Serena Williams, Tiger Woods and racial identity in sportsPosted in Articles, Identity Development/Psychology, Media Archive, United States on 2015-09-11 20:55Z by Steven |
Serena Williams, Tiger Woods and racial identity in sports
ESPN
2015-09-05
Mike Wise, Senior Writer
Mike Wise writes that Serena Williams has embraced her blackness and found a spiritual home while Tiger Woods has been proudly biracial and found a perhaps unintended kind of isolation
You can’t miss the term “black excellence” pulsating through Claudia Rankine’s provocative story on Serena Williams in last week’s New York Times magazine. Though Serena never goes there herself, the acclaimed poet and professor takes the journey for her, living vicariously through Serena’s sass and brass. “Serena’s grace comes because she won’t be forced into stillness; she won’t accept those racist projections onto her body without speaking back.”
Rankine’s affection for Serena’s defiance is so deeply personal, she almost channels John Carlos and Tommie Smith, raising their black-gloved fists into a Mexico City summer night some five decades ago.
Step off, backward white folk.
Between black excellence and her picture next to the Twitter hashtag #BlackGirlMagic, Serena is clearly playing for more than herself and history at the US Open this week.
Meanwhile, a term not found with a Google search: “Cablanasian excellence.”
This is possibly because Tiger Woods has not won a major since the Bush administration, and he has been careful not to singularly co-opt any one part of his multiracial identity (African-American, Thai, Caucasian, American Indian, Chinese and beyond).
But now that we’re routinely taking stock of two seminal athletes of color, both of whom dominated their Downton Abbey-white sports at different times in their careers, it’s fair to delve into how they both handled race and ask a simple question:
Is the importance of a strong racial identity — especially being viewed as authentically black — something to fall back on during career and life struggles?…
Read the entire article here.