Best of 2015: 12 authors on remarkable transformationsPosted in Articles, History, Media Archive, Passing, United States on 2016-01-01 00:41Z by Steven |
Best of 2015: 12 authors on remarkable transformations
Christian Science Monitor
2015-12-28
Randy Dotinga, President
American Society of Journalists and Authors
This year, I’ve interviewed many authors about moments of transformation for Q&A features in the Monitor. Here are some of my favorite answers.
Transformation is an integral part of story-telling: How do we get from there to here, and what have we become? For some of us, these tales are monumental in scope.
We may embrace a new gender, declare ourselves to be another race, or find long-elusive happiness in our final days. Or we might disrupt the world of fiction, turn crime-fighting into crime-supporting or replace old obsessions with new ones.
This year, I’ve interviewed many authors about moments of transformation for Q&A features in the Monitor. Among other things, we’ve talked about the paths from teen to terrorist, from nobody to military hero, from laughingstock to landmark.
Here are excerpts from a dozen of our conversations.
…4. Allyson Hobbs comments on the black response to “passing”
“Most blacks were pretty sympathetic, although there were definitely some who were not. Particularly during the years of Jim Crow, people recognized how difficult life was for blacks and recognized this was a way of getting ahead.
There was some humor or levity to it, a kind of practical joke at the expense of whites. It was very delicious for some blacks.
But there were some blacks who definitely disagreed with the practice of passing. They felt it was important for blacks to stay within the race and fight for the race.”
– Allyson Hobbs, author of “A Chosen Exile: A History of Racial Passing in American Life,” on how blacks responded to those who “passed” as white. (Click here for full interview.)…
Read the entire article here.