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A refreshingly clearheaded and taboo-breaking look at race in America reveals our culture as neither Black nor White nor Other, but a mix-a mongrel.
Black Like You is an erudite and entertaining exploration of race relations in American popular culture. Particularly compelling is the author's ability to tackle blackface--a strange, often scandalous, and now taboo entertainment. Although blackface performance came to be denounced as purely racist mockery, and shamefacedly erased from most modern accounts of American cultural history, Strausbaugh shows that, nevertheless, its impact has been deep and longlasting. The influence of blackface can be seen in rock and roll and hip-hop; in vaudeville, Broadway, and drag performances; in Mark Twain and "gangsta lit"; in the earliest filmstrips and Hollywood's 2004 White Chicks; on radio and television; in advertising and product marketing; and even in the way Americans speak.
With remarkable common sense and clarity, Strausbaugh candidly illuminates truths about race rarely discussed in public, including:
- American culture neither conforms to knee-jerk racism nor to political correctness. It is neither Black nor White nor Other, but a mix-a mongrel.
- No history is best forgotten-however uncomfortable it may be to remember. The power of blackface to enrage and mortify Americans to this day is reason enough to examine what it still tells us about our culture and ourselves.
- Blackface is still alive. Its impact and derivations- including Black performers in "whiteface"-can be seen all around us.
- Sales Rank: #3975081 in Books
- Published on: 2006-06-08
- Released on: 2006-06-15
- Format: Bargain Price
- Number of items: 1
- Dimensions: 8.50" h x 1.28" w x 5.74" l,
- Binding: Hardcover
- 384 pages
About the Author
John Strausbaughis a regular contributor to The New York Times. His previous books include Rock Til You Drop and E: Reflections on the Birth of the Elvis Faith.
From The Washington Post
Anyone familiar with director Spike Lee's satirical film "Bamboozled" will have a head start on the themes in Black Like You, John Strausbaugh's take on the sordid history of blackface minstrelsy, the mongrel nature of America and related skeletons in the closet of U.S. pop culture. However, this excellently detailed account provides a more sympathetic examination of blackface -- defined here as "a form of racist caricature invented by White Americans in the minstrel-show days of the 1800s" -- than Lee's moralizing assessment. The less didactic approach is not necessarily a good thing, lending an often apologist air ("Why does Eminem sound black?" he asks. "Why does Oprah wear her hair straight? Maybe they just like it.") to an otherwise thoroughgoing overview.
Near the beginning of Black Like You, Strausbaugh lines up the nativists -- arguing "that American culture was and always had been the culture the first Europeans had brought with them across the Atlantic" -- against the multiculturalists, who subscribe to the melting pot theory and rally "against the evil, imperialist, genocidal, sexist, racist, homophobic, exclusionist culture the Founding Fathers brought with them and transplanted here." Though he refuses to side completely with the second faction because of what he perceives as their often ironic divisiveness, he does conclude that America owes its true personality to the collective makeup of its various ethnic groups. Americans of color will likely shrug their shoulders at this, an observation they have long taken for granted. How Strausbaugh goes about supporting his perhaps obvious point is what matters most, though, as he delves into the origins of blackface, the minstrel show, early African-American literature, black cinema and Negrobilia collectibles (e.g, "mammy" cookie jars).
A friend once admonished me for being offended by comedian Mike Myers's hip-hop parody in "Austin Powers in Goldmember," for the same reason Strausbaugh offers when denouncing the politically correct: "Surely no one can still be so hypocritical as to believe disrespectful stereotypes are acceptable from people who look like you, but insist it is racism when a member of another race finds humor in it." The author has a point, and he raises it to defend white comedians' right to find above-the-belt humor in the ways of African Americans in the same manner that, say, jokesters on BET's "Comic View" continually poke fun at the behavior of whites. Though Strausbaugh doesn't wholeheartedly excuse the harsher aspects of blackface, this is typical of his stance in Black Like You. He is confident that modern Americans are mature enough to be able to indulge in some mutual teasing about our differences, and he is hopeful that this may lead to some reciprocal appreciation as well.
Strausbaugh is most on target with his rundown of minstrel history, which he concludes by drawing a parallel with modern aspects of rap music. In 1832, T. D. Rice, a white man professionally known as Jim Crow, toured frontier towns dressed in tatters and blackface makeup -- the infamous mixture of burnt-cork ashes worn with clownish red lipstick. His hillbilly minstrel hit, "Jump Jim Crow," sparked a craze that lasted another 50 years as the dominant form of popular music in the United States, before giving way to vaudeville and ragtime. Following the Civil War, black performers took to minstrelsy for the rare professional opportunities it offered.
"Some minstrel songs started as Negro folk songs, were adapted by White minstrels, became widely popular, and were readopted by Blacks," writes Strausbaugh. "The question of whether minstrelsy was white or black music was moot. It was a mix, a mutt -- that is, it was American music." The same case is made nowadays to claim jazz as American music rather than the sole invention of black Americans.
The chronological approach of Black Like You surveys the evolution of minstrel music from backwoods immigrant entertainment to its appearance in more legitimate theater, such as stage adaptations of Uncle Tom's Cabin. In 1890 Ernest Hogan incorporated ragtime into the minstrel format with his "All Coons Look Alike to Me," creating the offshoot of "coon songs." Strausbaugh makes it simple to trace the lineage from a minstrel dandy such as Zip Coon to the current rap popularizers of bling such as Lil Jon. He occasionally strays off message, such as when he wanders into an ill-considered exploration of Ebonics. But overall, Black Like You is an all-encompassing, breezily written summary of an aspect of American popular culture usually swept under the rug.
Reviewed by Miles Marshall Lewis
Copyright 2006, The Washington Post. All Rights Reserved.
Most helpful customer reviews
0 of 0 people found the following review helpful.
Great Issues but not enough substance.
By CT Shopper
I thought the themes that Strausbaugh spoke about consistently were important themes that effect American popular culture. Though I feel that he lack of research driving economic forces behind Blackface and the minstrel shows and how that continued to perpetuate them in pop culture showed a flat view of the issue that only talks of morals. In a country where there is a large divide between the wealthy and the not wealthy it is hard to just view issues as pure moral issues that people need to stop being so Politically Correct about in their daily lives. I thought had he done more of the research himself and came to more critical decisions it would have been a better outing.
1 of 2 people found the following review helpful.
Fearless, funny, dead serious
By Harry Eagar
The first thing to say about "Black Like You" is that it's fearless. The second is, John Strausbaugh is a pretty funny guy.
There are so many themes in this serious book - no reason serious has to be solemn - that's it's hard to know where to begin, but a main theme is that blackface entertainment can be understood as youth rebellion, as much as or even more than some fundamentally racist trope.
Although "blacking up" can be traced way back, it erupted into popular culture on the Bowery in the 1830s, and the patrons were mainly young (often Irish) marginal white boys, who were under economic pressure from the proletarianization of American labor in the 19th century (a process explored solemnly and in great depth by Sean Wilentz in "Chants Democratic." Strausbaugh does not seem to have read Wilentz, but his conclusions are similar.). The same phenomenon, Strausbaugh says, erupted again and again, youth thumbing its nose against stodgy authoritarianism and dull order, as with the blues, rock and roll and hiphop.
Another theme is that America is a mutt culture,. It is not possible, in Strausbaugh's view, to make a bright line between racist blackface and the other kind. There were black minstrel performers, and in fact at some points they were predominant, and black blackface minstrel shows outlasted the white blackface.
Clearly, this is a cultural phenomenon that is not easy to pin down. Some blackfacing was viciously racist, some not so much, and maybe some not at all. Strausbaugh has no patience for either the antiblack racists nor the moralizing racists of the multiculti school.
He forthrightly calls the so-called diversity crusaders of the present day racists, and no one can doubt it. Although he does not put it quite this way, it is a question for philosophers: Who, in a country that is 70% white and 70% Protestant, is more "diverse," an African-American Baptist or an Italian-American Catholic?
Some of the book gets pretty far away from popular culture. Strausbaugh spends many pages on crappy movies, which may have been popular in the sense that they were not "high," but were not popular in the sense that many people were aware they existed. Their bare existence may tell us much about American attitudes - Strausbaugh would say they do, and I mostly agree with him - but there's a big difference between cult films and "Amos & Andy."
For example, Strausbaugh starts out with a report on a modern blackface comic, Chuck Knipp, whose character is Shirley Q. Liquor, but who also has a white persona, Betty Butterfield. Of the two, the white character is a vicious portrayal, a pillpopping Southern dimwit; while Shirley Q. Liquor is self-proclaimed "ignunt" but really a woman with few of the opportunities of Betty Butterfield doing the best she can in an unforgiving world. Knipp is not obviously a racist, but he is definitely misogynist.
In any case, not many Americans know Chuck Knipp, who is rather a cult figure with white homosexual men, and (I venture) not even many of them. It is hard to say to what extent Knipp represents 21st American popular culture.
Anyhow, Strausbaugh is right to think that "blacking up" reflects "a tremendous emotional, sexual and political confusion," and "Black Like You" does about as good a job of sorting it out as anyone ever has.
4 of 8 people found the following review helpful.
oh mammy!
By Arlee Bird
This is a highly readable book with some interesting and thought-provoking ideas. I can't vouch for the accuracy of everything presented here, but for the most part the data seems fairly plausible and convincing. For me, the first 3/4 of the book were far more interesting than the final chapters which analyze black influences in modern culture. Toward the end of the book I was anxious for it to end so I could move on to something else. I didn't buy some of the premises here, especially regarding "ebonics" and influence of Black speech on American English language. And though not too heavy handed, I did sense some sort of gay agenda wisping through some of the content of the book. Not making any accusations, but not sure what the author was trying to say about that and I didn't care to dwell on it.
Not a book that many people will love, but worth checking out if you are interested in the topics presented in the pages of BLACK LIKE YOU.
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