ONTD

1:14 pm - 02/19/2013

Django, in chains

Editor's note: Jesse Williams is an actor/producer who plays Dr. Jackson Avery on the TV series "Grey's Anatomy." He is a Temple University graduate and former public high school teacher. Williams founded the production company, farWord Inc. and is an executive producer of "Question Bridge: Black Males." Follow him on Twitter and Tumblr. Note: This article contains offensive language.



Films such as "Django Unchained" carry with them an uncommonly high concentration of influence and opportunity. Due to the scarcity of diverse and inspiring representations on screen, Quentin Tarantino's latest movie casts a longer shadow than many are willing to acknowledge.

In a recent interview with UK Channel 4, Tarantino stated his goals and interpretation of the Oscar-nominated film's impact: "I've always wanted to explore slavery ... to give black American males a hero ... and revenge. ... I am responsible for people talking about slavery in America in a way they have not in 30 years."



He went on, "Violence on slaves hasn't been dealt with to the extent that I've dealt with it."

My personal biracial experience growing up on both sides of segregated hoods, suburbs and backcountry taught me a lot about the coded language and arithmetic of racism. I was often invisible when topics of race arose, the racial adoptee that you spoke honestly in front of.

I grew up hearing the candid dirt from both sides, and I studied it. The conversation was almost always influenced by something people read or saw on a screen. Media portrayals greatly affect, if not entirely construct, how we interpret "otherness." People see what they are shown, and little else.

It's why my dad forced me to study and value history from an absurdly young age -- to build a foundation solid enough to withstand cultural omissions from the curriculum and distortions from the media. It's what led me to become a teacher of American and African history out of college. There is a glaring difference in outlook between those who have mined the rich, empowering truth about how we've come to be, and those who just accept that there's only one or two people of African descent deemed worthy of entire history books.

If, like Tarantino, you show up with a megaphone and claim to be creating a real solution to a specific problem, I only ask that you not instead, construct something unnecessarily fake and then act like you've done us a favor.

[...]

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READ JESSE'S COMPANION PIECE HERE
cluelessraf 19th-Feb-2013 09:57 pm (UTC)
We really are! A lot of the struggles I had growing up was not being able to identify myself with any group, especially in the LGBT community. Like I was never "hood" enough to hang out with a group of AA gays because I grew up in the suburbs and my vocab was very "white" and too polished. I'm not Latin enough to hang out with the Brazilian/Hispanic gays because I am practically Americanized, therefore I lost my heritage (bullshit!)... let alone try hanging out with a group of Caucasian gays, who always deemed me as the "sassy" black friend.

I was able to get over that though and I think just being myself helped me out.
queen_insane 19th-Feb-2013 10:03 pm (UTC)
I'm glad you've worked it out. For me it's about trying to find both voices and share with people both voices so that both find a place to live. They won't ever be in harmony but I'm trying to make a life based on both, and then also just be me.

We are one of the few groups that is almost impossible to label when it comes to race and I don't think that's a bad thing. I'm not saying we should strive for being color blind because that's 1) stupid and 2) ignores history, and 3) ignores what other people see of us as to say my skin looks more black than white and thus ignores their thoughts on us and our race, but I do think that's interesting.
devetu 19th-Feb-2013 10:08 pm (UTC)
"hood" enough to hang out with a group of AA gays because I grew up in the suburbs and my vocab was very "white" and too polished."


lmao, i can see why they wouldn't want to hang out you now
cluelessraf 19th-Feb-2013 10:11 pm (UTC)
Wow, ruse tbh.
cluelessraf 19th-Feb-2013 10:56 pm (UTC)
I would really like to know what you meant by that tbh. Your response kinda puzzled me, like I was trying to say all African Americans have a "hood" vocab. And that is NOT what I meant at all, so please don't think that. The select group of people I was referring to not accepting me grew up in large urban cities, NYC/Philly mostly and I grew up in a suburb of Massachusetts. I wanted to hang out with them because I never connected with the caucasian group of gay men on campus and felt I would connect instead. What I meant to say originally was that I was never able to fit in because I didn't know how to. Like, I didnt understand the references, humor or slang. I was a sheltered Brazilian, went to school with predominantly white kids and when I came home I watched Brazilian TV.. And I think that's the problem.
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