BlondGirl
Aim for the Bullseye ; )
- Joined
- Dec 27, 2000
- Posts
- 2,092
Re: Acting White (Or Black)
Hhmmm... As the mother of a biracial child, it has been interresting to see the responses his color gets us.
In the winter, his color fades and no one really looks at us. But it is not winter now and he has spent every day in the pool for the last 2 months and is mighty dark. Since he is olive skinned to begin with, it gets noticed.
Interrestingly enough, I never get racist comments from white folks--it is generally black people who feel it is acceptable to make racist remarks. (Mexicans and Asians do not make cracks to us either--it has been strictly black people who are derogatory.)
Occassionally, people will ask (his ethnicity is not obvious--he appears to have features of every race, so people do wonder.) My son identifies himself as the race that is the origin of his color--but he lives in a white family and it is apparent in the way he speaks. (Yep, we have a bit of a Southern drawl.)
Oh, and my son is does not identify himself as either white or black. There are other races out there and it is very, very egotistic to automatically discount them.
Being "colored" did not only refer to people who were black. There are many variations of "non-white".
(Why does this remind me of the discussion of "vanilla" as a category as opposed to "Non-BDSM"?.....)
Angel said:You cannot possibly act white. You ARE WHITE OR BLACK
Hhmmm... As the mother of a biracial child, it has been interresting to see the responses his color gets us.
In the winter, his color fades and no one really looks at us. But it is not winter now and he has spent every day in the pool for the last 2 months and is mighty dark. Since he is olive skinned to begin with, it gets noticed.
Interrestingly enough, I never get racist comments from white folks--it is generally black people who feel it is acceptable to make racist remarks. (Mexicans and Asians do not make cracks to us either--it has been strictly black people who are derogatory.)
Occassionally, people will ask (his ethnicity is not obvious--he appears to have features of every race, so people do wonder.) My son identifies himself as the race that is the origin of his color--but he lives in a white family and it is apparent in the way he speaks. (Yep, we have a bit of a Southern drawl.)
Oh, and my son is does not identify himself as either white or black. There are other races out there and it is very, very egotistic to automatically discount them.
Being "colored" did not only refer to people who were black. There are many variations of "non-white".
(Why does this remind me of the discussion of "vanilla" as a category as opposed to "Non-BDSM"?.....)