• “The Box Marked Black” is coming to Willamette University Oct. 24-25

    Willamette University News
    Salem, Oregon
    2014-10-02

    What does it mean to be black? Is it the shade of your skin or the kink in your hair? Is it learned?

    These questions are explored in “The Box Marked Black: Tales from a Halfrican American growing up Mulatto. With sock puppets!” Written and performed by Damaris Webb and directed by Debra Disbrow, the play is debuting at Willamette University Oct. 24-25.

    “In exploring the story of my blackness and unpacking my personal relationship to identity, race and culture, it quickly became clear that the best form for this exploration was as a solo piece,” Webb says. “Hopefully, telling my story will create space for others to unpack and breathe around their own varied identities.”

    With only Jenny Willis from “The Jeffersons” as a guide, Webb’s narrative uses direct storytelling, modern dance, song and puppetry to share the perspectives of both sides of her interracial family…

    For more information, click here.

  • Performance added for one-woman play at Willamette U.

    The Salem Statesman-Journal
    Salem, Oregon
    2014-10-13

    Tom Mayhall Rastrelli, Fine Arts & Culture Writer

    Damaris Webb will debut her one-woman play “The Box Marked Black: Tales from a Halfrican American growing up Mulatto. With sock puppets!” at 7:30 p.m. Oct. 24 and 25 at M. Lee Pelton Theatre, Willamette University, 900 State St. According to the box office, the performance Oct. 24 is sold out, but the recently-added performance Oct. 25 has many tickets available.

    Using Jenny Willis from “The Jeffersons” as a guide, Webb will narrate her experience of living in an interracial family with storytelling, dance, song and puppetry. The play asks what it means to be black, but it’s themes of abandonment, belonging, fear and acceptance, are universal.

    “Hopefully, telling my story will create space for others to unpack and breathe around their own varied identities,” Webb said…

    Read the entire article here.

  • Revisiting Middlebury’s Racial History

    The Middlebury Campus
    Middlebury College
    Middlebury, Vermont
    2014-03-19

    Conor Grant, Managing Editor


    Alexander Twilight Hall, a building named in honor of Alexander Twilight of the class of 1823, is just one part of the complicated legacy of America’s first black college graduate. (Courtesy/Middlebury)

    Alexander Twilight Hall — the austere brick building separating the town from Middlebury College — is named for Alexander Twilight, the 1823 Middlebury College graduate who is known today as the first American black college graduate.

    Today, Twilight is widely touted as an example of Middlebury’s rich legacy of inclusivity and racial diversity.

    But who exactly was Alexander Twilight? Was he really the first black man at Middlebury?

    The answer to that question is more complicated than it might first appear…

    Read the entire article here.

  • Skin tone, biracial stratification and tri-racial stratification among sperm donors

    Ethnic and Racial Studies
    Volume 37,  Issue 3, 2014 (Special Issue: Race, Migration and Identity: Shifting Boundaries in the USA)
    pages 517-536
    DOI: 10.1080/01419870.2012.696666

    Carol S. Walther, Assistant Professor of Sociology
    Northern Illinois University

    Conception through donor insemination is an attractive option for many couples and single women in the USA, being a relatively simple and inexpensive way of having a baby by a biological birth. Sperm banks provide online catalogues in which sperm donors can be selected according to their physical and social characteristics. One sperm bank’s catalogue was analysed based on the pregnancy of selected donors. Three hypotheses were tested related to colourism, biracial stratification and tri-racialism. Specifically, the selection of donors did not reflect: (1) any general preference for a lighter skin tone; (2) a black–white polarity; or (3) any trend towards tri-racialism. Donors who could be identified as Jewish or Muslim were more likely to be selected. Donors whose major was law were less likely to be selected.

    Read or purchase the article here.

  • Whiteness as Property

    Harvard Law Review
    Volume 106, Number 8 (June 1993)
    pages 1707-1791

    Cheryl I. Harris, Rosalinde and Arthur Gilbert Professor in Civil Rights and Civil Liberties
    School of Law
    University of California, Los Angeles

    Issues regarding race and racial identity as well as questions pertaining to property rights and ownership have been prominent in much public discourse in the United States. In this article, Professor Harris contributes to this discussion by positing that racial identity and property are deeply interrelated concepts. Professor Harris examines how whiteness, initially constructed as a form of racial identity, evolved into a form of property, historically and presently acknowledged and protected in American law. Professor Harris traces the origins of whiteness as property in the parallel systems of domination of Black and Native American peoples out of which were created racially contingent forms of property and property rights. Following the period of slavery and conquest, whiteness became the basis of racialized privilege—a type of status in which white racial identity provided the basis for allocating societal benefits both private and public in character. These arrangements were ratified and legitimated in law as a type of status property. Even as legal segregation was overturned, whiteness as property continued to serve as a barrier to effective change as the system of racial classification operated to protect entrenched power.

    Next, Professor Harris examines how the concept of whiteness as property persists in current perceptions of racial identity, in the law’s misperception of group identity and in the Court’s reasoning and decisions in the arena of affirmative action. Professor Harris concludes by arguing that distortions in affirmative action doctrine can only be addressed by confronting and exposing the property interest in whiteness and by acknowledging the distributive justification and function of affirmative action as central to that task.

    TABLE OF CONTENTS

    • I. INTRODUCTION
    • II. THE CONSTRUCTION OF RACE AND THE EMERGENCE OF WHITENESS AS PROPERTY
      • A. Forms of Racialized Property: Relationships Between Slavery, Race, and Property
        • 1. The Convergence of Racial and Legal Status
        • 2. Implications for Property
      • B. Forms of Racialized Property: Relationships Between Native American Land Seizure, Race, and Property
      • C. Critical Characteristics of Property and Whiteness
        • 1. Whiteness as a Traditional Form of Property
        • 2. Modern Views of Property as Defining Social Relations
        • 3. Property and Expectations
        • 4. The Property Functions of Whiteness
          • (a) Rights of Disposition
          • (b) Right to Use and Enjoyment
          • (c) Reputation and Status Property
          • (d) The Absolute Right to Exclude
      • D. White Legal Identity: The Law’s Acceptance and Legitimation of Whiteness as Property
        • 1. Whiteness as Racialized Privilege
        • 2. Whiteness, Rights, and National Identity
    • III. BOUND BY LAW: THE PROPERTY INTEREST IN WHITENESS AS LEGAL DOCTRINE IN PLESSY AND BROWN
      • A. Plessy
      • B. Brown I
      • C. Brown II
      • D. Brown’s Mixed Legacy
    • IV. THE PERSISTENCE OF WHITENESS AS PROPERTY
      • A. The Persistence of Whiteness as Valued Social Identity
      • B. Subordination Through Denial of Group Identity
      • C. Subjugation Through Affirmative Action Doctrine
        • 1. Bakke
        • 2. Croson
        • 3. Wygant
    • V. DE-LEGITIMATING THE PROPERTY INTEREST IN WHITENESS THROUGH AFFIRMATIVE ACTION
      • A. Corrective Justice, Sin, and Whiteness as Property
      • B. Affirmative Action: A New Form of Status Property?
      • C. What Affirmative Action Has Been; What Affirmative Action Might Become
    • VI. CONCLUSION

    …Because the “presumption of freedom [arose] from color [white]” and the “black color of the race [raised] the presumption of slavery,” whiteness became a shield from slavery, a highly volatile and unstable form of property. In the form adopted in the United States, slavery made human beings market-alienable and in so doing, subjected human life and personhood—that which is most valuable—to the ultimate devaluation. Because whites could not be enslaved or held as slaves, the racial line between white and Black was extremely critical; it became a line of protection and demarcation from the potential threat of commodification, and it determined the allocation of the benefits and burdens of this form of property. White identity and whiteness were sources of privilege and protection; their absence meant being the object of property.

    Slavery as a system of property facilitated the merger of white identity and property. Because the system of slavery was contingent on and conflated with racial identity, it became crucial to be “white,” to be identified as white, to have the property of being white. Whiteness was the characteristic, the attribute, the property of free human beings…

    Read the entire article here.

  • Appointment of new Chancellor

    University of Salford, Manchester
    News
    2014-10-17

    The distinguished award-winning writer of fiction, poetry and plays, Jackie Kay MBE, has been appointed as our new Chancellor. Jackie, who takes up the position immediately, takes over from the University’s previous Chancellor, Dr Irene Khan who stepped down earlier this year after her five-year term.

    As well as the honorary role of Chancellor, Jackie will, from the 1 January 2015, take up the position of University ‘Writer in Residence’. In this capacity, she will contribute major commissions that will enhance learning and teaching and the students’ broader experience at the University.

    Vice-Chancellor, Professor Martin Hall said: “We are thrilled to welcome Jackie to our University. She will inspire our staff, work with our students to help them imagine their future selves and strengthen our role as a civic institution in our wider community.”

    Jackie Kay said:” It’s a huge honour to have been chosen to be Chancellor of Salford University, and I’m very much looking forward to taking up the role, and to being a hands-on Chancellor, as well as a shaking hands Chancellor. As Writer in Residence, the idea of getting to know each department thoroughly and of finding new and pioneering ways to work across disciplines excites me.”…

    …Jackie, who lives in Manchester, was born to a Scottish mother and Nigerian father in Edinburgh and was adopted as a baby by Helen and John Kay, growing up in Glasgow

    Read the entire article here.

  • Mixed Race Irish group seek redress amid claims of racist abuse in industrial schools

    The Irish Examiner
    Dublin, Ireland
    2014-10-22

    Noel Baker, Senior Reporter

    Mixed Race Irish group seek redress amid claims of racist abuse in industrial schools

    Mixed-race Irish who spent time in industrial schools will today claim they faced physical, emotional, and sexual abuse there because of the colour of their skin.

    The Mixed-Race Irish group has 71 members, many of whom now live outside Ireland. Representatives of the group will appear before the Oireachtas Justice Committee today as part of a campaign aimed at official recognition of their experiences and access to redress.

    Founder members Evon Brennan, Rosemary C Adaser, and Carole Brennan are set to address the committee and are expected to outline how there has been a failure to acknowledge the historical and ongoing suffering of mixed-race Irish children placed in State institutions throughout Ireland between the 1940s and the 1980s.

    They claim mixed-race children who spent time in the industrial school system have had their lives blighted as a result, from poor adoption and educational opportunities, reduced job opportunities due to institutional racism, and memories of neglect and physical, emotional, and sexual abuse because of their skin colour.

    The group say records relating to their care are not readily available as the Irish Census did not begin to record ethnicity until 1996.

    In all, the group believes as many as 150 mixed-race children were placed in State industrial schools between 1940 and 1980, including in St Patrick’s in Kilkenny, on the Navan Road in Dublin, and in Letterfrack in Galway

    Read the entire article here.

  • Award-winning author and poet Jackie Kay appointed as University of Salford’s new chancellor

    Manchester Evening News
    Manchester, England
    2014-10-19

    Dean Kirby

    Jackie Kay MBE succeeds Dr Irene Khan at the University of Salford, who stepped down earlier this year after her five-year term came to an end

    An award-winning writer of fiction, poetry and plays has been appointed as the University of Salford’s new chancellor.

    Jackie Kay MBE succeeds Dr Irene Khan, who stepped down earlier this year after her five-year term came to an end.

    As well as the honorary role of chancellor, Jackie will become the university’s writer in residence…

    Read the entire article here.

  • Snap! Space presents Zun Lee

    Snap! Orlando
    1013 E. Colonial Drive
    Orlando, Florida 32803
    Saturday, October 25, 2014 14:00-16:00 EDT (Local Time)

    Join us for an afternoon artist talk and book signing with photographer Zun Lee.

    Zun will be joining us from Toronto and discuss his series ‘Father Figure’ and sign copies of his newly released book Father Figure – Exploring Alternate Notions of Black Fatherhood (September 19, 2014.) Zun’s book release party at the Bronx Documentary Center was so highly anticipated that crowds lined the street surrounding the building around the block to get in. This afternoon at Snap! Space is not to be missed.

    Over the course of three years photographer Zun Lee has masterfully attempted to change the perception of the African American father through the lens of his camera. This collection of photographs in the new book is an immersive approach to his remarkable photo documentary project. “Scenes that can stand on their own and humanize the black experience without demanding perfection or respectability,” says Lee were filmed with so much care—vivid images of loving parental relationships that are able to engross any spectator into a family story that is tough to believe. An added revelation: the photographer himself grew up feeling a sense of loss due to his own father’s choice to abandon his family.

    Lee, a Toronto-based physician and now self-described street photographer, was born in Germany to what he thought was both a Korean mother and father. As a boy he learned the truth: his black father left his mother upon learning she was pregnant. Lee’s search for compassion led him to families in urban areas of Chicago, New York City, and home to Toronto. Says Lee: “There’s been considerable backlash and confusion regarding why black fatherhood stereotypes are a problem at all, why the special focus on only black fathers, and people who simply refuse to believe that black men can be capable, affectionate loving fathers, period. I appreciate both sides of the collective commentary, because it exemplifies why these images and a broader conversation are needed.

    For more information, click here.

  • Season 2, Episode 6: Stanford Prof. Allyson Hobbs Talks about A Chosen Exile: A History of Racial Passing in American Life

    The Mixed Experience
    2014-10-20

    Heidi Durrow, Host

    Allyson Hobbs, Assistant Professor of History
    Stanford University

    I was lucky enough to get an advance reading copy of A Chosen Exile: A History of Racial Passing in American Life, a most excellent book by Stanford Professor Allyson Hobbs. She recently did a TED Talk about the role of grief in these narratives of racial crossing. The book very aptly and eloquently “examines how passing became both a strategy for survival and an avenue to loss.” You will love this interview with Allyson Hobbs as she explains the inspiration for this book, a brief discussion on the idea of “passing as black” and much much more.

    Listen to the episode here. Download the episode here.