Elizabeth Barrette (ysabetwordsmith) wrote,
Elizabeth Barrette
ysabetwordsmith

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My Response to the Racism Ruckus

Last night janetmiles directed my attention to a large fuss about racism, which has boiled all over LiveJournal and beyond. A summary of the instigation and ensuing mayhem is here. I meant to explore the whole situation thoroughly, I really did. But all I could think was, "This is a stupid argument. This is a textbook example of how not to talk about race issues. This is a waste of my time." I just couldn't see any good coming out of it, and substantial harm already has -- feelings hurt, journals closed, and dire threats flung by people who really should have a firmer grip on their professional bearing. So after about ten minutes, I quit reading and went off to do other things.

I woke up with this idea fizzing in my brain. I am a writer, a reviewer, an editor, a teacher. I am going to do something totally different.


For those who need it, here are some basic resources about race issues. I'm taking a turn at "Racism 101" because brown-skinned folks get tired of it.
"Racism - Introduction" (This is the first in an extensive series of essays on race relations, including some matched pro/con pairs.)
Race, Racism, and the Law (from a law school)
"Racism - Getting to Basics" (from a blog about Middle Eastern sociopolitical meltdowns and fallout)
How to Help Stop Racism (from the Stop Hate website)
Teaching Tolerance (extensive resources for parents, teachers, teens, and children)

These are some of my favorite "canon" poets of color:
Alice Walker
Basho
Langston Hughes
Leslie Marmon Silko
Lorna Dee Cervantes
Paula Gunn Allen
Phillis Wheatley
Robert Hayden
Rumi
Zora Neale Hurston

These are some poets of color on Poetry Blog Rankings:
Antonio G. Fernandez
Janeya
Jon Sanders
Jy Obadele
Kamil

These are some of my favorite writers whose ethnic background and experience has influenced their work:
Booker T. Washington
browngirl
Frederick Douglass
Gloria Anzaldua
haikujaguar
John (Fire) Lame Deer
Joy Harjo
Octavia Butler
Sandra Cisneros
Sequoya
Sojourner Truth

These are some talented ethnic artists:
Aaron Douglas
Claude Clark
haikujaguar
Hayao Miyazaki
Katsushika Hokusai
Kevin Red Star
Marcos Pavon Estrada
Ruben Manuel Guerra
therebirthofme
William Barak

Me and You

The anthology Triangulations: Taking Flight contains one of my short stories in which all of the characters have brown skin; "Peacock Hour" takes place in the Whispering Sands desert. newWitch magazine (issue #15) published my short story "Peaches from the Tree of Heaven," which is not about racism, but rather about Chinese and Chinese-American cultures and family planning. Click the "poem" tag in the right sidebar for poetry examples; I've posted a variety of those on this blog. If people wish to discuss how well (or poorly) I presented ethnic characters and concepts, that's welcome as long as it stays civil and you can support your arguments with citations from the text. Quality feedback aids targeting.

If you are a writer or artist of color, and I haven't already listed you, and you would like to present your work to an audience rich in smart sensible people who like literature and artwork -- send me a link. If I get more than a few in replies here, I can pull them into a separate post later.

I disapprove of racism wholeheartedly. I've experienced a few incidents of it directed at me. I did not like it. I would not want to be stuck with it every day. I do not want anyone else to be stuck with it either. Racism is a disgraceful waste of human potential based on an atavistic instinct that is unseemly in sentient beings. This is what the Universe wanted me to do about it today. I've been working on this post for about two hours. This feels like time well spent.
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  • 49 comments
Yes, my parents are Cuban. But I was always given the impression that because I could pass for white, I am white.

It's not that I don't identify as a person born of Cuban parents; nor is it that I don't recognize this has given me a cultural background I haven't shared with people around me. But I have never felt that this is a legitimate observation because my skin is pale.

*spreads hands*
You can skip this if I'm getting into territory that's too personal, but I'm intrigued by the line of reasoning.

>>Yes, my parents are Cuban. But I was always given the impression that because I could pass for white, I am white.<<

This raises the question of whether "race" (a largely human-invented concept, not always backed by DNA) is based more on observable skin tone and hair/eye color, or more on genetic family relation and national origin. I tend to favor the latter, because the former leads to ridiculous headlines like "Twins born, one black and one white!"

What about situations where Person A is okay with Person B, then A finds out that B is of African rather than Italian descent, and A starts treating B differently? Often, passing only counts as long as the ethnicity remains completely obscured; once revealed, the race marker tends to take effect on human interactions. This is more prominent in some regions (and perhaps socioeconomic classes) than others. A particularly ugly situation occurs when neither group will accept an individual: too dark for one club, and not dark enough for the other. This aspect appeared during the presidential race with the whole "not black enough" circus.

>>But I have never felt that this is a legitimate observation because my skin is pale.<<

Well, the Hispanic gene pool is interesting. Spain has a range of skin tones from very fair to rather dark, and they can switch around pretty freely -- especially when mixed with other genetics. So Spaniards came to the New World and procreated with Africans, Native Americans (of assorted tribes and shades), and Europeans. Each flavor of Hispanic thus came out a little different: they're all related, but like branches of a family tree. And in some countries that's a great big deal, in others not so much; it varies whether they hate people who look too black or too Indian or too ... I forget all the variations. We had a list of some examples in Chicana Literature class, mapped out by country.

So then ... do you feel that your skin tone has had an impact on your life experiences, or not? That's an intriguing area to explore, if the cultural background has had more impact than the appearance.

Appearance? Never seems to matter. When I look in the mirror, I can tell I look Cuban, but that's because I have seen a lot of Cubans in my life, and there's a... facial structure/eye/nose/etc thing that I can see. But Cubans are a minority in the Hispanic community (you want to get into that discrimination? I don't hear it talked about at all :P ), so most people don't recognize them.

But no, it's the background that's always given me issues, not my appearance. I've had people ask me if I was French.

That doesn't mean the background hasn't given me issues.


Maybe this means that (as far as most People of Color are concerned) my experiences are too different to be called racism. Maybe it really is about skin color. *shrug*
>>Appearance? Never seems to matter. When I look in the mirror, I can tell I look Cuban, but that's because I have seen a lot of Cubans in my life, and there's a... facial structure/eye/nose/etc thing that I can see.<<

That is interesting!

>>But Cubans are a minority in the Hispanic community (you want to get into that discrimination? I don't hear it talked about at all :P ), so most people don't recognize them.<<

If you have the time and inclination, I'd be intrigued by this. I know that "Hispanic" is a catchall for many somewhat-related-but-really-not-the-same ethnic groups, and that some of them are edgy with each other; but I don't have a whole lot of details. Most of my exposure was either the Chicana Lit class in college, or where my Native American studies bump up against some Hispanic groups freaking out over "Indios" blood (a legacy of Spanish invaders taking over the natives, and creating a system similar to the slave plantations of the American south).

>>Maybe this means that (as far as most People of Color are concerned) my experiences are too different to be called racism. <<

That's a very astute observation, and may be true. It would be interesting to do a study with a really huge number of people from different ethnic groups, and try to compare how experiences match with background vs. visible appearance.