a closer look into the lives of Dora Milaje while re-affirming some of Wakanda’s egalitarian and lgbt-friendly societal values. When we dig into older source material we see the Black Panther abroad and at home facing different challenges with varying success. Overall there is alot to read, analyze and consider when creating within the world of Wakanda. This blog should serve as a resource on that journey.
For enlarged picture:
- Writing Wakanda
This post is Part Three of a series,
Part Two, Part One
Interesting World building Prompts for Writing Wakanda
How does inheritance work in Wakanda? Does the concept of ‘bastards’ exist? If so why?
Where do people live, and with whom? (How does it vary by tribe, location, clan, religion?)
Does private property exist? What would be considered ancestral hold to the tribes/clans (combination of families) etc?
Depending on how you answer these questions, and if the answer changes across it’s history, it could help you develop your world better.