By: Randall Kennedy
Posted: August 11, 2011
In
his latest book, the cultural critic argues that African Americans
should never have their racial loyalty or authenticity questioned. This
reviewer disagrees.
African
Americans fight a multifront struggle in pursuing their ambitions.
Along with the difficulties that others face -- bad luck, personal
deficiencies, talented competitors -- blacks face additional obstacles.
On one front they encounter prejudiced Caucasians. On another they
encounter Negroes who, attached to stunted conceptions of racial
solidarity, habitually castigate as disloyal blacks perceived as "acting
white," being "oreos," "selling out."
Blacks
characteristically confront white racism with uninhibited fury. With
black critics, however, they often display ambivalence. Even when
chafing miserably from constraints imposed by racial solidarity, many
blacks nonetheless bite their tongues. They refrain from speaking openly
and frankly because the rhetoric and performance of racial solidarity
occupies an honored position in black American circles. It has claims on
blacks' psyches even as they wrestle with the restraints that
solidarity entails.
In Who's Afraid of Post-Blackness: What It Means to Be Black Now
(Free Press), Touré assails "self-appointed identity cops" who write
"Authenticity Violations as if they were working for Internal Affairs
making sure everyone does Blackness in the right way." His aim is to
"destroy the idea that there is a correct or legitimate way of doing
Blackness," maintaining that "if there's a right way then there must be a
wrong way, and that [that] kind of thinking cuts us off from exploring
the full potential of Black humanity." Touré claims that he wants
African Americans to have the freedom to be black in whatever ways they
choose and that he aspires "to banish from the collective mind the
bankrupt, fraudulent concept of 'authentic' Blackness."
"Post-Blackness"
is the label Touré deploys to describe the sensibility he champions, a
"modern individualist Blackness" that enthusiastically endorses novelty
and diversity, fluidity and experimentation. "Post-Blackness," he
insists, "is not a box, it's an unbox. It opens the door to everything.
It's open-ended and open-sourced and endlessly customizable. It's
whatever you want it to be." "Post-Blackness" means, he says, that "we
are [like President Barack Obama] rooted in, but not restricted by,
Blackness."
Touré,
a 40-year-old author of three previous books, a contributing editor to
Rolling Stone and a correspondent for MSNBC, is a keen student and
practitioner of publicity who rounds up a posse of artists, scholars and
journalists to assist with the promotion of his brand of
"post-Blackness."
In Who's Afraid of Post-Blackness,
he prominently features, for example, professor Michael Eric Dyson.
"We've got to do away with the notion," Dyson writes, "that there's
something that all Black folk have to believe in order to be Black.
We've got to give ourselves permission to divide into subgroups, or
out-groups, organized around what we like and dislike, and none of us is
less or more Black for doing so."
"The
undeniable need to fight oppression," Dyson declares, "can't overshadow
the freedom to live and think Blackness just as we please."
"Post-Blackness," he insists, "has little patience for racial
patriotism, racial fundamentalism, and racial policing."
Selling Out or Not?
Touré and his allies are right to be concerned about charges of racial disloyalty. As I showed in Sellout: The Politics of Racial Betrayal,
the specter of defection occupies a salient place in the
African-American mind and soul. It figures in novels (such as Ralph
Ellison's Invisible Man), in films (Spike Lee's Bamboozled),
in hip-hop (the Geto Boys' "No Sell Out") and in writings questioning
whether blacks have an obligation to reside in "the hood," marry within
the race or decline certain careers, such as prosecutor.
Anxieties
over racial loyalty are echoed in incantations such as "Don't forget
where you come from" and "Stay black." They are glimpsed in the
obsessive scrutiny of prominent blacks for evidence of inadequate
commitment to black solidarity.
These
fears prompt blacks, especially those in elite, predominantly white
settings, to signal conspicuously their allegiance to blackness. This
angst contributes to the rise of what journalist John Blake termed "soul
patrols," cliques of black folk "who impose their definition of
blackness on other black people." Writing in the Atlanta
Journal-Constitution in 1992, in an article that Touré could have
usefully cited, Blake complained that soul patrols are not content with
choosing your friends. "They want to tell you how to think, where to
live, how to do your job."
Touré's
principal complaint with those he sneeringly dismisses as
racial-identity police is that their disapproval trenches on personal
freedom. He wants black people to be able to do what they please, free
of inhibitory racial expectations. He wants blacks to be able to occupy
offices as corporate or governmental chief executives without being
immediately hectored as sellouts.
He
wants African Americans to be able to have nonblack romantic partners
without facing charges of racial abandonment. He wants Negroes out in
public to be able to eat fried chicken or watermelon without feeling
that they are disgracing the race. He wants black artists to be able to
play with depictions of slavery, segregation or anything else without
being indicted for defaming Afro-America.
Call the Blackness Police
Touré
rightly assails principles or tactics that impose wrongful constraints
on blacks (or anyone else). He errs, however, when he adopts a stance of
libertarian absolutism, according to which it is always wrong
for one black person to question another black person's fidelity to
black America. This is the stance taken by Stephen L. Carter in Confessions of an Affirmative Action Baby,
in which he wrote, "Loving our people and loving our culture does not
require any restriction on what black people can think or say or do or
be ... "
No
restriction? But what about an African American who expresses racial
hatred for blacks? Or what about an African American who joins a
legitimate black-uplift organization for the purpose of crippling it?
Blacks (or anyone else) who do or say such things ought to be shunned as
forcefully as possible in order to punish them, render them ineffective
and dissuade others from following a similar course.
Some
ideas ought to be stifled. Determining what ideas should meet that fate
under what circumstances and by what means are large, complex, daunting
questions that warrant the most careful attention. The world is awash
in destructive censorship.
And the broad swath of cultural freedom that has been painstakingly won in the United States is a treasure for which Americans should be willing to fight. At the same time, it bears repeating that under some circumstances, people behaving in certain ways -- which includes the expression of certain ideas -- ought to be ostracized.
And the broad swath of cultural freedom that has been painstakingly won in the United States is a treasure for which Americans should be willing to fight. At the same time, it bears repeating that under some circumstances, people behaving in certain ways -- which includes the expression of certain ideas -- ought to be ostracized.
Touré
is rightly appalled by the pettiness, narrowness, bigotry and
dictatorial character of those who have intermittently afflicted Negroes
with destructive bouts of internecine warfare. Hence the purgings
committed by proponents of Marcus Garvey's Universal Negro Improvement
Association, Elijah Muhammad's Nation of Islam and H. Rap Brown's
Student Nonviolent Coordinating Committee. "We've all heard and felt,"
Touré observes, "the Blackness police among us -- or within us --
judging and convicting and sentencing and verbally or mentally casting
people out of the race for large and small offenses."
What Does It Mean to Be Black?
A "postracial Doll created by New Orleans-based white artist Jamie
Hayes. Offensive? Or "whimiscally postracial" because he also created
white big lipped dolls? What would Toure say?
Touré's response is to so broaden the boundaries of blackness that no black person can properly be "convicted" of straying outside. In this post-black era, Touré writes, "the definitions and boundaries of Blackness are expanding ... into infinity ... [O]ur identity options are limitless." According to Touré, "Blackness is not a club you can be expelled from ... We've been arguing for decades and decades about identity and authenticity and who's Black and who's not and I want to yell above the din -- Truce! We're all Black! We all win!"
There
are several problems here. First, Touré himself does not fully believe
in the unbounded conceptions of blackness or post-blackness that he
sometimes seems to propound. "Our commonality," he writes, "is too
diverse, complex, imaginative, dynamic, fluid, creative, and beautiful
to impose restraints on Blackness."
To
what, however, does he refer to when he says "our"? For "our" to have
meaning, it must have some boundary that separates "us" from "them." If
post-black opens the door to everything, does that mean that anyone
can rightly be deemed "Black"? Just suppose that Glenn Beck and Bill
O'Reilly, as a joke, declared themselves to be black. If there really
are no restraints on blackness, no boundaries
distinguishing "Blacks" from "non-Blacks," then it follows that there
would be no basis on which to deny their claim. That, in my view, would
be unsatisfactory.
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What
Touré and his allies seek to escape are fundamental aspects of any
community: boundaries and discipline. Every community -- be it a family,
firm or nation-state -- necessarily has boundaries that distinguish
members from nonmembers. That boundary is a constituent element of the
community's existence.
Touré
could opt to reject affiliations that are organized around racial
identity. He could abandon blackness or post-blackness or any and all
racial labelings and groupings. But Touré eschews that option. It is,
among other things, all too unpopular for his taste.
Despite
his avant-garde pretensions, Touré is at bottom rather conventional: a
politically liberal black guy who wants to make it in the
white-dominated world of print journalism and television broadcasting
without catching flak from "brothas" and "sistahs" because of the way he
talks (preppy), because of his significant other (a woman who is not
African American) and because of his attachment to ideas that he knows some blacks will disdain.
Touré
voices, for instance, an instrumental patriotism: "We may need to more
fully embrace our American-ness in order to maximize the power we have
as individuals and as a collective." He praises "Black people who can
make the leap to loving and trusting white people" because these African
Americans "have far more ability [than others] to climb the ladders of
power." He frankly propounds a preference for insiderism:
We
need more and more Blacks sitting at tables of real power. Let's be
like Barack and get what we want from America in spite of racism ...
Let's buy into the promise of America and get what we deserve: a place
in the American life lottery. Let's come home. You can fight the power,
but I want us to be the power.
Aware
that some African Americans will see in these beliefs an ugly ethic of
racial brownnosing aimed merely at attaining robust tokenism, Touré
seeks a general truce whereby blacks forgo judging the racial politics
of one another. But that aim is futile; judgment is inevitable.
Touré
claims to accept as equally "Black" all beliefs advanced by African
Americans. But he doesn't really believe this. He insists repeatedly,
for instance, that he is no "oreo" -- an inauthentic Negro -- black on
the outside but white on the inside. In saying that he is not an oreo,
however, Touré concedes that someone is.
Touré
supports the continuation of blacks as a distinct community in America.
He situates himself in a racialized "we": "We Blacks." He views his
book as a contribution to a more effective and enlightened black
collective action. Collective action, however, requires coordination;
coordination requires discipline; and discipline requires coercion.
Consider
the magnificent Montgomery Bus Boycott triggered by the arrest of Rosa
Parks. The boycott is typically portrayed as an entirely voluntary
enterprise in which the heroes of the story wage their struggle against
racist villains without morally soiling their hands. The reality,
however, was considerably more complicated. The boycott was mainly
animated by the commitment of blacks to resisting Jim Crow oppression.
It was also reinforced, however, by fear. While few African Americans
rode the buses, more would have, had they not feared reprisal.
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Improper
policing can indeed impinge unduly on individual freedoms, prompt
excessive self-censorship, truncate needed debate and nurture
demagoguery. But policing is part of the unavoidable cost of group
maintenance. That is why all nations have criminal laws, including
prohibitions against treason.
Boycotting Clarence Thomas
To
the extent that Touré wants to perpetuate black communities but eschew
policing, he seeks a sociological impossibility. The erection of
boundaries and the enforcement of stigmatization, including the threat
of expulsion, are inescapable, albeit dangerous, aspects of any
collective enterprise.
Some
folks ought to have their racial credentials lifted. Consider Supreme
Court Justice Clarence Thomas -- the most vilified black official in
American history, a man whose very name has become synonymous with
selling out. Many organizations, including scores of law schools, refuse
to bestow any semblance of prestige or support through association with
him. He is being massively boycotted. And like all boycotts, this one
is coercive. It applies pressure to the target.
It
also applies pressure to third parties, threatening with disapproval
those who might cross the boycotters' picket line. The boycott of Thomas
is largely monitored by blacks who detest his reactionary politics and
rue his paradoxical success in exploiting black racial loyalism.
Remember that but for his appeal for protection against a "high-tech
lynching," he would probably have failed to win senatorial confirmation
to the seat once occupied by Thurgood Marshall.
Is
it right for blacks to cast Thomas from their communion? Is it
appropriate to indict him for betrayal? These questions have arisen on
numerous occasions. In confronting them now, I conclude that I have
erred in the past. Previously I have criticized Thomas' performance as a
jurist -- his complacent acceptance of policies that unjustly harm
those tragically vulnerable to ingrained prejudices; his naked
Republican Party parochialism; and his proud, Palinesque ignorance. But I
have also chastised those who labeled him a sellout.
I
was a sap. Blacks should ostracize Thomas as persona non grata. Despite
his parentage, physiognomy and racial self-identification, he ought to
be put outside of respectful affiliation with black folk because of his
indifference or hostility to their collective condition. His conduct has
been so hurtful to and antagonistic toward the black American community
that he ought to be expelled from membership in it.
Touré
rejects the idea that an African American can ever properly be
dismissed from the race -- "de-blacked," to use the memorable term
coined by Washington University professor Kimberly Jade Norwood. How one
stands on this matter depends on how one conceptualizes racial
membership. Some view racial membership as an immutable status -- you
are born black and that is it. I do not. I view choice as an integral
element of membership. In my view, a person (or at least an adult
person) should be black by choice, with a recognized right of
resignation.
Carrying
through with that contractualist conception, I also believe that a
black person should have no immunity from being de-blacked. Any Negro
should be subject to having his or her membership in blackness revoked
if he or she pursues a course of conduct that convincingly demonstrates
the absence of even a minimal communal allegiance.
Religions
impose excommunication. Nations revoke citizenship. Parents disown
children. Children disown parents. Why, as a matter of principle, should
blacks be disallowed from casting from their community those adjudged
to be enemies of it? The power of expulsion is so weighty that prudence
should demand extraordinary care in exercising it. Still, the power to
exclude and expel is, and should be, part of what constitutes black
America.
Unlike
the United States, individual states or Indian tribes, black America
lacks mechanisms of sovereignty -- courts, for example -- that can
provide centralized, authoritative and enforceable judgments regarding
membership. In black America, only an amorphous public opinion
adjudicates such matters, generating inconclusive results. Nonetheless,
black public opinion should and does exercise some control over its
communal boundary, determining in the process a person's standing as
member, guest, enemy and so on.
Keeping It Real
Opposed to the idea of racial boundaries, Touré is also against the idea of racial authenticity. His opening chapter is titled "Thirty-Five Million Ways to Be Black," an homage to a statement he attributes to Henry Louis Gates Jr.:
If
there are thirty-five million Black Americans then there are
thirty-five million ways to be Black. There are ten billion cultural
artifacts of Blackness and if you add them up and put them in a pot and
stew it, that's what Black culture is. Not one of those things is more
authentic than the other.
Recall
that one of Touré's aims is "to banish from the collective mind the
bankrupt, fraudulent concept of 'authentic' Blackness." That aim is
misleading. To be sure, there are numerous instances in which blacks'
racial authenticity has been challenged on spurious grounds by people
claiming that "real" blacks don't (fill in the blank) fence, ski, enjoy
Mozart, climb mountains, study hard, etc. These ignorant suppositions
have generated destructive consequences -- shriveling expectations,
discouraging curiosity, reinforcing stereotypes.
One
should differentiate, however, between specious and defensible notions
of racial authenticity. Out of frustration with the former, Touré throws
out the latter. Authentic blackness can be discerned by comparing it
with performances in which people self-consciously dilute their artistry
or message to give it "crossover" appeal. Whether such dilution is
warranted or not in a given circumstance is not the immediate point. The
point is simply that in some circumstances, African Americans do vary
the racial character of their performances, and the language of
authenticity is one way of noting that variation.
When
African-American artists, politicians or activists assert that they are
going to "keep it real" despite complaints that they are "too black,"
they are adopting a stance that is important to appreciate even if one
disagrees with it. That stance, like the strategy of dilution, is no
figment of the imagination. It is a choice that gives rise to different
grades of blackness. That is why it is proper, Henry Louis Gates
notwithstanding, to recognize that the music of James Brown at the
Apollo is more authentically black than the music of the Supremes at the
Copacabana.
Racial
solidarity will always depend to some extent on self-appointed monitors
of racial virtue. Touré himself, of course, is just such a monitor. His
chiding of black political correctness is itself a variant of black
political correctness.
Those
who want to maintain black community while containing the peer pressure
that makes collective action possible must recognize that solidarity
always poses a problem of balance between unity and freedom. That is why
libertarian romanticism is untenable when conjoined with a desire for
collective advancement.
Randall Kennedy is the Michael R. Klein Professor of Law at Harvard University and the author of The Persistence of the Color Line: Racial Politics and the Obama Presidency.
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