Being Weird and Black Doesn't Mean You're Interested in Being White

Mastamimd

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http://wearyourvoicemag.com/identities/race/weird-black-doesnt-mean-youre-interested-white

Blavity — one of my favorite blogs — recently ran an article titled, “To All My Weird Black Girls.” As soon as I saw it on my newsfeed I was excited, because I knew this article would speak to me. But then I read it in its entirety.

The writer spoke plainly about being an outlier in the black community because she loves heavy metal, anime and Star Trek. She says, “I was unlike many girls in the black community, and it made me insecure and uncomfortable and even brought tears to my eyes.”

In some ways I could relate to this. My first album was Alanis Morrisette’s Jagged Little Pilland my first cassette tape was No Doubt’sTragic Kingdom. I have memories of opting out of recess just so I could curl up with a good book on the benches and catch up with R.L. Stine’s Goosebumps or Sweet Valley High. I played with slugs, loved making fart noises and didn’t know who Tupac was when he died.

I was a weird black girl and wore my weirdness as a badge of honor. I also received my fair share of bullying for being an outlier. I’ll never forget my fifth-grade bully, Ladonna, chasing me around the playground calling me a “wannabe white girl.” Despite praying that I wouldn’t get my ass kicked, I remember feeling a great deal of pain for being accused of “acting white.” It was confusing because in my mind I just wanted to be myself and I wondered why that wasn’t enough.

But Jaya’s article was problematic for me. In one part she says, “Society has an idealized perception of a black person. They feed into the stereotypes and think that everyday black people are loud, obnoxious, ‘ghetto,’ etc. If someone does not fit this description, they are an outsider.”

Related: Casually Cosplaying at Anime Expo

Throughout the article, the only traits she associates with “typical” black people are negative. She admits that she didn’t truly feel accepted until she went to college and met people with similar interests. One of the main points of the article was, if you didn’t conform to this narrative of blackness, you were considered weird. Being someone who sees both weirdness and blackness as incredible gifts, I beg to differ.

Although I was a weirdo, I was still accepted by my core group of black friends. We listened to Usher, The Fugees, Next and Tamia and and danced to their songs in talent shows. Even though I was criticized for “acting white” by a couple of bullies, I was also taught to be proud of my blackness from an early age.

I celebrated Kwanzaa, played with black Barbies and Kenya dolls, and had a huge crush on Langston Hughes. In fifth grade, I won first place (by a landslide) at my school’s Black History Bee. My mother spent hours helping me study, and it gave me great pleasure to learn about the amazing accomplishments of people who shared the same hue as me. On the other hand, I also loved rocking out to Korn and Matchbox 20, but I never felt the need to reject black culture to embrace being eclectic. Both realities existed within me simultaneously and created the curious, creative and weird little girl that I was.

The movie Dope attempted to address this conundrum of black identity as well. The lead character Malcolm gets beat up and bullied for liking “white people shyt.” In his application to Harvard he poses the question, “Am I a geek or a menace?” This question contains racially charged, hidden language that really asks questions like, “Do I identify with white or black culture?” or, “Do I want to go to college or to prison?”

Identity within a racial binary framework seems to always ask you to choose a side — and no matter which side you choose, you’re forced to tell an incomplete story about who you are. Although some parts are relatable, Jaya’s “To All My Weird Black Girls,” along with the movie Dope, subscribe to this racial binary of either/or rather than subverting it.

Related: Fashion Faux Pas for the 30-Something: My Little Pony

In their stories, black people are only valued or considered “special” if they embrace dominant white culture. Identifying with white culture isn’t synonymous with being “special” or unique because the dominant culture has never had a monopoly on weirdness; if anything, it’s been the “other” — it’s people forced to live life on the margins who have engaged in the most innovation.

Accepting black culture doesn’t equate to conformity; black narratives are filled with individuals who have created themselves for themselves, despite popular consensus. Black women are multi-faceted and there are tons of weird black girls out there who embrace both their weirdness and blackness. In many ways, they are one in the same.
 

K.Dot

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I'd smack a negro for saying I'm weird for enjoying cartoon's, a billion dollar ultra popular SciFi or a spinoff of a music genre WE CREATED. How are we the hipster, artsy trendsetting people that everyone aspires to be but then get chastised by our own people for being different? This happens everywhere but it shouldn't be happening at all over here, weirdo and art are damn near synonymous and we are the artsy trendsetting people.
 

Worthless Loser

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Call me crazy, for my opinion on this, but it makes sense to me.

I think white supremacy and the aftermath of Jim Crow caused an identity crisis in the black community. Since we were robbed of social and economic opportunities while being put in areas designed to build poverty and misery, we really didn't have much of an identity except for the identity white people tried to force on us. As we became emotionally closer through the actions of racism, we started to develop our cultural identity through music, dance, fashion, language and general behavior. Since we developed a closeness and unity, I think it was expected that all of us engage in "black" activity since it was "are" culture and more importantly we should be proud of it due to our history and other races shytting on our culture. If you don't engage in the culture and have other preferences & interests, people think something is wrong with you due to that expectation of what a black man or woman is. Other, more militant people may assume you don't support us and you support white people because you are not into your own culture.

I think the definition of blackness should be expanded. I wouldn't say it should be expanded to the point where we down with black gothic shyt, but I think it should be expanded so that we accepted those who may dress "white", (not that gothic shyt though. Nah man), may talk "white", and may listen to pop/rock music under the condition that they understand their heritage, their history and do not sell us out/turn against us.
 

MrPentatonic

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I was guilty of looking at black people with alternate interests as weird when I was younger, but it was 9/10 times because of the social circles they kept and how they came across. If I met a black dude with mostly white friends I usually assume he grew up around white people. Its a prejudice that I never really gave thought to but realizing now, it is wrong.

At the same time, I have interests that im heavy into that ain't really popular with black people for eg. programming, e-commerce and business stuff etc. etc. . I just kept them to myself and brought them up with friends I know that their interests cross over with mine.

I never really had to build an exclusively white social circle to be able to enjoy those things.
 
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