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The Bourgie Blues

How to live the American dream without losing your soul. 

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Feb. 14, 2008--Alana and Craig Wilson live in a predominately white, middle-class subdivision in Virginia's Fairfax County, just outside of Washington, D.C. Across the Potomac River, Terry and Rodney Jefferson reside in majority-black Prince George's County, Maryland.

The Wilsons and Jeffersons are black and middle-class. Both families, deeply concerned about the world their children will inherit, do all they can to prepare their kids for the continuing struggle of being black in race-conscious nation.

That's all these two families have in common.

The pseudonymous Wilsons and Jeffersons are real-life characters in Karyn Lacy's provocative book "Blue Chip Black: Race, Class and Status in the New Black Middle Class." (University of California Press, 2007).  Lacy, a sociologist at the University of Michigan, argues that these parents are among the growing numbers of black middle class helping their children navigate the turbulent waters of racial identity as they wade through a mainstream culture that continues to see all-things-white as the norm.

Even among educated, upwardly mobile and suburban African-American parents, there is no uniformity of opinion about how best to raise a black child in 21st Century.

I didn't have to read Lacy's book to know this. Though my days of heavy lifting as a parent are drawing to a well-earned conclusion (my daughter is a third-year college student and almost emancipated), I have always been fascinated by discussions of how  black parents raise their children. Personal experience and pained conversation with other parents assures me that this issue occupies an enormous volume of middle-class black parents' waking hours.

When my wife and I moved to Atlanta with an infant daughter more than 20 years ago, we made a conscious and deliberate decision to live around other middle-class black people in Dekalb County. We did the same a few years later when we moved to Washington, D.C., choosing to relocate in the same Prince George's County community that Lacy studied. (A note of disclosure: Lacy and I are friends and I assisted her in locating neighbors in our subdivision for her research.)

My wife and I thought it would be best – and easier – to raise a healthy and happy black daughter, if she was constantly exposed to other middle-class black families.

A decade later, we wanted to do the same when we moved to northeast Ohio, but were shocked to discover that Greater Cleveland lacks an upwardly mobile, predominately black middle-class community. So we settled in a largely white suburb with highly regarded schools. It turned out all right, I suppose, but still I wish I'd had another, predominately black and middle-class option.

This is an educated guess:  Poorer black folks don't worry about such matters. Often confined to hyper-segregated communities and limited mostly to official or servile dealings with white people, they aren't fixated over fitting in with white folks or remaining true to their blackness. Could this be a source of the frisson making intelligent conversation about class-based distinctions among black folks so awkward and uncomfortable?

No doubt, for a host of optimistic expectations, middle-class blacks – but rarely the underclass – share the same sense of entitlement to the neighborhoods, schools and workplaces as their white peers. That makes fitting in – and remaining authentically black, whatever that means – a neurotic preoccupation unique among African Americans who are upwardly mobile. Or aspiring to be.

 "These black parents are most concerned with helping their children negotiate the black-white color line, as opposed to managing relationships with other people of color," Lacy told me in a recent conversation. "They know that when their children grow up, they will spend large chunks of time working, shopping, and perhaps, living in the white world, where mainstream norms and values prevail. But at the same time, they don't want their children to abandon their racial identity in order to fit in there."

Pulling it off isn't easy.

Some like the Jeffersons in black Prince George's County choose to surround their children with role models of black people who live well because they rise every morning and work hard at downtown jobs alongside white peers. What their children see are black neighbors who live black, but work in white mainstream.

By contrast, the Wilsons in Fairfax County opt to live in the "best" – translated, "white" – neighborhoods that their above-average salaries can afford. But they drive into the city or other parts of the region to maintain ties with black churches, social groups and family.

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The Bourgie Blues

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  • Posted By:
    kreicken at 02/22/2008 11:18:20 PM
    Comment:
    This sentence doesn't make sense:

    Could this be a source of the frisson making intelligent conversation about class-based distinctions among black folks so awkward and uncomfortable?

    Frisson means "thrill," or "pleasurable shudder." Try inserting either of those locutions and then see what sort of flapdoodle's in your bucket.
  • Posted By:
    kreicken at 02/22/2008 11:16:41 PM
    Comment:
    This sentence doesn't make sense:

    Could this be a source of the frisson making intelligent conversation about class-based distinctions among black folks so awkward and uncomfortable?

    Frisson means "thrill" or "pleasurable shudder." Try inserting that locution in its place and see what sort of flapdoodle's in your bucket.
  • Posted By:
    Datdamwuf at 02/19/2008 7:10:45 PM
    Comment:
    I don't understand this need to "live black", I would like to get it. I am italian/jewish descent and grew up with the Italian side of the family. I've lived all over the US, at times in predominately black neighborhoods, one of those times was in Wash DC. Once I lived in Little Italy in Baltimore, on the west coast a Chinatown, etc. I have enjoyed cultural differences everywhere I've lived. I've also been just as happy in neighborhoods that are mixed. My family never really paid attention to the race of the people when looking for a place to live, we looked for a home that we liked, and I always found walking my dog helped me make friends :). Whether it was an apartment or a house changed depending on our ability to pay of course.

    I have found that people are people, there are good and bad of all races and religions. I wonder if you will be doing an article about "living white" or "living italian" or "living pakistani" or "living hispanic".

    I also wonder what my neighbor, who is Iraqi , would think of this article. He is so sweet and so happy to be in America where, he tells me: everyone can be together and treat each other with respect. His overwhelming wonder is that he can grow any food he likes here and share it with his friends. There are only a few black families in my current neighborhood, I didn't know who lived here when I bought my house, I just liked the trees and wildlife and that there was no HOA. I wonder now if it's because it is "too white"?
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