Skip Navigation
Cancel
[ Views ]

Fear of a Non-Black Planet

Morehouse graduated its first white valedictorian. Welcome to the new black consciousness.

Type Size

June 5, 2008--Joshua Packwood's march across the stage as Morehouse College's first white valedictorian left a trail of fiery online commentary from African Americans, filled with consternation, anger and fear. For some, white participation and success in the black world means the failure and even end of blackness. For me, Packwood's successes are but a part of a larger global movement toward multicultural pluralism. 

The backlash from blacks is tinged with paranoia. In a recent op-ed, NPR's News and Notes commentator Jasmyne Cannick paired Packwood with Ellie Gunderson, the white president of Georgetown's NAACP chapter, suggesting that the prominence of whites in black institutions endangers the vitality and uniqueness of black culture and signals a failure in black performance. The article describes a fear of invasion and cultural dilution—one that is not entirely different from that of white supremacists who claimed that they must protect the sanctity of white institutions.  

In some ways, the defensive pose is understandable. Black consciousness is rooted in the need for oppositional ideologies, developed to protect the community from the ignominy and violence resulting from racism. The Harlem Renaissance, negritude, the Black Arts and Black Power movements all sought to affirm the value of black and African culture, heritage and identity. In his essay "Orphée Noir," the French philosopher Jean-Paul Sartre identified negritude as a sort of "anti-racist racism."  

Black consciousness is still important; however, the problem arises when the movement becomes rigid and institutionalized, losing the potential of what would otherwise be more inclusive and uplifting crusades. The xenophobia expressed by some black commentators on the Web has no place in the postmodern world, especially for blacks who have been particularly excluded. Sartre predicted that racism and negritude would eventually resolve the persisting contradictions. In other words, the black institutions that were developed to serve blacks in ways that had been denied them by white institutions would eventually collide with those very same original structures of exclusion. This is exactly what has happened in the case of Joshua Packwood. This white American moves freely in a black context, and Morehouse, a black institution, maintains its identity while producing hybrid leaders suitable for a pluralistic world.  

History has left us all with overlapping identities and realities. Ethnicity in today's world is more like a spectrum whose edges bleed into each other with no beginning and no end. Technology, capital and people traverse the world's borders every day. Culture gets transported in carry-ons. The desire to preserve some concept of a group's purity in today's globalized society is absurd. Far from losing something in these new, hybrid developments, blacks continue to be a part of the global process of cultural diffusion.  

We shouldn't fear this brave new world because as blacks in America, we have been worldwide leaders in hybridity for centuries. During the Atlantic slave trade, blacks fused vastly different elements from diverse African cultures, various European traditions and their environment in the New World, to create what Caribbean writer Edouard Glissant refers to as creolity. It is this type of cultural fusion that created one of America's most celebrated cultural forms: jazz. Negro spirituals, African rhythm and black vernacular expressions were filtered through European instrumentation and harmony to create what is known the world over as one of the coolest musical genres.  

Today, elements of black hybrid culture have ceased being niche phenomena and have seeped into mainstream popular culture, leading other groups around the world to adopt "black" practices. Hip-hop, for instance, is a dominant cultural force everywhere from Moscow to Casablanca to São Paolo. Whether the influence is positive or not can be debated, but the position of black people at the forefront of global cultural production cannot be denied.  

Packwood's success at Morehouse does not signal a reversal or decline in black success. At Morehouse, a school that consistently has at least one Rhodes' scholar finalist each year, graduates many students directly to top Wall Street firms and produces many socially-conscious citizens, Packwood stands out for his race not his merit. Like Packwood, many black Americans are making significant impacts in diverse and often unexpected places.  

Instead of worrying about Josh Packwood, we should concern ourselves with making blackness a positive force in a pluralistic and globalized world.  

W. Hassan Marsh has spent the last year studying literature, language and philosophy in France, Morocco and Senegal. A rising senior at Morehouse College, he is an intern at the Dakar bureau of the online news organization allAfrica.com. He blogs at marshtravels.blogspot.com and is senior editor for "The Maroon Tiger."

Also on The Root:

Saaret Yoseph  brings extra baggage from Ethiopia, Ibram Rogers charges the po-po with assault, and Gary Dauphin takes Jes Grew to the polls.

Return to The Root Homepage

Discuss:

Fear of a Non-Black Planet

Discussion and Submission Guidelines

Member Comments

  • Posted By:
    leftspeak at 07/21/2008 12:14:03 AM
    Comment:
    "There is as much racism on the Black side as the white" Do you really believe that! Tell me the Black equivalent of SLAVERY, JIM CROW, LYNCHING at.al. How many of your ancestors are at the bottom of the Atlantic (non-literal) because of Black racism. HBCUs exist because until the '60 Blacks in the South could not get into "White" universities. You are a fool and an ignorant one at that ( or is that a double entendre).
  • Posted By:
    peterparker1 at 07/10/2008 1:56:46 PM
    Comment:
    comment
  • Posted By:
    stonelady at 06/16/2008 7:09:52 PM
    Comment:
    "Intentionally mixed community"? Doesn't that show the conundrum?
    I'm really disappointed that there seems to be more energy put to maintaining some kind of cultural roots than to building up the "American" side of society. Why isn't it American-African? Or American-Irish? As all of my great grandparents came from Germany, I used to say I was pure German. However, that idea proved quite ridiculous when I was in Germany. I only had to share that once to learn that "No" I am an American. As for "roots" in Germany, it's not really important. Knowing that one "root" was quite enslaved by some kind of cruel class system, that all came here and left the others a world away has created a pure kind of American for me and mine. My grandparents were only able to get out of rat infested farmhouse with much hard work and the WWI bonus check. There was a real "classism" (?) going on even within the family! The HAVES were very protective of what they had and were suspicious whenever a HAVE-NOT made progress,.....or received a bonus check , as the story goes! With no color to divide, something else had to be a factor, I guess.
    But the family that was grew to be large and welcoming. With all the travel and communication between WI and MT, WI and WA, it seems sort of strange that there were no connections with anyone back in Germany but there is not, was not. Unlike certain communities around here, we do not wear any leiderhosen for Octoberfest, or proclaim our heritage as having anything much to do with our lives now. There was always work, on and off farms. And gardening. It was an intregal part of survival, and certainly, my upbringing had beef roasts (my father worked for half or quarter cow on his cousin's farm-us kids, too) and fresh, canned, or frozen produce because my father, in addition to digging ditches all day long, worked into the night in our large garden in our city yard.
    I see a lot of pathetic white people around here. Poor for life-you know they ain't gettin' out. Members of my own family see no good in culture or learning. Although the bigots still run deep, I think there have been improvements in the last 40 years. My kids can't believe the open racism that existed in my youth. There certainly are a hell of a lot of colors in the upper middle class, and higher. A lot higher than me and mine. Except for Native Americans here (who are very good Americans and proud of this country), I don't see why being American is not a priority. Heritage is just that-the past. The future is what's in danger and, as the earth is fighting back all over this world, ignoring differences to solve the greater problems is vital.
View All Comments »