Being Black in America: From Twelve Years a Slave and Beyond
By Sara Niles
In the year 1988, Peggy McIntosh published a landmark essay
on ‘white male privilege and white privilege in general, that provided a
revolutionary view of what most White people expected as a result of simply being born ‘White’ or Caucasian: The title
was White Privilege: Unpacking the
Invisible Backpack
The reason this paper was such an illuminating essay in
1988, was because it caused people to take a second look as the way races
viewed not only each other, but how White people viewed the world. In the
essay, it was revealed that a White person learned to expect to be treated a
certain way simply because he or she was White; for example. McIntosh stated
that these perceptions and privileges were both “denied and protected” by those
who enjoyed them, and that those protected privileges
were the total opposites of those of minority races; that being White was not
listed as a defining characteristic of an entire race, and the White race was
used as the ‘In’ group to provide the standard for those of the ‘out’ groups or
races. Even in the year 2014, the word ‘minority’ is applied to most races that
are non-White, and ethnic groups and racial distinctions leave out Whites, with
the presumption that the majority sets the standard that needs no definition or
label.
It is now 2014, over
twenty-five years since McIntosh wrote about White privilege, and six years
since Barak Obama, the first Black president of the United States, was sworn
into office. The racial landscape has changed drastically during the past
couple of decades, and will continue to evolve and change; which leads to a
question that is becoming more prominent: What does it mean to be Black in
America now?
In 1988, being Black in America
meant that you suffered the delayed reaction of a culture that was born during the
times of blatant racial prejudices and injustice, a time when the era of
Integration of the schools was a fresh memory in the minds of many who lived it
firsthand (me included). There were many who still held beliefs that Blacks
were inferior, less intelligent, less courageous and less handsome or beautiful
than their fair skinned and light haired contemporaries; in fact, I remember
when Sidney Poitier and Cicely Tyson broke through many of the preconceived
stereotypes of what Blacks could and could not do. I remember when Diahanne
Carrol was first considered ‘beautiful’ by the standard of White America; and I
also remember when the supermodel arena first opened the doors of its
perception wide enough to see the beauty of Black female models who ranged from
light caramel in complexion, as in Super Model Tyra Banks, to an ever
increasingly dark hue of brownness until
Sudanese born British model, Alex Wek
was pronounced ‘beautiful’, and graced the covers of countless magazines. By
now, it was 1995, and the racial climate in America had undergone an extensive
degree of change toward being the progressive nation that it has been destined
to be, since our forefathers said “every man is …equal”-but we are not there
yet. There is still work to be done before the dark shadow of American slavery
and its years of ugliness, has been removed.
The last frontier: The Black
Man in America, and how he is viewed, is now front and center. The killing of
Trayvon Martin presented a hint of leftover stereotypical fear-because if you
changed the scenario of the teenaged Black child innocently taking a shortcut
home through a White neighborhood, for a blond haired White child doing exactly
the same thing, at the same time and in the same place-it would almost assuredly
have produced a different result, from the reaction of George Zimmerman to the
judgment of the jury. The national perception is still slightly tainted against
the idea of the ‘scary’ Black man; especially if he happens to be ‘dark’ complexioned,
with a hint of Africa, the birthplace of the world, apparent in his coloring.
I just watched the movie Twelve
Years a Slave, an adaption of the 1853 memoir of Solomon Northup, an intense
account of man’s inhumanity against man, and a historical time of grave
injustices against all men born of color, especially those born Black; and I
was driven to reflect upon the changing standards by which America deems one
human’s life to be just as valuable, or equal to that of another. I remembered
Peggy McIntosh landmark work on White Privilege, and realized it has a match in
the Black Man’s lack of automatic privilege; although the scene of racial
equality has drastically changed for the better, the view of the Black Man in
America, still needs work. Until we can see all humans as merely humans, not as
a Red Human or a Green One, and measure all people by the same standards, as
good or bad. Intelligent or beautiful, there is work to do yet.
Top Ten Black Supermodels: