-------- Original Message --------
Subject:        [AFAMHED] Judging a Book by Its Writer's Color
Date:   Mon, 24 Jul 2006 09:11:40 -0500
From:   S. E. Anderson <[EMAIL PROTECTED]>
Reply-To:       S. E. Anderson <[EMAIL PROTECTED]>
To:     [EMAIL PROTECTED]


Note: "How can you be neutral on a moving train?"  In this case, the moving 
train is US literature. When one does not write about one's "race" one is still 
writing about one's "race." Why? Because we live in a nation and world that is 
governed by "race" and class. White publishers of Black authors really don't 
like Black authors to give them manuscripts solely about whitefolk. they didn't 
like when Richard Wright was alive and don't like it now.

But we Blackfolk have the right to write about whitefolk in their world without 
having a single central Black character. That's not writing "beyond race." 
That's writing "within race." Many of us Blackfolk know both world's 
intimately. It's just a question of can some of us Blackfolk write NOT just 
about Blackfolk, but about other folk as well? Yes we can and we should. 

But... that doesn't make our writing "better"  or "universal" or "race-free" 
because we choose to write NOT about Blackfok.
xxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxx

http://chronicle.com/weekly/v52/i47/47b01201.htm
 July 28, 2006

Judging a Book by Its Writer's Color
By GENE ANDREW JARRETT

Thanks to the widely acclaimed Norton Anthology of African American Literature, 
we can read and celebrate an assortment and abundance of fiction, nonfiction, 
poetry, and drama by black writers. But this admirable book ignores a 
remarkable history: Some of our most celebrated black authors weren't always so 
"hungry for texts about themselves," an actual phrase used to introduce the 
anthology's second edition. Contrary to this claim, some canonical authors were 
just as interested in writing about our common humanity, regardless of racial 
differences.

Take a look at this list of authors and some of their fiction. Ironically, 
although numerous anthologies tend to hail the former, they often ignore the 
latter: Francis Ellen Watkins Harper's Sowing and Reaping (1876-77); Paul 
Laurence Dunbar's The Uncalled (1898); Nella Larsen's "The Wrong Man" and 
"Freedom" (1926); Jean Toomer's York Beach (1929); Wallace Thurman's The 
Interne (1932); Ann Petry's Country Place (1947); Zora Neale Hurston's Seraph 
on the Suwanee (1948); Chester Himes's Cast the First Stone (1952); Richard 
Wright's Savage Holiday (1954); James Baldwin's Giovanni's Room (1956); Samuel 
R. Delany's "Time Considered as a Helix of Semi-Precious Stones" (1968); Toni 
Morrison's "Recitatif" (1983); and Octavia Butler's "Bloodchild" (1984).

These short stories, novelettes, or excerpts of novels have two things in 
common. First, they feature characters who are white or racially unmarked or 
ambiguous. Second, these works tend to go unread, undersold, or out of print. 
For those reasons, they could be thought of as the anomalies of 
African-American literature.

A 2004 international bibliography of academic scholarship prepared by the 
Modern Language Association supports this point, particularly because the 
editors of anthologies of African-American literature tend to be scholars. In 
an analysis I did of the MLA bibliography, I found that anomalous stories 
constituted the main subject matter of less than 2 percent of all the 
dissertations, articles, chapters in edited collections, and books published on 
African-American writers since 1963. Such a circumstance has certainly 
prevented us from realizing how prolific and sophisticated our most famous 
black authors actually were.

By neglecting these works, we also fail to learn more about the most famous 
examples of African-American literature. "The Wrong Man" and "Freedom," stories 
about the emotional struggles of white women, anticipated Nella Larsen's 
experimentation with certain literary themes and techniques that later appeared 
in her two classic novels about racially mixed women, Quicksand (1928) and 
Passing (1929). The themes of dialect and male chauvinism in Seraph on the 
Suwanee recalled Zora Neale Hurston's earlier outstanding novel, Their Eyes 
Were Watching God (1937). Finally, by the time "Recitatif" appeared, Toni 
Morrison had already released two well-known novels — The Bluest Eye (1970) and 
Sula (1973) — whose themes of strong women and deadbeat fathers also enhanced 
her first short story.

In addition to the idea of anomalies, the lesser-known works of fiction 
mentioned here could also be thought of as African-American literature written 
beyond race. The word "beyond" doesn't necessarily assert an optimistic belief 
that we can advance beyond race in our world. To do so would be naïve; it would 
ignore race's persistent and pervasive social impact today. However, it does 
mean, as Toni Morrison explained in a 1994 lecture at Princeton University 
entitled "Home," that blacks can admirably and usefully write literature that 
is at once "race specific" and free of "racial hierarchy," or is "a world in 
which race does not matter." In the personal lives of certain famous black 
writers, of course, race and racism were palpable realities, mattering at all 
times. But these writers also felt that this fact shouldn't have always 
required them to write stories of analogous political charge.

So why are anthologies of African-American literature so one-sided, reluctant 
to select such literary mitigations of racial politics? This canonical tendency 
is symptomatic of the broader cultural preoccupation of American society with 
racial authenticity. Since slave narratives were published in the first half of 
the 19th century, literature written by black people — or, more precisely, by 
people who are identified or who identify themselves as black — must be "the 
real thing," a window into the black experience, in order to have any 
aesthetic, cultural, social, political, or commercial value.

After slavery, the earliest and most remarkable example of a writer who 
suffered from the culture of racial authenticity is Paul Laurence Dunbar, whose 
legacy is enjoying a scholarly renaissance today. A century ago, Dunbar died 
separated from his wife, and an alcoholic at the young age of 33. By the time 
of his death, he had published four novels, four collections of short stories, 
and 14 books of poetry, as well as many songs, plays, and essays in newspapers 
and magazines around the world. Dunbar was the first black writer born after 
the emancipation of slaves in 1865 to become a phenomenon in this country and 
the rest of the world.

The centennial of Dunbar's death has led to a recent blitz of publications, 
including five books of Dunbar's writings in the past several years alone. What 
makes Dunbar so remarkable today, however, isn't just his career-long 
productivity and the centennial of his death. The circumstances of his 
emergence as the first "Negro Laureate" of the United States teach us not to 
prejudge a book by the author's skin color.

In the early months of 1896, James A. Herne, a pre-eminent actor and 
playwright, returned to his hotel in Toledo, Ohio, where his play Shore Acres 
was running, and learned that Dunbar had left him a gift with the hotel clerk. 
After attending and enjoying Shore Acres, Dunbar decided to leave Herne a 
complimentary copy of his second and latest book of poetry, Majors and Minors. 
Herne turned out to be well acquainted with the "Dean of American Letters," 
William Dean Howells, and Herne passed Majors and Minors on to Howells.

Both men were captivated by the frontispiece of the book, an image of Dunbar at 
age 18. Howells found the image so compelling that he decided to review the 
book in Harper's Weekly. Howells called Dunbar "the first man of his color to 
study his race objectively" and "to represent it humorously, yet tenderly, and 
above all so faithfully." For the benefit of his readers, he also described 
Dunbar's facial features: "In this present case I felt a heightened pathos in 
the appeal from the fact that the face which confronted me when I opened the 
volume was the face of a young negro, with the race traits strangely accented: 
the black skin, the woolly hair, the thick outrolling lips and the mild, soft 
eyes of the pure African type." A black star was born, but perhaps for a few 
wrong reasons. What Howells did, although in an older and especially racist 
fashion, is similar to what readers do today: They presume what a book is about 
based on what the author looks like.

Certain authors have tried to counteract this literary sort of racial 
profiling. The most famous case of an author resisting identification with the 
black community is Jean Toomer. Against the wishes of publisher Horace 
Liveright, who advised the author to mention his "colored blood" in the 
publicity of Cane (1923), Toomer reiterated his autonomy: "My racial 
composition and my position in the world are realities which I alone may 
determine." Toomer preferred to be called a national or American writer; he 
refused to allow race to overdetermine his identity as a person and artist.

Unfortunately, the historical record of authors' interrogating the racial 
identities thrust upon them has had little impact on the definition of 
African-American literature. This definition has long imposed a mythical 
"one-drop rule" on authors, meaning that one drop of African ancestral blood 
coursing through their bodies makes them black. It has also dictated 
African-American "canon formation," misleading readers into believing that 
black people write best only about black people.

This authentic idea of African-American literature — perpetuated by publishers, 
acquisition editors, anthology editors, scholars, teachers, and ultimately 
students — is everywhere. It determines the way authors think about and write 
African-American literature; the way publishers classify and distribute it; the 
way bookstores receive and sell it; the way libraries catalog and shelve it; 
the way readers locate and retrieve it; the way teachers, scholars, and 
anthologists use it; and the way students learn from it. In short, it 
determines our belief that we supposedly know African-American literature when 
we see it.

But readers arrive at this conclusion not because they think about it as deeply 
as they should. They arrive at it because they focus on the author's skin 
color. Although readers know by heart "not to judge a book by its cover," they 
are still likely to remain superficial and prejudge the content of a book based 
on the author's skin color. And if that book defies their expectations or 
presumptions, they ignore or devalue it. As long as readers cling to this idea, 
they fail to learn about black culture in all its guises. And that includes 
African-American literature beyond race.

-------------------
Gene Andrew Jarrett is an assistant professor of English at the University of 
Maryland at College Park and the editor of African American Literature Beyond 
Race: An Alternative Reader, published this year by New York University Press. 
This essay is adapted from Deans and Truants: Race and Realism in 
African-American Literature, forthcoming from the University of Pennsylvania 
Press. Copyright © 2006 by the University of Pennsylvania Press.

http://chronicle.com
Section: The Chronicle Review
Volume 52, Issue 47, Page B12 
Copyright © 2006 by The Chronicle of Higher Education

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