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Blackness Primer Revisited

Writer John McWhorter defends fried chicken, dancing and Ebonics.

Getty Images for Meet the Press
According to John McWhorter, there are certain practices and traditions that are undeniably black -- like loving fried chicken and dancing -- that black people should not be ashamed of.
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Feb. 28, 2008 -- My recent piece on a definition of blackness seems to have created some misunderstandings. Many seem to think that if all people of African descent do not exhibit a cultural trait, then there are no grounds for designating that trait "black."

Upon which I note: ostriches do not fly; bats do. Does this mean that we are "stereotyping" in making the generalization that birds fly?

Of course not. Most birds fly. My quick list of some traits that can be considered "black" was based on the same logic. That is: There are definable cultural characteristics and behaviors that link black people to one another culturally, and this complex of characteristics and behaviors can be designated "black culture." This particular complex of characteristics and behaviors does not describe Jewish people or Armenians. It describes black Americans.

Black English was created by black people; most black people speak it to some extent. If there were no black Americans there would be no Black English. It is a black cultural trait.

Christianity is a bedrock of cultural blackness. There are, of course, Black Muslims, but not as many as Christians. Barack Obama was counseled by black ministers that if he was to have credibility in the community where he was organizing, he would have to join a church. Their counsel would seem to suggest that Christianity plays a central role in black culture. Were they "stereotyping" black culture? Christianity played a central role in the Civil Rights movement: that is, the black people with most influence over the community were Christian ministers.

In the program to the original Broadway production of the musical Hairspray, six of the eleven black cast members thanked God (not Allah) for their success.  One the 24 white cast members, only one did that. This was another indication that Christian faith plays a central role in black culture – unless for some reason white actors have a commitment to suppressing evidence of their faith in their program bios, which obviously they do not.

Or: in the film of Waiting to Exhale, there is a quick exterior sequence of the protagonists leaving church on Sunday, despite that the movie is not about religion. Think about how much less likely that shot would be in the latest film with people like Drew Barrymore, Julia Roberts, or Katie Holmes. If they were seen leaving church – especially four characters together – then the movie would likely be about the church in some way. In Waiting to Exhale, that sequence was a nice touch of authenticity – in that Christianity is part of the warp and woof of the culture.

Fried chicken is a part of black culture. It was created in the South, and black Americans once mostly lived in the South. Naturally, fried chicken would remain popular with black people. In addition, black people helped develop its seasoning, and ate it especially often because slaves were only allowed to keep chickens.

Its popularity lives on. Fried chicken is much more likely to be served at a black event than a white one outside of the South, and thank God for that. People offended to read that chicken has something to do with black culture are claiming that soul food is not black food. Excuse me?

Is there a certain shame in some of these traditions? I, for one, am ashamed of none of them.

I am quite the fan of fried chicken and anybody who thinks I hate hip-hop might want to take a peek my book, All About the Beat, coming out later this year.

Ebonics, as I have written, is not "bad grammar."

And as to dancing, I remember how in college black parties were more about dancing than about excessive drinking. I thought that was good. Dancing is more central to black culture than to white culture; it is taught early and passed on. This is good. The book that gets this across most effectively that I am aware of is this one.

I sense that many respondents to what I wrote don't like the idea of being put in a box. Okay, but I did not intend it to be a complete listing of blackness. Nor did I intend that such a  list could possibly be the totality of any individual human being.

Those traits would be, simply, the black traits about them, indications of their membership in black culture.

Yet I might add that I'm not sure why my list would necessarily be considered a "box." If all black people actually did, somehow, display all the listed traits, I would consider it wonderful.

However, all black people do not display all of these traits to an equal degree, and if there were a complete list of cultural black traits, again, black people would participate in them to differing degrees.

Many readers seem to think that I was reading black people out of being "really black" if they did not participate in all of these traits, or one or two of them. However, if it's important that we are wary of "stereotyping," it is equally important to be wary of binary thinking: It's not that one is either black or not; my very point was that it is a continuum.

Greater comfort with that continuum would mean that, for example, if Newark Mayor Cory Booker runs for president one day no one will be musing grimly about whether he is "black enough" because of his  background.

As to the idea that cultural blackness is a matter of being aware of and dealing with white people perceptions of us, I'm not with it. That, to me, is too glum, to serve as a useful self-definition. More to the point is James Weldon Johnson's watch-cry: "I will not let prejudice or any of its attendant humiliations and injustices bear me down to spiritual defeat. My inner life is mine, and I will defend and maintain its integrity against the forces of hell."

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Blackness Primer Revisited

Member Comments

  • Posted By:
    Genna at 03/24/2008 1:32:15 PM
    Comment:
    This article and the response to the earlier one reminds me of a conversation I had at work about Christianity. I refused to define or to accept a definition of Christianity if it let gay and *** people out. The argument was counterintuitive to me. If you accept that this basic premise than you can exclude those that don't adhere to that premise.

    Here you say blackness is a continuum, you are neither black or not black based on adherence to a core premise or set of propositions. I can agree with that. There is a diversity in black circles that I had to learn coming from a majority high school, going into a HBCU, and leaving to attend a majority graduate institution. I had incredible misfortune thinking everyone was black when I went to work thereafter.

    It makes sense to understand all aspects of blackness if we are going to be functional. I liked this piece.
  • Posted By:
    jesus christ was a black man at 03/20/2008 2:30:00 PM
    Comment:
    Deep-frying originated in Africa, for what it's worth. Apparently the Scottish in the American south deep-fryed their chicken, but they likely had adopted it from Africa previous to their migration to the New World. Cetainly, the spicy element in fried chicken was directly African.
  • Posted By:
    jesus christ was a black man at 03/20/2008 12:25:58 PM
    Comment:
    Deep-frying originated in Africa, for what it's worth. Apparently the Scottish in the American south deep-fryed their chicken, but they likely had adopted it from Africa previous to their migration to the New World. Cetainly, the spicy element in fried chicken was directly African.
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