Miscegenation and Me — Part 1

This is PART 1 of a piece originally written for a proposed book called “Leaving California.” It eventually wound up in SanSan Kwan and Kenneth Speir’s 2004 book Mixing It Up: Multiracial Subjects.  The book’s cover is reproduced below, and the book itself will be available in very limited quantities on this site (click the WRITING tab above).  Reviewers lauded my essay as one of those “in which an interweaving of autobiography and theory leads to unexpected and insightful commentary.”  A link to PART 2 is at the bottom of this page.

For a take on current opinions about interracial relationships, look at this short video on reaction to a 2013 Cheerios ad featuring a black-white couple and their child.

*

On August 24, 1973, my first wife (Alice) and I packed two-thirds of all we owned into a blue-green Dodge Dart and headed south from Hayward, California, then east at Barstow and across the Mojave Desert to travel to Virginia along the southern tier of the United States.  Two years later, my brother and his Nikon camera came to visit. Charmed by the small, spidery waterfalls along the Blue Ridge Parkway, in contrast to the gargantuan pouring of the California falls at Yosemite, he crept too close to where the Tye River spilled over a forty-foot drop and fell over the main cascade of Crab Tree Falls.  I heard his scream as he went down and, running back up the trail along the river, shouted his name again and again until I found him sitting upright in the pool below, water up to his armpits, his hands held high to keep the Nikon out of the water.  It was too late for the camera.  It would have to be disassembled and dried and re-oiled, and for the next three days he was condemned to sit on an inflated donut pillow.  But when he sent us copies of the pictures he had taken before his fall we cursed our luck at having traveled so far two years earlier with nothing but a Kodak Instamatic.  We went into hock to buy a Canon TLB, itself a relic today, and the Instamatic disappeared leaving behind a handful of pictures, one that has haunted me for years.

The railing of the mansion porch at Oak Alley provided just the right height and angle, so after positioning the Instamatic on the rail and walking my wife forty yards down the lawn, I walked back up to the big house.  “When I get out to her and take her hand,” I said to another person touring the estate in St. Francis, Louisiana, on August 30, 1973, “could you please snap the picture?”  And turning around again, down I went, thinking less about the picture than the humidity.  Leaving California means discovering that the rest of the country doesn’t dry to a golden brown during the summer.  But the price of summer greens is close, smothering air.  I remember a cartoon of two sinners talking in Hell.  Everything is flames and perspiration, but one says to the other, “At least it’s a dry heat.”  The 110-degree Mojave had worn two of our tires bald and fried a sensor, so that our temperature gauge always showed us on the verge of boiling over.  Slowed by false reports, we crept fifty miles, two or three miles at a time, until at some mirage of a Shell Station a man named Frank discovered the error.  Overjoyed by the news and Frank’s apparent honesty, I bought from him, besides a new heat sensor and two new tires, a set of helper springs to buoy our back springs which rode perfectly flat under the weight of our possessions.  For years later, without a heavy load, we always bounced along.   We had planned to make the Grand Canyon the first day, but settled for Kingman, Arizona, where it was still arid.  On August 28th we stepped from our motel room in Austin, Texas, into a steam bath of heavy air and drawling accents.  By the time we had reached the Oak Alley estate in St. Francisville, Louisiana, two days later, this had become my private mantra:  “I shall never draw a clean breath of air again.  Never ever again.”  This was slogging through my mind as I walked back down the lawn and grabbed her hand and the picture was snapped.

 * *

Frantz Fanon, Black Skin-White MasksFrantz Fanon, the Algerian psychiatrist whose Third World liberation theories found their home in the U.S. among the Black Panthers, wrote this in Black Skin, White Masks:

“Out of the blackest part of my soul, across the zebra striping of my mind, surges this desire to be suddenly white.   I wish to be acknowledged not as black but as white.   Now—and this is a form of recognition that Hegel had not envisaged—who but a white woman can do this for me?  By loving me she proves that I am worthy of white love.  I am loved like a white man.   I am a white man.” (63)

This begins Chapter Three, “The Man of Color and the White Woman.” On days when I’m feeling bad about myself and the world I grasp this idea as Truth, and the degree to which we accord this idea Truth, says Fanon, is an index of how sick, how deluded, we are.

Despite labored breathing, my brain was in full symbolic stride when I set up the Oak Alley picture.  Backs to the camera, she and I walk on verdant green between twin rows of towering live oaks towards a faintly visible Mississippi levee.  Our backs are to California.  We are walking away from some personal problems, and the hectic, motorized grind of the Bay Area.  When we reach Charlottesville, Virginia, where I am to begin a doctoral program, when we see the rounded, forested mountains of the Blue Ridge, something inside seemed to say, “Welcome home.”  But you never walk away from something without walking in to something else.  In the Oak Alley picture: my black hair, my Filipino brown hand holding her white hand, her blonde hair draping down to the middle of her back.  We were walking away from a place where those combinations did not mean that much to a place where they meant more than they should, where the foreignness of interracial marriage hung humid, close and thick around such couples, and the complexes Fanon described seemed smothering, especially to me.

In Charlottesville we moved mostly in university and church circles where adjustments to us were made more easily, where we sought all kinds of shelter and found most of what we needed.  I studied and taught.  My wife worked on a masters and as a teacher’s aide at Clark Elementary School, where one day I went to pick her up early.  Because I am nervous, I dress in black sweater, taupe sport coat, and jeans, an ensemble I fancied as somewhat dashing.  There is a palpable stir as I enter the lunchroom.  A few hours later my wife tells me that one of her teacher friends had said, “If you don’t want him, I’ll take him.” Like my wife, she is blonde and pretty, and my ego gets boosted like any man’s would.  I mention this, however, because of how rare that feeling became for men like me once they left California.  “For years, in the States,” writes David Mura in his book Turning Japanese,

…each beautiful white woman had seemed a mark of my exclusion.  The stereotype of Asian women is of a doll-like submissiveness and a mysterious exotic sensuality, qualities which make them attractive to Caucasian men who have trouble accepting women as equals.  As an Asian male, I was placed in a category of neutered sexuality, where beauty, power, and admiration were out of the question, where normalcy and acceptance were forbidden.  None of the women I saw on television, in the movies, or read about in books dreamed of a lover like me.” (148-49)

In rare instances, like Mura’s, this impotence changed.  After high school, says Mura, “Without knowing how, I have gained this knowledge—I can create desire, I can make them want me.  Even while I fear they will shun me, even though the small voices still echo inside me, the voices of difference, of the years without power…” (150).  Here is the world Frantz Fanon critiqued, a world where sex rides to the supposed rescue of the powerless.  One would like to look past this entangling of sex and race, but the influence of this tangle is undeniable, sometimes unbearably so.  What we had, and still have to a large degree, is a Manichaen vision which sees the world arrayed in oppositions—spirit and flesh, black and white, evil and good—and believes order depends on keeping these opposites clear and separate.  Sexuality always plays big because it blurs the lines, undermines neat categories.  In a world struggling to keep whites and people of color strictly separated, it helped to keep a yearning for each other alive.  Those who crossed the dividing lines for love—even though that love might have contained more lust, cruelty, selfishness, or delusion than it should have—have had their part in creating a new world we now glimpse at a distance, a world more interracial, and nowhere more alive in the U.S. than in California.

But I had left.  And David Mura grew up in the Chicago suburbs just a few miles from where I now write.  The shame of the Japanese concentration camps aside, Mura’s feeling of sexual neutering would probably not have been as great if he had spent more time in California.  To put it bluntly: I and other Asian and Southeast Asian men are sexier in California than anywhere else.  Less bluntly: our human reality—which includes our sexuality—is a more everyday, acknowledged fact, and we can more easily dream that we enter the dreams of women, even white women.

In Charlottesville, however, I am sitting at a bus stop outside Martha Jefferson Hospital, where our first child would be born three years later, when an elderly Southern lady, sits down at the opposite end of the bench, and, eyeing me gently, says, “You’re at the university aren’t you?”  Growing up in California, no one I knew said, “Yes, Ma’am,” “Yes, Sir” as a matter of course, but faced with this woman, the very archetype of Miss Daisy, I say, “Yes, Ma’am,” as if I had said it all my life.  “What are you?” she says.  I tell her I am a graduate student and am about to tell her in which department when I realize the question is more basic than that.  “What are you?”  I tell her I am from the Philippines after quickly calculating that telling her I am from California would not have done either.  “Yes,” she says abstractly, “you have that pretty brown skin, those dark eyes.”  This with all the charm of that melt-in-your-mouth drawl, I hardly realize how deftly I have been put into a certain place.  I would experience such placings, some wreathed with a similar charm, over and over.  Or I would experience the opposite, which would amount to much the same thing. At Clark School a few minutes after my entrance has caused such a stir, for example, I sit with my wife waiting for her and others to finish eating when a little girl who has been eyeing me, and us, finally says, “He sure is more different than you!”  She exhales this with a quick droop of the shoulders, overtaken by utter bafflement.  This exhaled air of astonishment follows first me, then my wife and I, in the South and elsewhere.  Even if innocent, it breathes these thoughts: that I, we, don’t fit in any world they can imagine easilty, that people don’t know quite where to place me as a sociological, much less human phenomenon.  In such an atmosphere I realize how often one is granted only the choice of how one will be dehumanized.  If, for example, I had the choice of choosing to live with the stereotype of animal sexuality still commonly attributed to black males, or the neutering proffered to Asian and Southeast Asian males, I think I’d chose the former seven times out of ten.  This goes beyond the dubious male fantasy of wanting to be studly.  It puts me on the scale of the living.  Never mind that it may be subhuman.  Neutered, I feel I am nowhere at all.

* * *

Our first child, Rick, was born near the end of our Charlottesville stay under near-celebrity conditions because my wife was one of the one in ten thousand women who suffer no labor pains.  Waking up on June 30, 1977, she felt merely constipated, but a push or two and the baby’s head was already crowning.  Weeks of Lamaze training instantly slammed into reverse, so that now the special breathing patterns became ways to help her not to push.  Once in the hospital, the baby was fully born in about ten minutes.  For the first few hours, Rick’s head was somewhat misshapen because of staying in the birth canal longer than normal.  Among my first pronouncements about him was: “You could use the kid for a pencil.”  Thus my reputation for the inability to formulate endearing phrases.

One of the nurses on the floor that morning was Sarah McPherson, an Irish redhead then married to the African-American writer James Alan McPherson.  Contemplating a family himself, McPherson said to me a couple of times in the weeks following, “I’d like to come look at your son.”  It was, is, and perhaps always will be harder for black/white marriages.  When my family moved to California from Missouri in 1956 a sign posted at the gate of Hayward’s newest subdivision said, “Whites and Orientals Only.”  Interracially, the sentiment still stands even though it shows signs of weakening.  Though not technically Orientals, Filipinos eventually became close enough, as have other minorities, largely by virtue of not being black.

The McPherson’s had their child, and you may read a  fictionalized account of the whole issue of interracial marriage in what I consider the most brilliant short story every written, “Elbow Room,” the title story of the book for which McPherson won the Pulitzer Prize in 1978.  At the end, shortly after the main characters have had a son, the narrator says this in response to an editorial voice that has continually been breaking in to ask him to clarify the meaning of the story:

“I lack the insight to narrate its complexities.  But it may still be told.  The mother is, after all, a country raconteur with cosmopolitan experience.  The father sees clearly with both eyes…I will wait.  The mother is a bold woman.  The father has a sense of how things should be.  But while waiting, I will wager my reputation on the ambition, if not the strength, of the boy’s story.” (241)

The editorial voice says, “Comment is unclear. Explain. Explain,” but the story ends here, scant on clarity, so much hope placed on a child, the offspring of a black mother and white father.  David Mura’s book Turning Japanese ends similarly.  A Sansei married to a white woman of English and Hungarian Jewish descent, Mura says this about their daughter Samantha:

“This split I have felt between America and Japan, this fusion of two histories, will reside in her, in a different, more visible way.  I would like to think she is part of a movement taking place everywhere throughout the globe, our small planet spinning along in blue-black space.  I would like to think that the questions of identity she faces will be easier than mine, less fierce, less filled with self-neglect and rage.  That she will love herself more and therefore be more eager for the world, for moving beyond herself.  And I know how little control I have over these wishes and their outcome.” (372)

To the old story of the mixed-breed who, rejected as not “pure” enough by both sides of their heritage, McPherson and Mura offer a counter story, and who is to say which is true?  Looking at our children now, hoping the hopes parents do, I incline towards the counter story.  More accurately, perhaps we are at the clashing of two ages, one waning, one coming to the fore, our children walking into the age of the interracial, the mulatto, the half-breed—these last two terms now losing the overwhelming negativity they once carried.  At such times, it is possible to interpret things cynically and hopefully at the same time and be right both ways.  You could think that Lisa Bonet, or Jada Pinkett, or Haley Berry, for example, are seen as beautiful because they are blacks with mostly white features, or because they represent a mix, an exoticism, that’s becoming more acceptable in its own right.  You could think that exoticism is just another white ploy to colonize people of color, or that multiraciality really is not only more acceptable, but something to be desired in and of itself as a human quality.  There may be a kind of ease to this transition—a walking, as I said, not a marching—though interracial couples must still face degrees of astonishment and danger.  This is not a colorblind world, but love may be as colorblind as we have always thought it was just plain blind, and in this case that may not be all that bad.  What I know more clearly is that there is a kind of desperateness, a fore-grounded interracial anxiety to my world now—to Mura’s, to McPherson’s and Fanon’s—that I can only hope fades to background for our children, as it was for me growing up in California.

Nor is it only that I’m more acutely sensitive these days: the California I knew was a kind of interracial paradise.  Cher Mueller, white, whose first child was by a black man I never got to know, used to call our church, the Free Methodist Church on Harvey Avenue in Hayward, California, a little United Nations.  Besides various kinds of whites, there were several Chinese, Japanese, Native American, and Mexican persons who passed through the doors.  There were two families from Tonga.  There were several African-Americans as well, though when their numbers became large enough they left to form their own church, the Palma Ceila Baptist Church, in a rapidly integrating subdivision that, however, was where blacks were confined when we first moved to Hayward.  The first time we went over to Palma Ceila Baptist to join their service after ours was over, the pastor, an immense man who delivered mail during the week, welcomed us with a grandiloquent speech which ended, “We now await your welcome.”  After an awkward, silent half-minute I jumped up, said we were happy to be with old friends again and was glad Free Methodist and Palma Ceila Baptist were sister churches.  And so we became.  At the church I count Gail and Esther Wong who married interracially, as did Kathy Martinez, as did Melinda Chew (who married Roy “Cookie” Matsuda), as did Wilma and Wanda Chui, and more.  At school Larry Tong, Karen Bassett, Harry Fung–these and many more also married interracially.  Not that interracial dating and marrying were the norm, but they were not abnormal either.  Nor was a racial minority whose English was “perfect”—that is to say, “unaccented.”  Or, for that matter, whose German was fluent, too.  Wilma and Wanda’s older sister Shirley Chui married Gary Fong, who taught high school German, his fastidious dress and speech—in German, English, and Chinese—at one with the fastidious care he took of his Karman Ghia, which he always covered even during rainless, California summer nights.

A few years ago back here in Illinois I was doing a writing seminar for Brown & Root, one of the nation’s largest engineering firms.  Among the twenty engineers condemned to sit under my tutelage were four Filipinos—three men, one woman.  Several times during breaks, drawn together by pro patria sentiments and the kinship of our bodies, we talked and laughed, sometimes about the irony of a dark man teaching English to whites.  At the end of our third session, one compatriot, Mike, said to me privately, “Can you teach me to do what you do?”  “What’s that?” I asked.  “Well,” he said, “when you’re talking with us, your countrymen, you sound like us, but the minute you step before the whole group”—and here he snapped his fingers with a crack that still echoes in my mind—“you’re white!” he said triumphantly.  Two days later the firm’s vice president called me aside.  “Can you help Mike lose his accent?  He’s the brightest engineer I’ve got, but I can’t take him on sales calls because people won’t trust him.”  I could not.  Mike had come to this country in his thirties, well past the age, seven or so, where the voiceprint of an original language can be rubbed off the voiceprint of a second.

When I was six I remember my father driving our blue ’53 Plymouth rashly up our driveway on Adams Street in Neosho, Missouri.  Coming into the house and sitting down quickly at the kitchen table he announced to my mother that she was no longer to speak our dialect (Ilocano) to the children.  He was breathing hard.  I have wondered at the incident, or the buildup of incidences, that caused his pronouncement.  As a result my brother and I speak an unaccented English, I lapsing into hints of foreignness only when I’m very tired.  I no longer speak Ilocano, though I still understand it, and remember hearing my parents say, in Ilocano, to relatives or friends who would resort to it to try to hide something from me:  “It’s no use.  He knows everything you say.”  My brother, being only two when the edict came down, neither speaks nor understands.  But we are trapped both ways.  Speak with an accent and for far too many Americans the confirmation of a stereotype breeds feelings of superiority and mistrust.  Speak an unaccented, or otherwise perfectly “American” speech, and the shock, the utter novelty, breeds fear and suspicion.  Or comedy.  The Korean comedian Henry Chow walks on stage dressed in sport coat, jeans, and cowboy boots.  He speaks, naturally, with a Texas drawl, saying in mock empathy, “I know y’all are thinking, ‘What is wrong with this picture?'”  In the California I grew up in and still know, there is a more settled familiarity, almost a profound comfort, with a much larger range of accents, so that inflections of voice have lost much of their significance one way or the other.  Here in Illinois and other places where migration patterns result in a higher percentage of first-generation immigrants, I know I am often seen as an accent on legs.  Walking around to random garage sales or showing up at some more formal civic event where people don’t know me, I love to spy that look of surprise my articulate, unaccented speech causes.  I used to speak up right away to chase off my own uneasiness, but now I often wait long minutes to make their shock that much stronger at this alien who suddenly walks into their world, the world not only of the human, but the competent human.  Watching myself do this again and again, I hear my mind whispering more often these days, “I’m tired of this.”

—–End of Part 1.  Read Part 2.—– 

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Miscegenation and Me — Part 2

Written originally for a proposed collection of essays by ex-Californian’s in “exile” titled “Leaving California,” this piece eventually wound up in SanSan Kwan and Kenneth Speir’s book Mixing It Up: Multiracial Subjects (Austin: Univ. of Texas Pr., 2004): 91-106.   The book’s cover is reproduced here, and limited copies of the book will be available on this site (click on WRITING picture above).  A book review lauded this essay as one “in which an interweaving of autobiography and theory leads to unexpected and insightful commentary.”  This is PART 2 of the essay.  Read PART 1.

For a take on current opinions about interracial relationships, look at this short video on reaction to a 2013 Cheerios ad featuring a black-white couple and their child.

 

* * * *

Not that California is an interracial paradise without its fair share of sin.  Anyway, “paradise” overstates the case.  It took the U.S. Supreme Court until 1948 to declare anti-miscegenation laws unconstitutional, and it wasn’t until 1967 that the last one was officially wiped off the books.  That last law was in Virginia—it was brought down by a suit filed by a man with the marvelous name of Arthur Loving—but the effort to keep races from intermarrying operated as strongly, if not more so, in California than anywhere in the country.  In 1910 California’s official anti-miscegenation law prohibited whites from marrying blacks, Mongolians, and mulattos.  In the late 20’s, one Salvador Roldan sued Los Angeles County when his attempt to marry a white woman was turned down on the basis of his being a Mongolian.  Filipinos are not Mongols he replied.  He won both a lower court case and a 1933 appeal made by Los Angeles County to the California Supreme Court.  So in 1935, to close the loophole, the California civil code was amended by adding Malays—which I suppose Filipinos are—to the list of people whites were forbidden to marry.  The general sentiment was that while Filipinos might not be as bad as blacks, they led white girls astray more easily and therefore should be watched as closely, or more so.  Vigilante groups roamed, threatening to lynch Filipinos if they were caught with white women, especially blondes.  In January 1930, in Watsonville, a vigilante group attacked a group of Filipinos, killing one of them, after the group had rented a hall and invited white women to the dance.

My dad doing a magic trick in L.A. 1927

My father, 17, doing a magic trick in L.A., 1927

My father roamed California at the same time.  Coming over in 1924 at age 14, supposedly to further his education, he was, to put it mildly, led astray.  A compulsive gambler, in love with song and dance, he would say with false braggadocio years later that he never made it past the seventh grade.  Yet all the while, when he was in the Army and we lived at Fort Ord, he would take classes, which I thought were mainly hobby related.  One day he came home and handed my mother a certificate.  “Your father has passed his GED test,” she said to me.  That was all.  He said nothing.  She said nothing more.  It would be twenty years before I knew what a GED was.  What I remember is my father’s almost apologetic sheepishness, a faint air of shame enveloping the modest proceedings.  It has always been difficult to get my parents, my father in particular, to talk about the early days.  “They used to mock me,” he once said.  “They would shout, ‘Hey, monkey!’  But you know what I did?  I read and read.  I was reading some anthropology in the Los Angeles Library one day and realized that whites had more body hair than I did, and since monkeys are really hairy, who’s closer to monkeys, them or me?”  Every time we visit California, I make raids on the photo albums and come back here to impose on my friend Linda, asking her to clarify the past by wiping away the cracks and reversing the fading with all the retouching magic at her disposal.  The black and whites of my father show him as a startlingly handsome young Filipino.  Even then, marks of natural leadership show through, and to this day he is one of the most respected persons in the San Esteban Circle, the organization named after our hometown in northern Luzon.  At 5’8″ he is a full head taller than most of his compatriots.  He has a charismatic smile, and an aura of silent-screen glamour surrounds him when he is not smiling.  In one snapshot he and a white woman lie on their tummies next to each other on a typical California backyard lawn.  They are both looking up at the camera, she turned slightly toward him with a look of delight, he mugging in contorted funny face.  Their bodies touch.  The shadow of the photographer slants across the picture’s lower right corner, and I realize with a start how many times my father must have run into, must even have been visited by, vigilantes.  The rage and disesteem of this, the cold blunting of Filipino-white sensuality.  Perhaps most of all the shame, and with that shame the heavy curtain of silence.

On my mother’s side of the family there was a Filipino-white marriage that always glowed glamorously in my mind.  Her youngest brother with the wondrous name Amante, meaning “beloved,” had married a beautiful German girl named Heidi, who, even as a youngster, I thought of as a Marlene Dietrich, only sexier and with dark hair.  In 1962 when the marriage broke up and Amante had hung himself in his kitchen with an electrical extension cord, my mother sat for three days after her return from New York in a straightback dining room chair, hands unfolded in her lap, lips tight, eyes searching deeply into the heart of betrayal.

When I showed up four years later with a white girlfriend, her mind did not have to search long before fingering a cautionary node of pain.  One month later, I came home to find her sitting in the same straightback chair, her hands, lips, and eyes set as they were in 1962.  “You cannot see her again,” she said.  “Her father thinks I do not speak English.”  Stunned, then enraged, I flew at her with a mixture of imploring and accusation.  A graduate of a Philippine Normal College, my mother had worked as a teacher, largely of English.  In America, however, she was painfully shy, rarely attending any public events in the world outside our Filipino associations, even when her sons, in whom she took enormous pride, were key players.  When my girlfriend’s father, a minister, called on my parents for the first time, he could have interpreted her deep silence in any number of ways.  Unfortunately, he chose to ask her if she spoke English.  I think of this every time someone thinks I myself do not speak English, or speak it badly, but react mainly with irony and chagrin, perhaps because I became a professor of English, and, as I said, because I sometimes relish surprising people in their misperceptions.  My mother, however, took the question with an offense that struck the deepest core of her being.  After days of apologies, her position softened.  She grew to accept my girlfriend, and introducing her to relatives would say as an explanatory aside:  “She eats rice.”  Granted, rice carries a sacred aura in many cultures, but I still marvel at the calming effect these words had on my mother and perhaps many others in the Filipino community.  We became a certified item, and though we received several major honors between us when we graduated from Tennyson High School, I still deeply regret losing Cutest Couple to Janet Milan and Bob Calaway by four lousy votes.

 * * * * *

I write about sunny California in one of the sunniest essays I’ve ever written, knowing full well not only the biases of my maleness and the power of my nostalgia, but also the California of Watts, and Rodney King, and O.J.  Power shortages and the Gary Condit saga had steered California’s current governor Gray Davis away from race as a headline issue.  September 11th brought it back for him and all Americans.  It brought back the fact that though it was subsequently struck down as unconstitutional, California had passed Proposition 187 to block access to many essential services for its significant illegal alien population.  It brought back memories of former governor Pete Wilson, whose fondness for announcing how much it took to imprison illegal aliens who commit crimes (upwards of $490,000,000) echoes louder now than when he was saying it a few years ago.  This is also the California of the University of California, Berkeley, my alma mater, which was at the forefront of the battle to eliminate affirmative action.  Bill Bagley, a regent of the university system and senior partner in the law firm for which my brother works, courageously broke with several fellow regents and his old friend Pete Wilson over this issue.  His fight led to the anti-affirmative action resolution being repealed for the U.C. system.  However, Proposition 209, partly a result of the battles at Berkeley, is still in force and bans affirmation action state-wide.  Bagley’s victory may be more symbolic than real—which is still a very important thing—but the fact that such issues replaced the radical vision of the U.C. Berkeley of the 1960’s reveals how deep the turmoil over race in California is.

What’s the sunniest face I can put on this?  For the past few years I have begun thinking that the growing backlash over race and gender in particular might be the last desperate gasp of an old order.  I come to this thought from many places, like James Baldwin’s essay “Stranger in the Village,” a work that seems to breathe behind at least half of everything I write.  In it he tells of going to live in a Swiss village where people had never seen a living black.  As he walks through the village an air of astonishment follows him.  The village’s biggest attraction is its hot spring waters which attract many cripples who come to “take the waters” hoping for a cure.  Baldwin uses the village as a metaphor for the Western world’s yearning to go back to simpler, more innocent times, to times before issues of race revealed darknesses and crippling sicknesses in the Western soul that that soul has always been loath to face.  He ends his essay this way:

“The time has come to realize that the interracial drama acted out on the American continent has not only created a new black man, it has created a new white man, too.  No road whatever will lead Americans back to the simplicity of this European village where white men still have the luxury of looking on me as a stranger.  I am not, really, a stranger any longer for any American alive.  One of the things that distinguishes Americans from other people is that no other people has ever been so deeply involved in the lives of black men, and vice versa.  This fact faced, with all its implications, it can be seen that the history of the American Negro problem is not merely shameful, it is also something of an achievement.  For even when the worst has been said, it must also be added that the perpetual challenge posed by this problem was always, somehow, perpetually met.  It is precisely this black-white experience which may prove of indispensable value to us in the world we face today.  This world is white no longer, and it will never be white again.” (148-49)

This essay first appeared in October 1953.  Near the end of his life, Baldwin himself began to lose hope.  Now, as the gap between rich and poor in America grows, as 20 percent of America’s children still go hungry each day, as the prospects for the lowest half of our lower class drop close to absolute zero, there seems more to lose hope over than to build hope on.  And if, as I have implied, California is to America what America is to the world, it is entirely appropriate that California be wracked with the racial struggles it currently faces, for, to modify Baldwin slightly, nowhere have peoples of all colors been so deeply involved in each others’ lives than in California.  Nowhere have they settled so much, become so comfortable with each other, and thereby won the right to discover what more needs settling.  “This world is white no longer, and it will never be white again.”  This sentence seems to sound loudly in the imagination of the old order, causing it to lash out in denial, causing it to cling to notions of racial and ethnic purity even while most of us realize more each day what violence and death result from such ideologies.  Things change in the imagination first, I tell myself.  You cannot change until you imagine not only what that change could be, but also the very possibility of change itself.  And yet Baldwin’s sentence is not merely imaginative.  It is a sentence as real as blood.

Our continuing social crises will give rise to more initiatives to curb violence, increase job opportunities, deliver food, shelter, education, and the like to those in need.  Most of these will be necessary.  Meanwhile something else, something totally outside the programmatic, continues to rise and change the very nature of our racial vision.  When Baldwin wrote about the creation of new blacks and whites, he meant this not only figuratively, culturally, but literally as well, referring to the history of white masters raping black slaves that goes back to the dawn of slavery in the U.S.  In his essay “Junior and John Doe,” James Alan McPherson describes “older Anglo-Saxons” who “when pressed or drunk” might tell you in private: “We’re all cousins.  The only difficulty is that most people don’t understand just how we’re related” (178-79).  Genuine interracial marriage has also continued the mixing process, and the numbers have risen steadily.

In 1970 my wife and I were one of just 300,000 interracial marriages.  Just over 30 years later there are over 1,300,000, about 20 percent being black/white marriages.  In late 1991 a Gallup Poll reported that for the first time in history more Americans approved of interracial marriage than disapproved.  And there are the children of these marriages.  Somehow, many years ago in Virginia, our schedules never meshed, so James Alan McPherson never did get to see Rick, our first born, who is turning out fine.  I admit the bias of thinking that Filipino/white marriages produce the most beautiful children of all; and we had four, in part because they are all boys and we kept chasing the elusive girl.  I also went to four, though I still feel twinges of environmental guilt, because I felt there needed to be more of “us,” not just minorities but interracial minorities, if we were to live, as we did, amid the whiteness of the Chicago suburb of Naperville.  When the push for zero-population growth was at its height, one black radical labeled it a white ploy to wipe out minorities.  Though not a conspiratorialist thinker by nature, I understood immediately both what he meant and what he felt.  David Duke and Pat Buchanan, those who shot Amadou Diallo and Ricky Birdsong, those who dragged a man to death down in Texas—these and countless more, to say nothing of the institutional racism that still grips us very firmly, make it hard to clear the haze of conspiracy from our minds.  Yet as we become more “one blood” the whole concept of race is being called into question once again, and it has begun to dawn on more of us that “race” and “ethnicity” are social constructs more symbolic than actual, even for people of color.  The sociologist Mary Waters writes that, “The ultimate goal of a pluralist society should be a situation of symbolic ethnicity for all Americans” (167).  To see ethnicity, and even race, more symbolically is to see them as more open, fluid, and complex, a situation allowing people to construct identities which are also more open, fluid, and complex, yet also warm and fleshed out by ties to, hopefully, the best that ethnic and racial identification has to offer.

Such a prospect, however, brews its own battles.  For example, the racial categories that appeared on the 2000 U.S. Census hadn’t changed so much that the “Other” designation had expanded into a true “Multiracial” category, but it was the first time you could identify yourself as two races, and that was enough for me to think that my boys might one day be able to list themselves as Filipino-Spanish-English Americans, which is what they are at the very least.  Looking at the 2000 census, Margo J. Anderson, professor of history at the University of Wisconsin, Milwaukee, and specialist in census issues, identifies interracial children as one of the big “sleeper” issues of this census and the future, agreeing with reporter David Mendell that “racial lines in America are blurring more with each decade” (qtd. in Mendell 2:4).   Such multiplication of racial/ethnic choices, such blurring of racial lines, isn’t without huge downsides, however.  The cover story of the February 13, 1995 Newsweek highlights this growing multiracial movement in America. “Solidarity is hard to find,” reports Tom Morganthau.  “One third of African-Americans polled say that blacks should not be considered a single race” (64).  And in a related article Civil Rights activist and professor Julian Bond fears that the multiplication of colors may dilute “the power and strength of numbers as they affect legal decisions about race in this country” (qtd. in Cose 72).   But there are already college groups (Prism at Harvard, Specturm at Stanford), magazines (New People and Interrace), a growing body of impressive research and writing, even support groups like the Biracial Family Network of Chicago dealing with this key phenomenon: amid the avalanche of ethnicity, it is the increase in interracial marriages and children that is shattering racial barriers in ways that we had only dimly foreseen, and in ways that no program or legislation ever could.  “This world is white no longer, and it will never be white again.”

Perhaps no place understands this more than California, and this explains in part why the Oak Alley picture haunts me.  The ghost of another picture has begun appearing to me when I look at it, and it is simply that I also see myself walking back the other way, towards California, accompanied this time by a throng of others so large I appear to lose myself, happily, in a national surge of walkers who are in interracial relationships or the children of such relationships.  Every time I come back to California, every time I see the depth of the interracial there, something inside says, “Welcome back.  You’re home.”  More Americans seem to be hearing that same salutation, that same multiracial welcoming, whether the California they are walking towards is that actual western reach of land or a symbol that describes what more and more places in America are becoming like.

—This is the end of the essay.  Read Part 1 of essay.— 

 

WORKS CITED

Baldwin, James.  Notes of a Native Son.  New York: Bantam, 1964.

Cose, Ellis.  “One Drop of Bloody History,” Newsweek, 13 February 1995: 70-72.

Fanon, Frantz.  Black Skin, White Masks.  New York: Grove, 1967.

McPherson, James Alan.  Elbow Room.  Boston: Little, Brown, 1977.

__________.  “Junior and John Doe,” in Lure and Loathing: Essays on Race, Identity, and the Ambivalence of  Assimilation, ed. Gerald Early.  New York: Allen Lane/Penguin, 1993: 175-193.

Mendell, David.  “As face of American changes, statistics provide a mirror.”  Chicago Tribune, 15 July 2001,  2:4.

Morganthau, Tom.  “What Color Is Black?” Newsweek, 13 February 1995: 62-65.

Mura, David.  Turning Japanese: Memoirs of a Sansei.  New York: Anchor/Doubleday, 1991.

Waters, Mary.  Ethnic Options: Choosing Identities in America. Berkeley: Univ. of California Pr., 1990.

West, Cassandra.  “The New Mix.” Chicago Tribune, March27, 2002.

 

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Leanita McClain: The Middle-class Black’s Burden

Leanita McClain’s elegant, but also blunt writing brought into focus the intersection of race, politics, justice, and family life as passionately as any writer in America ever has.

Leanita McClainMcClain  (1952-1984), the first Black member of the Chicago Tribune’s editorial board and only its second Black columnist, was propelled up the ranks of journalism by her talent and perfectionism, and into the national spotlight by her essay “The Middle-class Black’s Burden,” a “My Turn” opinion column printed by Newsweek in October 1980.  “I am a member of the black middle class,” it begins, “who has had it with being patted on the head by white hands and slapped in the face by black hands for my success.”  Her former husband, Clarence Page, the other Tribune Black columnist, said in his introduction to A Foot in Each World, a collection of McClain’s work: “The emerging class of black professional baby boomers needed a voice, and Leanita McClain was becoming that voice.”

But such stardom proved costly, and McClain took her own life on May 29, 1984, barely 32 years old.  The Time magazine obituary of June 11th said that her death came, “…after bouts of depression brought on at least in part, friends said, by the strain of being a role model and by the furor resulting from an article she wrote for the Washington Post…which prompted the [Chicago] city council to consider demanding an apology.”  The Post published that article, titled “How Chicago Taught Me to Hate Whites,” on July 24, 1983. It begins:

“Chicago—I’d be a liar if I did not admit to my own hellish confusion.  How has a purebred moderate like me—the first black editorial writer for the Chicago Tribune—turned into a hate-filled spewer of invective in such little time?

“Even today, the vicious, psychotic events leading up to and following Harold Washington’s election as the first black mayor of Chicago leave me torn as never before. I’ve become a two-headed, two-hearted creature….

“In one day my mind has sped from the naive thought that everything would be all right in the world if people would just intermarry, to the naive thought that we should establish a black homeland where we would never have to see a white face again.”

McClain also often probed the very construction of racial categories, as in an April 1, 1984, column on James Baldwin entitled “There are no white people.”  Summarizing Baldwin, she writes that whiteness, “…is a fraud ethnics who arrived on these shores perpetrated against themselves out of the necessity to deny the humanity of blacks…no one was ‘white’ before they came here, were, in fact, proud to be hyphenated Americans, with strong ties to their mother country.  But then their fear of people of color led them to fade into a generic whiteness to better ensure and exert their collective power.”  But her writing also shows that fear often drives Blacks into a generic blackness, and these contending fears and generic outlooks seem almost certainly to have been other large factors in her death.

I have often spoken about Leanita McClain being the emotional center of my book Black Writing from Chicago.  Later in that book I put a poem, “This One,” by Rohan Preston dedicated “to Chairman Flax / Grand Wizard, Grand Dragon of white fire.” It mentions Leanita McClain twice, once alluding to her suicide: “You got into Leanita’s head and made her / take herself out—that’s the hard way….”  Indeed, it is.  It attests to the powerful tensions of being in a society that won’t fully let you be a part of it,  something I tried to convey in my book’s subtitle, a question: In the World, Not of It?

 Go to a list of Black Writers written about on this site, OR the Teaching Diversity main page.

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