Passing: When People Can't Be Who They Are.Passing: When People Can't Be Who They Are by Brooke Kroeger PublicAffairs Books, September 2003 $25.00, ISBN ISBN abbr. International Standard Book Number ISBN International Standard Book Number ISBN n abbr (= International Standard Book Number) → ISBN m 1-891-62099-1 Say the word "passing" and it's like pushing a "play" button in the mind that flashes that heart-wrenching scene in the 1959 movie Imitation of Life: There's Sarah Jane, sobbing behind the hearse of the black mother who died of a heart broken by her vanilla-hued daughter's cruel choice to live a tragic white lie. That classic portrayal of passing can rouse a nasty prickle prickle /prick·le/ (prik´il) 1. a small, sharp spine or point. 2. a tingling or smarting sensation.prick´ly of suspicion, sympathy and hostility amongst people of color Noun 1. people of color - a race with skin pigmentation different from the white race (especially Blacks) people of colour, colour, color race - people who are believed to belong to the same genetic stock; "some biologists doubt that there are important who feel betrayed, or those in the majority who feel tricked. Especially for folks who have, say, an uncle who crossed the color line way back when, or an allegedly white coworker whose crinkly hair and peachy peach·y adj. peach·i·er, peach·i·est 1. Resembling a peach, especially in color or texture. 2. Informal Splendid; fine. skin tone makes you go hmmm!!! But what about a white person who finds herself passing for black? Or a gay Jewish seminarian sem·i·nar·i·an also sem·i·nar·ist n. A student at a seminary. Noun 1. seminarian - a student at a seminary (especially a Roman Catholic seminary) seminarist and a lesbian naval officer, each masquerading as straight? A black man passing for Jewish? How about a working-class, Puerto Rican woman who becomes an Orthodox Jew and perpetrates as bourgeoisie? All the passion and pain of these provocative possibilities are sliced wide open over society's razor-sharp lines of sexual, economic and racial distinction in Brooke Kroeger's book Passing: When People Can't Be Who They Are. This enlightening exploration of the many dimensions of pretending to be something else and someone else, inspires a compassionate understanding of all the whys. Its 280 pages are void of scorn or blame or criticism. Instead, Kroeger, lauded for her biographies of reporter Nellie Bly and novelist Fannie Hurst, exposes the truths of six young Americans and succeeds at showcasing the sensitive dilemmas and choices that would provoke a man, woman or child to perpetrate per·pe·trate tr.v. per·pe·trat·ed, per·pe·trat·ing, per·pe·trates To be responsible for; commit: perpetrate a crime; perpetrate a practical joke. a false life based on diverse deep, dark secrets. How much information does one person owe another? Kroeger asks. When is nondisclosure lying? How does lying affect the soul? This, after she defines passing as deliberately presenting oneself to the world in a way that's different from how a man or woman views him or herself. "Passing never feels natural," writes Kroeger, an associate professor of journalism at New York University New York University, mainly in New York City; coeducational; chartered 1831, opened 1832 as the Univ. of the City of New York, renamed 1896. It comprises 13 schools and colleges, maintaining 4 main centers (including the Medical Center) in the city, as well as the . "It is a second skin that never adheres." She adds: "With the props of appearance and talent, passers step out of identities dictated by genes, heritage, training, circumstance, of happenstance hap·pen·stance n. A chance circumstance: "Marriage loomed only as an outgrowth of happenstance; you met a person" Bruce Weber. . They must possess the face, voice, skin color, body type, style, and/or behavior that defies or confounds easy profiling. Passers stay in character no matter what." And it can be excruciating. Kroeger illustrates this with a white female teacher in rural Virginia. Turns out, the woman's romances and friendships with African Americans led a black civic group to believe she was a light-skinned sister herself. When the group honored her with an invitation to emcee their charity fashion show, the woman was afraid to confess the truth. "It was easy for me to just dip into that world and if it got uncomfortable or touchy, I could say, 'Oops, I'm white! and go back to the white world?' Finally, though, the woman explained herself; the group leader was furious. "It was ... really horrible, one of the most uncomfortable moments of my life," the woman told Kroeger. "I'm embarrassed to say that I think it (the discomfort) was because somebody thought I was black." Kroeger says she set out to understand why people would twist their lives into painful deceit-ridden contortions for reasons that do not hold. Passing triumphs in trailblazing trail·blaz·ing adj. Suggestive of one that blazes a trail; setting out in a promising new direction; pioneering or innovative: trailblazing research; a trailblazing new technique. a new path toward understanding this painful and perplexing per·plex tr.v. per·plexed, per·plex·ing, per·plex·es 1. To confuse or trouble with uncertainty or doubt. See Synonyms at puzzle. 2. To make confusedly intricate; complicate. psychological terrain that is home for more Americans than anyone knows. Elizabeth Atkins is the author of Dark Secret (Forge, July 2000), a sexy thriller about a biracial bi·ra·cial adj. 1. Of, for, or consisting of members of two races. 2. Having parents of two different races. bi·ra woman whose high-stakes masquerade as a glamorous white woman costs her black mother's life. Atkins recently spoke about being biracial herself on The Montel Williams Show. She reviews the book Passing: When People Can't Be Who They Are for NONFICTION REVIEWS, which begins on page 58. --Reviewed by Elizabeth Atkins Elizabeth Atkins is a novelist and journalist who lives in Detroit. |
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