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Crossing the color lineCrossing the color line

Crossing the color line1994

Maureen T. Reddy

About this book

"Why do white people have vaginas?" asks Maureen Reddy's two-year-old son. "Why do boys have curly hair?" These are the questions Reddy grapples with on her journey, as a white mother of black children, toward an internalized understanding of race -- particularly whiteness -- and of racism. Moving from memoir to race theory, to literary analysis, to interviews with friends, Reddy places this personal journey in a broad cultural context. Reddy writes as a racial "insider" who stands outside accepted racial arrangements, a position that can afford unique insight into the many contradictions of those arrangements. She addresses attempts to cross the color line that divides blacks and whites; the meeting points of whiteness and blackness; the politics of feminism and anti-racism; loving blackness; mothering black children; racism in schools; and relationships among black and white women. Our culture is permeated by color. And whether we can sort out racial divisions will, Reddy feels, determine whether we survive as a society.

Details

First published
1994
OL Work ID
OL3452655W

Subjects

Parent and childCase studiesRacismRacially mixed childrenRace RelationsParent-Child RelationsFamilyKindPrejudiceInterrassische EheRassenfrageInterracial marriageRaceParenting

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HardcoverOpen Library
Book data from Open Library. Cover images courtesy of Open Library.