Friday, December 11, 2009

Agents of Redemption



I thought it would be a good idea to counter, and balance the over exhausted American narrative that has resurged with a vengeance; that is the lack of black agency. With the recent release of the film The Blind Side, and to a lesser extent the film Precious, the idea that many black folks are still incapable of pulling themselves out of their own tragic circumstances without the aid of some sort of support via Caucasians, is grossly reinforced in these films.
I remember as a young kid TV shows like Webster and Different Strokes overtly reinforcing this notion. Consequently, Webster provided a narrative for my peers, who didn’t understand my background. My white mother provided a logical explanation as to why I lived in the community I lived in, and an explanation for my teacher as to why I was a good student.
White folks being the agents of redemption for people of color plagued by their own seemingly genetic predisposition for self destruction, dangerously seems almost natural. Most see a story of a selfless upper middle class white woman in the film The Blindside, who welcomes a young black man into her home. This man later goes onto become a professional football player, and at some level his success is in large part due to her intervention in his previously dysfunctional life. A similar story line is reinforced in the film Precious, albeit without the aid of white people. The redeemers in this film are light skin black women, who help lift an extremely dark skinned adolescent girl out of the grips of black dysfunction.
These two films seem to generate the same discussion about race, but I think what’s often lacking is a measure of balance. There are films the offer this. The secret lives of bees presents a refreshing take on the exhaustive narrative of black agency. The agents of redemption in this film are all black women, who provide refuge for a young white girl. I admit that I haven’t seen the film, and I’m not even sure if it’s a good film, but I do think the premise is worthy a discourse.

Monday, December 7, 2009

Sunday, December 6, 2009

Saturday, December 5, 2009

My Confliction


I hate that I love this film so much.

Friday, December 4, 2009

Red Saris and Smoke Screens


Really?

Fashion's Penchant for the Offensive


Why all the complaining about the lack of work for models of color in the fashion industry?

I'd like to Introduce You to Yuri Kochiyama



When the experience of an internment camp becomes more of an equalizer than education…check it out!

Thursday, December 3, 2009

Ideological Skin Bleach


Ah yes the proverbial light vs. dark; good vs. evil, has made its way to the national political arena. No this isn’t a holy battle between the conservative right and their worldly liberal counterparts; it’s a question of perception. More specifically how does one’s political leaning lighten or darken the complexion of elected officials. Just when you thought that media sources and the blogosphere had exhausted every possible aspect of race in relation to Obama, comes this telling study, examining the correlation between how one’s political affiliation colors Obama’s color. What’s particularly interesting about this study isn’t how conservatives and liberals darken and lighten Obama, it’s the unfortunate revelation that most still equate good with light and bad with dark. Check it out!