O preconceito contra os droides era comum no universo de “Star Wars”? Ou foi apenas o barman na Cantina?

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Quando Wuher - o barman na espaçonave espacial de Mos Eisley no primeiro Star Wars - diz:

We don’t serve their kind.

Em referência a C-3PO e R2-D2 entrarem na barra, certamente é um pouco prejudicial, mas essas visões comumente mantidas nesse universo? Não vemos isso em nenhum outro lugar dos filmes, mas isso está implícito em algum outro lugar?

    
por tom christy 14.03.2013 / 21:21

2 respostas

Antipatia ativa de droids aconteceu. As razões para isso variaram.

Wuher (o barman da Cantina) tinha as seguintes atitudes e razões para eles: (src: "Be Still My Heart - The Bartender's Tale", de David Bischoff, de Tales From The Mos Eisley Cantina ) :

Still, as the human bartender bustled through the busy streets, sun hood up, squinting, he was bothered by that droid who had accosted him. Wuher was well aware that droids were essentially harmless. To hate them was like hating your latrine or stove or moisture vaporator if they’d somehow been overlaid with innocuous consciousness. True, droids tended to be essentially faithless, with no ethical or racial structure. So were a lot of biological aliens that Wuher had met. The truth, the bartender knew, was that droids were an easy target.

Wuher had been abandoned on Mos Eisley in early youth, a human amidst peoples who disliked humans. He’d been kicked about and spat upon all his squalid, hard life. His boss hated droids essentially because they didn’t drink and thus took up necessary room in the cantina that might be occupied by paying customers.

Wuher hated everyone, but droids were the only creatures he could actually kick with impunity.

Então, no caso do barman que disse a Luke para tirar seus dois droides, não foi tanto "racismo", quanto odiosidade geral. Os droides não eram realmente odiados por serem droides - eles eram odiados como qualquer um, mas eram os únicos a quem o ódio era expresso abertamente devido a ser a única saída segura para ele.

Revelation - at the end of the story, the bartender hires the droid, who ends up being a super-tremendous help (by making a new drink that Jabba the Hutt likes… using the shot-first-Greedo as an ingredient). Bon Appetit!

No caso do dono da Wookiee Cantina, era puro pragmatismo (ele provavelmente odiaria qualquer espécie que não comesse ou bebesse em sua cantina como espécie).

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Nos filmes, também vemos Han Solo exibindo uma atitude menos positiva do que C3PO, mas isso foi principalmente a personalidade desalinhada e abrasiva de Han ... ele não era exatamente muito mais agradável para muitos, se não para a maioria dos biológicos.

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Outro exemplo na UE foi os quadrinhos antigos da Marvel.

Aqueles tinham Valance. Citando o link :

Valance’s motivation is a little shaky to say the least. He hates droids. Like, really hates them. He hates droids so much that he’s made it his mission to hunt down Luke Skywalker, not because of any sizable Imperial bounty on the boy’s head, but because he’s heard a rumour that Luke actually likes droids. Surely you could find better things to do with your time. And who wouldn’t like Threepio and Artoo? They’re adorable!

Marvel’s Star Wars series really ran with that “people hate droids” idea in its early days. Just because that bartender in the cantina wouldn’t serve them we got a few stories centred around the concept. In the very first post movie storyline Han and Chewie catch a ton of shit for helping an insectoid priest take a dead cyborg pilot to a burial ground. Yeah people hate cyborgs too, which is a bit like hating people who wear contact lenses, but whatever. I’m really surprised that no bright spark has retconned this droid racism as being a hangover from The Clone Wars. Plenty of planets were invaded by the Trade Federation and the armies of the Seperatists, that it stands to reason that some people who remembered back twenty years would be a bit ticked off when they saw any robots. Job done. You can have that one, Lucasfilm.

So anyway Valance fails to find Luke – he runs into our old mate Jaxxon instead. Then we learn that, shock horror, Valance is a cyborg himself. In fact his major passtime, aside from blasting the shit out of innocent robots, is sitting in his cockpit, stewing in anger and self hatred, and ripping away his fake skin to reveal his true semi mechanical nature. It’s a well used image, that probably appeared in a million 50s comics and pulp sci fi novels, but it looks good, hence the fact they reused the scene a couple of times.

    
15.03.2013 / 02:14
Eu vou pensar que o exército de dróides da Federação de Comércio e os Separatistas que mataram muitas das raças nativas capturadas entre a batalha com a República nas Guerras Clônicas teve um pouco a ver com o ressentimento das máquinas. Por sua aparência, isso fez as coisas ficarem ruins e então adivinhar o que ficou pior por causa das tropas clônicas que se tornariam as Tropas de Assalto do Império. Então, alguém por perto o suficiente nos trinta anos e no meio tem razão suficiente para não gostar dos droides.

    
16.03.2014 / 21:02