Printer Friendly
The Free Library
7,774,290 articles and books
Member login
User name  
Password 
 
Join us Forgot password?

Critical race theory: Debra Dickerson argues it's time blacks stop worrying about what whites think of them.


The End of Blackness By Debra J. Dickerson Pantheon; $24.00 In the run up to the war with Iraq, Harry Belafonte entertainer and potentate POTENTATE. One who has a great power over, an extended country; a sovereign.
     2. By the naturalization laws, an alien is required, before he can be naturalized, to renounce all allegiance and fidelity to any foreign prince, potentate, state, or sovereign whatever.
 of the old black left, criticized Colin Powell for his role in the Bush administration war effort. Belafonte implied that Powell was a house slave, President Bush the master, and 1600 Pennsylvania Ave., the big house. "In the days of slavery, there were those slaves who lived on the plantation and [there] were those slaves that lived in the house," said Belafonte. "You got the privilege of living in the house if you served the master ... exactly the way the master intended to have you serve him. Colin Powell's committed to come into the house of the master."

The critique was a restatement of an old black-power notion, popularized by Malcolm X Malcolm X, 1925–65, militant black leader in the United States, also known as El-Hajj Malik El-Shabazz, b. Malcolm Little in Omaha, Neb. He was introduced to the Black Muslims while serving a prison term and became a Muslim minister upon his release in 1952. . Roughly, it asserts that docile house slaves were foolishly loyal to their masters, while cantankerous can·tan·ker·ous  
adj.
1. Ill-tempered and quarrelsome; disagreeable: disliked her cantankerous landlord.

2.
 field slaves were the real rebels. The analysis is historically specious spe·cious  
adj.
1. Having the ring of truth or plausibility but actually fallacious: a specious argument.

2. Deceptively attractive.
. Some of slavery's most violent dissidents--Nat Turner, Toussaint L'Ouverture, Denmark Vesey, Gabriel Prosser--weren't exactly intractable field hands. Vesey was free, in fact. The house slave/field slave dichotomy makes for great mythology but always fell down under the weight of historical analysis.

Belafonte was roundly panned, even by his fallow fallow

a pale cream, light fawn, or pale yellow coat color in dogs.
 black leftists, for effectively calling Powell a sellout. But beyond being just a vicious ad hominem attack An ad hominem attack is a personal attack in the form of an ad hominem argument.

Ad hominem attacks are often used in a debate or discussion where the speaker wishes to avoid the substance of the discussion and instead resorts to smearing the character of their opponent.
, Belafonte's critique was woefully woe·ful also wo·ful  
adj.
1. Affected by or full of woe; mournful.

2. Causing or involving woe.

3. Deplorably bad or wretched:
 simplistic sim·plism  
n.
The tendency to oversimplify an issue or a problem by ignoring complexities or complications.



[French simplisme, from simple, simple, from Old French; see simple
 and outdated. Exactly who was Powell selling out and who are the slaves? Black people? Poor people? All Americans? Calling Powell a sell-out, tells us nothing about the complexity of an African American African American Multiculture A person having origins in any of the black racial groups of Africa. See Race. , who is popular among other African Americans, and yet is charged with carrying out the foreign policy of a president most African Americans hate.

Belafonte's analysis suffered from a problem of vocabulary, one that has struck many black thinkers over the past few decades. African Americans have entered into an epoch of history where, for the first time, Bull Conner racisin is the least of our problems. And yet "the problem of the color-line" still lingers. A gaggle of brilliant scholars from Robin Kelley to Cornel West to William Julius Wilson William Julius Wilson (born December 20, 1935) is an American sociologist. He worked at the University of Chicago 1972-1996 before moving to Harvard.

William Julius Wilson is Lewis P. and Linda L. Geyser University Professor at Harvard University.
 have sought to articulate this new world where race intermingles with all manner of societal problems to wreak havoc on black communities.

But no one has yet coined a language that describes this new reality in the way W.E.B. Du Bois did in The Souls of Black Folk. Du Bois essentially defined black America in the 20th century with his notion of "double consciousness"--the idea that African Americans experience everything in this world both as Americans and as black people. Scholars have come up shaky in their efforts to update Du Bois's simple, but ingenious formula.

In her new book, The End of Blackness, Debra Dickerson has a solution for our lexiconal conundrum--throw the entire damn dictionary of race out the window. Dickerson lays out her thesis in the book's introduction: "This book will both prove and promote the idea that the concept of 'blackness,' as it has come to he understood, is rapidly losing its ability to describe, let alone predict or manipulate, the political and social behavior of African Americans."

The idea that race has little social or political meaning is not a new line of reasoning Noun 1. line of reasoning - a course of reasoning aimed at demonstrating a truth or falsehood; the methodical process of logical reasoning; "I can't follow your line of reasoning"
logical argument, argumentation, argument, line
 in the debate around black America. But it's usually employed by conservatives--of all races--attempting to down-play the impact of racism, or black people cynically seeking to absolve ab·solve  
tr.v. ab·solved, ab·solv·ing, ab·solves
1. To pronounce clear of guilt or blame.

2. To relieve of a requirement or obligation.

3.
a. To grant a remission of sin to.
 themselves of social responsibility (read: Bob Johnson). Dickerson, to her credit, believes in discarding many of the pillars of black identity, not because it would further her individually, but because she honestly thinks that it's the only path of survival.

White people, according to Dickerson, are victims of "aversion therapy aversion therapy
n.
A type of behavior therapy designed to modify antisocial habits or addictions by creating a strong association with a disagreeable or painful stimulus.
," in that they refuse to see their own complicity in racism. Furthermore, whites "assume their perfection" and exhibit "a continued refusal to see America as inherently, organically multiracial and multi-cultural." White narcissism narcissism (närsĭs`ĭzəm), Freudian term, drawn from the Greek myth of Narcissus, indicating an exclusive self-absorption. In psychoanalysis, narcissism is considered a normal stage in the development of children. , for Dickerson, is only one leg in a historical conspiracy. "Simply put," she writes. "Whites held hands across generations to hold blacks down long enough to ensure that their own heirs would ascend to as much privilege as possible while simultaneously keeping their hands clean."

But--as her very next sentence makes clear--Dickerson does not absolve the black community of responsibility in all this: "Blacks need to accept this and then get over it--and get even ... The know-nothingness required to keep blacks tilting at the windmill of white approval is no less odious than whites' determination to remain first among purported equals." For Dickerson, white racism is one giant head trip, and thus can only be as effective as black people's gusto for white approval allows it to be. Black people, she writes, are "complicit com·plic·it  
adj.
Associated with or participating in a questionable act or a crime; having complicity: newspapers complicit with the propaganda arm of a dictatorship.
 in maintaining white supremacy" because they hunger for "white approval or white apology rather than their own autonomy."

While Dickerson's rhetoric exhibits echoes of black nationalism, she turns an unforgiving eye to that philosophy's more recent manifestations. "Carpetbagging car·pet·bag·ging  
adj.
Of or relating to carpetbaggers or their practices.

Adj. 1. carpetbagging - presumptuously seeking success or a position in a new locality; "a carpetbag stranger"; "a capetbag politician"
 Afrocentrists," as she terms them, are at least as much to blame for the predicament of black America as approval- seeking blacks. "Instead of carrying out substantive studies of African history," writes Dickerson. "These charlatans imagine glorious achievements, such as the Bronze Age of African development, airplanes or routinized surgery." Dickerson dismisses today's nationalist community, roughly as "Afrocentric hustlers" who are invoking "mytho-ancestors, so far outside the past, as to be in fables."

At some points in her treatise, Dickerson journeys into interesting, and gutsy, terrain. Her critique of the Condoleezza Rice predicament is illuminating and saddening. I've written about my crush on the National Security Advisor A National Security Advisor serves as the chief advisor to a national government on matters of security. He or she is not usually a member of the cabinet but is usually a member of various military or security councils.  and her counter-intuitive allure. But I suspect that Dickerson's opinion, even in its overstated form, is closer to the truth. "To white men, [Rice] is not a woman. To black men, she's not a fuckable woman; even the vaunted vaunt  
v. vaunt·ed, vaunt·ing, vaunts

v.tr.
To speak boastfully of; brag about.

v.intr.
To speak boastfully; brag. See Synonyms at boast1.

n.
1.
 black penis cannot bridge the chasm between them ... Her having thrived is somehow an affront to the black man. What black masculinity does to white men, black female competence does to black men."

For almost anyone identified with any sort of political ideology, Dickerson's analysis is a bitter pill to swallow. Unfortunately, the book tops out at just that. For all her flame-throwing, caustic denunciations and grenade lobbing, Dickerson does almost nothing to realize her essential thesis--the assertion that "black" is somehow a woefully inadequate way of describing African-Americans. That's because, for all its bluster and vitriol vitriol: see sulfuric acid. , Blackness never emerges as much more than a directionless rant.

And not even a credible rant. Its targets are often strawmen conveniently substituted for less vulnerable objects. In the section of Blackness that attacks Afrocentricity, Dickerson ignores the legion of authors who've written on the subject, instead electing to attack Iyanla Vanzant. But Vanzant, a self-help guru, is only vaguely informed by Afrocentricity and certainly has never presented herself as any sort of intellectual. Furthermore, at this point, Vanzant's franchise has extended beyond black people--she had a talk show produced by Barbara Waiters. Afrocentricity, is surely responsible for producing its share of crackpots. But Dickerson at once ducks the jokers (Leonard Jeffries) and the more serious scholars (Temple University professor Molefi Asante, for instance, who basically invented Afrocentricity). Instead she picks on Vanzant, thus substituting a bait and switch A deceptive sales technique that involves advertising a low-priced item to attract customers to a store, then persuading them to buy more expensive goods by failing to have a sufficient supply of the advertised item on hand or by disparaging its quality.  for a valid critique.

When a strawman slides beyond her grip, Dickerson just makes a generalization and states it as an unassailable truth. "Blacks often ask what their country can do for them, but never the converse," writes Dickerson. This would come as news to the thousands of African Americans in the armed services The Constitution authorizes Congress to raise, support, and regulate armed services for the national defense. The President of the United States is commander in chief of all the branches of the services and has ultimate control over most military matters.  (puzzlingly, Dickerson once numbered among them) and African Americans who've died in every major American war, even without the basic guarantees of citizenship.

Even when veering into the realm of history, Dickerson can't resist the temptation to take extremely complex problems and reduce them to two dimensions. She claims that Africa was the source of the slave trade because it was "the least urbanized continent" and was "defenseless." There are reams of scholarship dedicated to discerning why one of Africa's chief exports turned out to be slaves. Dickerson has, evidently, consulted none of it. That's because she has no need of scholars or scholarship, and the lion's share of her sources are authors (Du Bois, Booker T. Washington, Carter G. Woodson Carter Godwin Woodson (b. December 19 1875, New Canton, Buckingham County, Virginia — d. April 3 1950, Washington, D.C.) was an African American historian, author, journalist and the founder of Black History Month. , James Baldwin) who are dead. The result is that Blackness feels extremely dated.

Certainly it's admirable that Dickerson is not beholden to any particular ideology. But in her efforts to not be pinned down, Dickerson mounts an intellectual scorched earth campaign and never settles down to stake out any ground of her own.

This is the book's ultimate failure--it broaches no new theories for how African Americans should consider themselves. Despite arguing for the uselessness of "blackness," Dickcrson presents very little evidence of wily black people should change their names. Instead she relies on generalizations, at best, and stereotypes, at worst, to prove her case. But ultimately she proves the opposite of her thesis the book has convinced me, beyond a shadow of a doubt Adv. 1. beyond a shadow of a doubt - in a manner or to a degree that could not be doubted; "it was immediately and indubitably apparent that I had interrupted a scene of lovers"; "his guilt was established beyond a shadow of a doubt" , that there are definitely a group of people in this country who are black.

Blackness is the wrong book to convince anyone otherwise. Ethnic monikers (Jewish, Irish, Japanese, whatever), like virtually anything else in the English language, never succeed as complete definitions of anything. They are abstractions applied to realities, and thus bear all the shortcomings of that transition. When the abstract no longer works well enough, people generally jettison jettison (jĕt`əsən, –zən) [O.Fr.,=throwing], in maritime law, casting all or part of a ship's cargo overboard to lighten the vessel or to meet some danger, such as fire.  it: the Italians are not the Lombards, the French are not the Franks, black people are not Negroes. People know when to change their names unsubstantiated intellectual hackery doesn't make the process go any faster. Ta-Nehisi Coates is a New York-based writer for The Village Voice
COPYRIGHT 2004 Washington Monthly Company
No portion of this article can be reproduced without the express written permission from the copyright holder.
Copyright 2004, Gale Group. All rights reserved. Gale Group is a Thomson Corporation Company.

 Reader Opinion

Title:

Comment:



 

Article Details
Printer friendly Cite/link Email Feedback
Title Annotation:The End of Blackness
Author:Coates, Ta-Nehisi
Publication:Washington Monthly
Article Type:Book Review
Date:Apr 1, 2004
Words:1630
Previous Article:Twisted sisters: the depravities of some sororities.(Pledged: The Secret Life of Sororities)(Book Review)
Next Article:Tax laxity: how a kinder, gentler IRS breeds cheats.(Perfectly Legal)(Book Review)
Topics:



Related Articles
American Anatomies: Theorizing Race and Gender.
Beyond Ontological Blackness: An Essay on African American Religious and Cultural Criticism.
Things of Darkness: Economies of Race and Gender in Early Modern England.
LOOK BACK IN ANGER.(Review)
Audiography and Black Identity Politics: Racialization in Twentieth Century America.(Review)
Dreaming Black/Writing White: The Hagar Myth in American Cultural History.(Review)
Black Male Fiction and the Legacy of Caliban. (Reviews).(Book Review)
William Pope.L: the Friendliest Black Artist in America[c].(Book Review)
A Hideous Monster of the Mind: American Race Theory in the Early Republic.(Book Review)
Ronald Radano. Lying Up a Nation: Race and Black Music.(Book Review)

Terms of use | Copyright © 2009 Farlex, Inc. | Feedback | For webmasters | Submit articles