
Passing
Fannie
Nellie
Bly


 
 



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February 06, 2004
Identity
issues: Book by KC native explores phenomenon of 'passing'
By ANNA JAFFE, Contributing Writer
People often pretend to be what they're not. It's a phenomenon known as
passing.
And it's the subject of a new book by Kansas City native Brooke Kroeger.
"Passing: When People Can't Be Who They Are," published in 2003
by PublicAffairs, looks at the act of passing in the context of escaping
injustice. Kroeger, an associate professor of journalism at New York University,
weaves together the real-life stories of six young Americans with expert
analysis from psychologists and ethicists to explore the societal implications
of passing.
"I was interested in environments and social situations where people
passed to get around blocks that shouldn't be there," Kroeger said.
"I wanted to explore real people up against those issues and see
what happened to them and how we all felt about it."
Each case of passing presented in the book is slightly different. The
stories include a black man passing for a white Jew, a working-class Hispanic
woman passing for privileged and a gay seminary student passing for straight.
There is a good deal of Jewish content in the book, which was not Kroeger's
original intent.
"It just happened," said Kroeger, who is Jewish and who grew
up at Congregation Beth Shalom. She's the daughter of Helen and the late
David Weinstein. "But of course, nothing is by chance. It's probably
because of who I am."
What ties the individual stories together is that each person "...
was fulfilling reasonable, honorable aims and ambitions," Kroeger
said. "And what was blocking them didn't make sense."
Each of the people profiled had a choice - forfeit his/her dreams or "pass"
for a period of time.
"There you are on that precipice, and what decision do you make?"
Kroeger said. "What do you do? I don't want to supply an answer.
But I do want to raise questions."
Passing in our time Kroeger became interested in the subject of passing
while working on a biography of writer Fannie Hurst. Hurst is known for
her novel "Imitation of Life," which tells the story of a black
woman who passes for white in the 1930s.
"I got very interested in passing in a pre-civil rights context,"
Kroeger said. "I found myself asking the questions: Would anyone
do this today? And under what circumstances would they do it?"
Kroeger helped organize a conference at Princeton University to explore
passing. She also started to do a great deal of reading on the subject.
"Passing shows up in a lot of academic arenas, but not really for
popular consumption," Kroeger said. "Virtually all of the writing
on the subject dealt with literature or film. It never dealt with real
people in real situations."
This convinced Kroeger that passing was a subject worth pursuing. She
set out to find real-life examples of the phenomenon to include in a book
that approached passing from a contemporary perspective.
"I wanted stories that were fresh and that we could relate to as
happening in our time," she said. "The only stories that really
moved me were those that had to do with instances of unjust exclusion,
where the passing was done to get around unfair prejudice. People's prejudices
had nothing to do with the situation at hand, but simply required the
person to use stealth to get beyond someone else blocking them at the
starting gate."
To Kroeger's surprise, she had close to 30 possible subjects to choose
from and settled on the six she felt told the story the best.
"There was always the question: Would anyone cooperate and could
I do it without their names?" Kroeger said. "I wanted to tell
stories on the record as much as possible. In the end, I had to leave
out two names. But I think the stories are complete otherwise."
Kroeger said she was surprised by how many people were willing to cooperate.
"People wanted to share their stories," she said. "In at
least three cases, they wanted to because they felt it would be helpful
to others. They felt they had a story to share that would save someone
else from their pain or would expose to others what they do to people
unwittingly."
Eye of the beholder The publication of "Passing" coincided with
the release of the Miramax film "The Human Stain." Based on
a novel by Philip Roth, it tells the story of a classics professor who
hides the fact that he is black.
"Even though the movie didn't do well, it did raise the specter of
this often not talked about subject," Kroeger said. "I got a
lot of attention that I wouldn't have ordinarily gotten because of the
film."
Responses to "Passing" vary.
"It's very much in the eyes of the reader," Kroeger said. "You
always bring your own stories and attitudes to the reading. So different
stories resonate in different ways. ... I wanted to present things so
that people could examine their own attitudes and ideas and decide where
they stand."
©Kansas City Jewish Chronicle 2004
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