In last week’s readings, we explored how the “meanings of blackness”
for people of African descent can change depending on several factors including
class and geography. As Aline Helg demonstrates in her study of the Caribbean rim of
Colombia, many people of color identified themselves based on region rather
than skin color even though they encountered some of the same stereotypes and oppression
that people of African descent have generally experienced across time. The students saw how the latter idea played out in Colombia and Jamaica, but also Brazil. They watched the 1959 film “Black Orpheus,” a
French re-telling of the Greek myth, which is set in Rio de Janeiro. Lauria,
one student, observed how dark skinned Brazilians featured in this imagined work seemed
to have “worse off living conditions.” Roosevelt, yet another student, took the
idea of complexion further by drawing our attention to the experiences of lead character Eurydice, a fair-skinned
women of color (His observation struck me as I would like to see this class better tackle
the issue of women and gender. I feel even more strongly about this as I just
attended a women’s and gender conference at my home university in Illinois). The
departure point for Roosevelt’s observation was his witnessing the horrific ending
to Eurydice's life. Noting that Eurydice's experiences fit the "tragic mulatto" trope, which, among other things, incorrectly blames race-mixing - rather than racism - for the troubles endured by biracial people, he said some of the challenges she faced stemmed from her not being “fully
black" (i.e. her seemingly beautiful fair skin, an outcome of her being of mixed race, contributed to her fate). Tiffany, another student, brought the idea of skin complexion
together with geography and racial politics. Returning to the Helg reading,
she thought about the ways in which people of African descent often lacked unity in Colombia because of the "territorial
fragmentation" in their country. But Tiffany was still attentive to how people
of African descent also separated themselves based on race. She wrote, “People
often assume that people of color are automatically unified based on the fact
that we have often been identified as [the] ‘other.’ …This idea is both true
and false…Whenever something ‘bad’ happens involving a ‘black person,’ some [black]
people rush to lament [those] who make… us look bad. But, …black
people [still see difference even amongst themselves when they separate] themselves
into categories [like] light-skin, dark skin [and] brown skin.” As we go forward, we will hopefully keep thinking about how race, place and gender intersect in discussions involving cities. We will also think about how certain bodies' association with urban spaces in this course thus far are most often related to labor needs or desires (certainly Eurydice's streetcar driving Orpheus, and the working women in urban Jamaica and Colombia, demonstrate as much). As we continue, we will also see how that narrative changes. Next week's readings take us to the experiences of postbellum washerwomen of color in Atlanta and an interracial couple residing in Gilded Age New York.
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