Just from the movies, I'd assume it was mostly just "business continues as usual" except with a centralized federal military. The Republic didn't seem to even be a state so much as an extremely weak federation with no coordination and no central powers, so a power bloc that had the actual material capacity to wield power and which had the tacit support of most of the component states wouldn't really face much in the way of real resistance. Like I don't even get the impression that it really disrupted the ruling class much at all, it just made it a bit more human-centric bit by bit and gradually escalated the suppression of non-humans and dissidents.
I kind of assume the Empire's long term base of support mostly came from human revanchism and supremacism along with the usual sorts of benefits compradors get for collaborating, and there'd probably be some planets or at least regions on some planets that get to be imperial cores and benefit from wealth extraction from all the subjugated planets, but with the series being written by libs it's not like they really do material analysis or think about things beyond just vibes like "the Empire is powerful because narratively that makes it an interesting and threatening antagonist and they're bad because they're the bad guys and scowl with their frowny faces and are mean and stuff." George Lucas was a bit better about that but despite having a clearer vision of what was going on and why he still leaned heavily on vibes to convey it and when he tried to make it more explicit and show the political side of it he didn't do a very good job and he got panned for it.
It's in the movies, if not directly addressed. The imperial command structure is exclusively human, as are their footsoldiers, and in A New Hope Luke sees joining onto this as a more desirable career path than anything to do with non-human cartels or businesses. It also seems like at least some of its foundational support comes from humans that had directly been oppressed or threatened by non-human institutions, between Naboo and its invasion by a non-human federation being a rallying point for Palpatine's bloc and Anakin having literally been enslaved in a society that seemed to put humans on the bottom.
Like this is clearly part of the worldbuilding, especially given that per Lucas the Empire is a mashup of America and Nazi Germany with the human dominance angle being a clear analogue to the white supremacism of its inspirations, it just doesn't do a good job of addressing or articulating it.
The implication is there I guess. If it's that crucial and these are kid's movies then they should have made an actual point of it. Cause also what even is a human in the star wars galaxy? And wasn't the senate mostly weird aliens? It seems humans were the vast minority in that organization and territory. They needed bug men to build their robots and long neck freaks who live in apple stores on a rainy planet to clone the clones. I'll allow some eu bs here, but like...why was Palpatine racist? Just.csuse he's evil? Darth Maul was an alien, if he had killed both the jedi in phantom menace and became the Darth Vader, what was his an there? I for sure have seen it by implication and get the symbolism, but it raises more questions than it answers. Star wars is stupid as hell
It really is. Lucas had a few good points, and maybe some writers have done something interesting with the setting, but it's ultimately just vibes based slop and even Lucas didn't do a very good job of articulating his points.
I think the most impressive thing about the franchise is that a janky sci-fantasy samurai cowboy movie about Space-WWII-Vietnam-War-mashup in space managed to mainstream and legitimize sci-fi as a genre.
Sfdebris (super old online video guy, like rlm ancient) did a really good George Lucas examination. Part.one is The Heroes Journey covering his rise to star wars, the shadows journey about him becoming a corporate hack (the videos do it more gently) and the hermits journey about the prequels. It's super well researched and fairly sympathetic to.the guy. George Lucas at this pont to me, with what I know, is a pretty tragic story and I do think as a person he really really didn't want to become who he is. He thought he could use the money and the money used him.
The Clone Wars TV show kinda gestures at it vaguely sometimes, but it's all background stuff that the child audience probably won't pick up on.
Like, there's a recurring bit of Palpatine consolidating senatorial power out of alien hands and into human ones as part of laying the groundwork for his rise. For example, all the heads of the banking clan are set up and Rush Clovis is appointed to lead them.
Or, like, how Gungans are treated in the senate, (they don't have a representative and the (Palpatine organised) senate celebrations of Naboo history all revolve around the human invasion of the planet and how cool they think the settler colonists were).
I think Tarkin rants about human supremacy in one of his republic is too weak speeches during the Citadel arc.
Just from the movies, I'd assume it was mostly just "business continues as usual" except with a centralized federal military. The Republic didn't seem to even be a state so much as an extremely weak federation with no coordination and no central powers, so a power bloc that had the actual material capacity to wield power and which had the tacit support of most of the component states wouldn't really face much in the way of real resistance. Like I don't even get the impression that it really disrupted the ruling class much at all, it just made it a bit more human-centric bit by bit and gradually escalated the suppression of non-humans and dissidents.
I kind of assume the Empire's long term base of support mostly came from human revanchism and supremacism along with the usual sorts of benefits compradors get for collaborating, and there'd probably be some planets or at least regions on some planets that get to be imperial cores and benefit from wealth extraction from all the subjugated planets, but with the series being written by libs it's not like they really do material analysis or think about things beyond just vibes like "the Empire is powerful because narratively that makes it an interesting and threatening antagonist and they're bad because they're the bad guys and scowl with their frowny faces and are mean and stuff." George Lucas was a bit better about that but despite having a clearer vision of what was going on and why he still leaned heavily on vibes to convey it and when he tried to make it more explicit and show the political side of it he didn't do a very good job and he got panned for it.
There is a wealthy Coruscant elite in a Mandalorien episode who jokes at a gala he barely noticed the change from Republic to Empire to New Republic.
I said no book bs. Did human supremacy come up in a TV show didn't watch?
It's in the movies, if not directly addressed. The imperial command structure is exclusively human, as are their footsoldiers, and in A New Hope Luke sees joining onto this as a more desirable career path than anything to do with non-human cartels or businesses. It also seems like at least some of its foundational support comes from humans that had directly been oppressed or threatened by non-human institutions, between Naboo and its invasion by a non-human federation being a rallying point for Palpatine's bloc and Anakin having literally been enslaved in a society that seemed to put humans on the bottom.
Like this is clearly part of the worldbuilding, especially given that per Lucas the Empire is a mashup of America and Nazi Germany with the human dominance angle being a clear analogue to the white supremacism of its inspirations, it just doesn't do a good job of addressing or articulating it.
The implication is there I guess. If it's that crucial and these are kid's movies then they should have made an actual point of it. Cause also what even is a human in the star wars galaxy? And wasn't the senate mostly weird aliens? It seems humans were the vast minority in that organization and territory. They needed bug men to build their robots and long neck freaks who live in apple stores on a rainy planet to clone the clones. I'll allow some eu bs here, but like...why was Palpatine racist? Just.csuse he's evil? Darth Maul was an alien, if he had killed both the jedi in phantom menace and became the Darth Vader, what was his an there? I for sure have seen it by implication and get the symbolism, but it raises more questions than it answers. Star wars is stupid as hell
It really is. Lucas had a few good points, and maybe some writers have done something interesting with the setting, but it's ultimately just vibes based slop and even Lucas didn't do a very good job of articulating his points.
I think the most impressive thing about the franchise is that a janky sci-fantasy samurai cowboy movie about Space-WWII-Vietnam-War-mashup in space managed to mainstream and legitimize sci-fi as a genre.
Sfdebris (super old online video guy, like rlm ancient) did a really good George Lucas examination. Part.one is The Heroes Journey covering his rise to star wars, the shadows journey about him becoming a corporate hack (the videos do it more gently) and the hermits journey about the prequels. It's super well researched and fairly sympathetic to.the guy. George Lucas at this pont to me, with what I know, is a pretty tragic story and I do think as a person he really really didn't want to become who he is. He thought he could use the money and the money used him.
https://sfdebris.com/videos/special/herosjourney.php
Do we ever see a nonhuman in empire uniform in the movies?
The Clone Wars TV show kinda gestures at it vaguely sometimes, but it's all background stuff that the child audience probably won't pick up on.
Like, there's a recurring bit of Palpatine consolidating senatorial power out of alien hands and into human ones as part of laying the groundwork for his rise. For example, all the heads of the banking clan are set up and Rush Clovis is appointed to lead them.
Or, like, how Gungans are treated in the senate, (they don't have a representative and the (Palpatine organised) senate celebrations of Naboo history all revolve around the human invasion of the planet and how cool they think the settler colonists were).
I think Tarkin rants about human supremacy in one of his republic is too weak speeches during the Citadel arc.