(1)ne Drop: Shifting the Lens on Race (BOOK REVIEW)
(1)ne Drop:
Shifting the Lens on Race
Edited by Yaba Blay, Ph.D.
with photography by Noelle Theard
BLACKprint Press
Hardcover, $40.00
288 pages, Illustrated
ISBN: 978-0-9896645-0-9
Book
Review by Kam Williams
“What
exactly is Blackness and what does it mean to be Black? Is Blackness a matter
of biology or consciousness? Who determines who is Black and who is not—the
state, the society, or the individual? Who is Black, who is not, and who cares?
In
the U.S.,
historically a Black person has come to be defined as any person with any known
Black ancestry. This definition has been… known as the one-drop rule, meaning
that one, single solitary drop of Black blood is enough to render a person
black…
(1)ne
Drop seeks to challenge narrow perceptions of Blackness as both an identity and
a lived reality… [The book] takes the very literal position that, in order for
us to see Blackness differently, we have to see
Blackness differently.”
--
Excerpted from the Introduction (pg. 4)
Traditionally,
in America,
if you were just a teeny-weeny bit black, you’d always been considered black.
This arbitrary color line was even codified by the Supreme Court decision in
Plessy v. Ferguson,
an 1896 case brought by an octoroon light enough to pass who sued for the right
to sit in the “white only” section of a segregated train traveling through the
South.
Much to
Homer Plessy’s chagrin, the Court sided with the State of Louisiana, taking judicial notice of the
“one-drop rule,” ruling that “a Negro or black is any person with any black
ancestry.” In other words, you could be black without looking black.
Fast-forward
to the present, the arguably post-racial age of Obama, a time when the country
has a biracial president, who nevertheless refers to himself to
African-American. The nation’s population has more mixed ancestry than ever
nowadays, which is reflected in the latest census offering over a dozen race
options to check off, as well as “Other,” if none of the above is to your
liking.
This means
that folks, who only a generation ago would’ve been forced to identify
themselves simply as black, now feel much more freedom to avail themselves of
an array of alternatives along the ethnic spectrum. (1)ne Drop: Shifting the
Lens on Race is a collection of essays reflecting on racial identity by 60 introspective
individuals who until relatively recently would’ve been labeled black in the
eyes of the law.
This
enlightening opus was edited by Dr. Yaba Blay, a professor of Africana Studies
at Drexel University,
and each contributor’s entry is accompanied by a proud portrait photographed by
Noelle Therard, a professor at Florida
International University.
The book breaks down the contributors by three categories: “Mixed Black,”
“American Black” and “Diaspora Black.”
Although
“Black” Kathleen Cross has a black father and a white mother, she has resisted
the invitations to join the “Multiracial Movement, which she sees as divisive.
By contrast, Harlemite Jozen Cummings describes himself as “Mixed,” with
parents who are Japanese, Puerto Rican and African-American.
Particularly
fascinating are the two albinos participating in the project, Sean Gethers and
Destiny Birdsong, who embrace being “Black” in spite of their white skin. Each
person’s earnest explanation proves to be rather revealing and touching, leaving
the lasting impression that in the 21st Century blackness is no
longer defined by the government but exists in the eye of the beholder.
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