
Passing
Fannie
Nellie
Bly


 
 



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THE VILLAGE VOICE
August 6 - 12, 2003
by David Ng
"Academics Look at the Social Phenomenon of 'Passing' and Ask: What
Could Be More American?"
What may surprise readers of Philip Roth's novel The Human Stain isn't
that protagonist Coleman Silk is black (a revelation made less than a
third of the way in) but that in 1998, when the novel is set, he still
keeps that fact a secret. A classics professor at a New England liberal
arts college, Silk awkwardly straddles a historical and racial divide:
Reaching adulthood during segregation, he finds that his light skin lets
him pass as white in a world (literary academia) where blacks were not
always welcome. He fashions a life as a Jewish family man, and with each
year, his birth identity goes from "being a hot secret to being a
cool secret to being a forgotten secret of no importance." As a friend
observes, Silk's life is a "masterful performance" born out
of necessity and sustained out of convenience.
Victim of societal prejudice? Or self-loathing opportunist? Public perception
of passing tends to choose the latter, though not without some amount
of morbid fascination. The recent death of David Hampton—the inspiration
for John Guare's Six Degrees of Separation—as well as last year's
depiction of Frank Abagnale Jr. in Catch Me If You Can fuel our imaginations
while reminding us how closely passing resembles fraud. Recently, however,
academics have cast a kinder eye on these complicated lives. In two new
books, Kathleen Pfeiffer's Race Passing and American Individualism (University
of Massachusetts) and Brooke Kroeger's Passing: When People Can't Be Who
They Are (Public Affairs), passing emerges as a complex form of self-invention
that demands closer inspection and greater public empathy, if not compassion.
As Kroeger writes, it is not "a faded emblem . . . of times we moved
beyond," but something current and vital that surrounds us always.
Passing served as a staple in literature and cinema long before The Human
Stain (whose own Miramaxed version, starring Anthony Hopkins, opens next
month). Perhaps the definitive passing character of American fiction is
Jay Gatsby, the hero of F. Scott Fitzgerald's 1925 novel. The son of impoverished
North Dakota farmers who presents himself as the Oxford-educated heir
to a Midwestern dynasty, Gatsby's significance lies in what Pfeiffer calls
an "insistence on self-determination and self-realization"—ideals
that reject inherited identity for a created one. What could possibly
be more American?
If passing thrives on concealment, then skin color is one of the most
versatile of masks. ("The inheritance of melanin is an uneven business,"
Henry Louis Gates Jr. once wrote.) The need to belong compels many light-skinned
African Americans to choose a side—thus Halle Berry is black, while
Anatole Broyard (the late New York Times literary critic) was white. But
what is Vin Diesel? As pejoratives like mulatto disappear from the spoken
language, few words remain to describe this racial no-man's-land, save
possibly Tiger Woods's self-coined Caublinasian. Passing helps bypass
this uneasy territory, swiftly expediting its practitioners between chromatic
shores. But according to Pfeiffer, a professor of English at Oakland University,
passing acknowledges the very divide it seeks to abridge: "The fact
that it is a nameable event reinforces the idea that there are such things
as authentic racial identities."
That race is a man-made construct, as Pfeiffer suggests, would render
Vin Diesel's true colors irrelevant, as indeed they already are for his
legions of fans. Still, it's easy to forget that for most of American
history, the infamous "one-drop" rule reigned supreme: Anyone
with one black ancestor was lawfully black. Having collapsed the racial
continuum into a binary structure, the one-drop rule still persists in
the American consciousness. Last month's reunion of Sally Hemings's descendants
provoked the usual murmurs of disapproval from the Monticello Association.
As the Times reported, for every white Jeffersonian descendant who accepts
the idea of having a black progenitor, there comes from council elders
an injunction to set progress back a generation: "You were born white,
and you're going to stay white."
For passers, blood remains that immutable proof of lineage. The Human
Stain begins with an appropriately sanguineous excerpt from one of the
world's oldest passing dramas, Oedipus Rex. "What is the rite of
purification? How shall it be done?" Oedipus asks Creon. "By
banishing a man, or expiation of blood by blood," he replies. Two
thousand years later, Warren Beatty's Bulworth proposed something just
as extreme, though certainly less violent: "Everybody just gotta
keep fuckin' everybody 'til they're all the same color." Is there
a more practical solution? Contemporary passers (many still exist; see
below) should check out the novels Pfeiffer analyzes in her book. Like
Gatsby, these Segregation-era protagonists challenge the status quo by
transforming themselves into what Pfeiffer calls "the fully individualized
product" of their own imaginations. In short, progress begins with
them.
------------------------------------------------------------------------
Before he was a teenager, David Matthews was already passing. Born in
1967 to a Jewish mother and a black father, Matthews grew up in a racially
divided Baltimore where being black meant seldom associating with whites.
By late elementary school, Matthews had begun passing as Jewish—first
in the upscale magnet school he attended, and then in social settings
with his mostly white friends. "It was always a question of being
allowed in," he tells NYU journalism professor Brooke Kroeger in
her new book. "Whatever I had to do . . . wasn't necessarily a bad
thing because not being allowed in was so much worse."
For Kroeger, finding contemporary passers like Matthews was surprisingly
easy: "In every case, I had a close introduction and there was no
more than one or two degrees of separation." Her subjects describe
their experiences with professional detachment (Matthews refers to passing
as "selective editing"), and most see themselves as honest people.
Some even pass by their own volition: A closeted gay rabbinical student
says that "he never felt forced into secrecy by the seminary"
and that "he was fully aware of seminary policy before he ever applied
for admission." Another subject, a gender-bending, pseudonymous music
critic (who happens to contribute to the Voice), admits that he loves
"a sense of game-playing," describing it as an "adventure."
While celebrities like Eminem engage in what Kroeger calls a "cultural
emulation" that is different from passing, they nevertheless contribute
to the dismantling of dogmas like cultural authenticity and representation.
"But passing is not for everyone," Kroeger cautions. "It's
not something you can advance in a way you might civil disobedience."
And as empowering as it may seem, passing can inflict a lasting psychological
toll. Life is often easier for those with no possibility of passing, Pfeiffer
says. "It's precisely the possibility of a choice that makes things
so vexing."
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