Entanglements: an exploration of the digital literary work FISHNETSTOCKINGSMain MenuStartCover pageFishnetStockings FundamentalsA path of background and documentation of FishnetStockingsMermaids, Little and Otherwisea path on one of the most famous mermaid talesHybriditySub/ImmersionProcessing, Systems, and CodeMovement/DanceSilhouettesUnderwater Paper CuttingSwim Through the CodeA path about the code of FishnetStockingsFellow Fishworks of digital art that set precedentWorks CitedSources of our inspiration and edificiationDiana Leong5f86c388d73d4478d782c449582a052ecb430834Mark C. Marino82e88cf89eeb02b94655b66cf941328b5c035777Jessica Pressman42c474d93c0b66b9f6bb205f58680b42bcf8968b
Halle Bailey
1media/Halle_Bailey_performing_Baby_Girl_live,_December_2020_thumb.png2022-05-13T21:19:23-07:00Mark C. Marino82e88cf89eeb02b94655b66cf941328b5c035777393861Bailey performing Baby Girl live, December 2020 via Wikipediaplain2022-05-13T21:19:24-07:00Mark C. Marino82e88cf89eeb02b94655b66cf941328b5c035777
This page is referenced by:
12022-05-13T20:57:50-07:00Racism and the live-action Little Mermaid9plain2022-05-13T21:34:14-07:00When Disney announced they would be casting actress Halle Bailey in 2019 for the live-action adaptation of The Little Mermaid, social media erupted at the casting of a black woman to play Ariel.
Rather than accepting a talented actress, the hostile response by many in the Twitterverse revealed the role race plays in the original animated film. Apparently, for Ariel to be part of some viewer's world, she needed to be white (Fernández 2020).