Source of
book: Borrowed from the library
This is my
official choice for Black History Month this year.
Here is the
list of Black History Month selections since I started this blog, and also some
related books:
2016:
Go Tell It
On The Mountain by James Baldwin
And
Black Boy (American Hunger) by Richard
Wright
Other
notable books by African American or African authors:
Poems by Phillis Wheatley
Zone One by Colson Whitehead
I Greet The Dawn (Poems) by Paul Laurence
Dunbar
The Price for Their Pound of Flesh by
Daina Ramey Berry
Homegoing by Yaa Gyasi
The Fire This Time edited by Jesmyn
Ward
Swing Time by Zadie Smith
Bud, Not Buddy by Christopher Paul Curtis
Children of Blood and Bone by Tomi Adeyemi
The Honor Code by Kwame Anthony Appiah
Things Fall Apart by Chinua Achebe
White Rage by Carol Anderson
The Boy Who Harnessed the Wind by William
Kamkwamba and Brian Mealer
Freshwater by Akwaeke Emezi
Books on
Black History by other authors:
The Slaves’ War by Andrew Ward
Claudette Colvin: Twice Toward Justice by
Phillip Hoose
The Astonishing Life of Octavian Nothing Vol.1
by M. T. Anderson
Devil In The Grove by Gilbert King
Strange Fruit by Lillian Smith
***
I first read
about Colson Whitehead back in 2016, when The Underground Railroad was
published - and won the Pulitzer. I didn’t read it then, because it was quite popular, and thus the
library wait list was pretty long. Instead, I grabbed an audiobook of Zone One, best described as a literary
fiction meets the zombie apocalypse. It was a bit out of my usual reading zone,
but quite thoughtful, so I added Whitehead to my regular read list. That it has
taken me more than three years to read him again is sad, although it isn’t for
lack of trying. I nominated different books of his for our book club, but they
never got enough votes to be chosen. Oh well.
The
Underground Railroad also defies expectations. On the one hand, it is
fantastical: the Underground Railroad is re-envisioned as a literal railroad,
with underground tunnels and trains. Kind of like a subway at continental
scale. (This leads to one of the most hilarious lines in the book, from one of
the station operators: “If you want to see what this nation is all about, I
always say, you have to ride the rails. Look outside as you speed through, and
you’ll find the true face of America.”)
Add to this
a symbolic character: the slavecatcher Ridgeway, who is kind of a less
appealing Javert, and that pretty much sums up the fantastical elements. There
are other parts that I think can be seen as metaphorical - indeed, the whole
book is a synecdoche. But much of the book is at least on the surface quite
realistic.
To be sure,
Whitehead does not pull punches in showing the brutality of slavery and white
supremacy. The book is in sections devoted to certain states, each of which has
its own flavor - and expression of racial violence. It starts on the plantation
in Georgia, which is pretty much a typical plantation narrative. (There are
plenty of sad connections between Uncle Tom’s Cabin and Kindred.)
From there, once the protagonist, Cora, escapes on the Railroad, the scene
shifts to South Carolina, where a “model” town of free negroes is revealed to
be the center of medical experimentation and involuntary sterilizations. North
Carolina (in this telling) has decided to attempt to end slavery by outlawing
(and exterminating) its negro population, and replacing them with Irish and
German immigrants. (While this didn’t happen on a statewide scale, and mass
deportation was usually preferred to genocide, this idea was shockingly popular
in white intellectual circles at the time.) Tennessee has become a fire and
plague ravaged wasteland. Indiana, formerly a slave state, now a free state,
expresses its violence by proto-Jim Crow and pogroms against free
African-American communities which become “too successful.”
Against this
background, Whitehead tells of Cora, a teenage who escapes. But she is
believably human - in fact, she just wants to live her life as a human, free
from disrespect and violence. Which is pretty much what we all want, isn’t it?
At least the decent people among us?
The problem,
of course, is that the United States still has a system of white supremacy that
expresses itself in violence when threatened. (See, for example, our ongoing
problem with police brutality, and our vicious approach to immigration from
Latin America.) I think the strongest element of this book is the way that
Whitehead demonstrates the way that slavery, white supremacy, and racism
function as a system which brutalizes everyone. It destroys everyone, and makes
the nation as a whole far less strong and functional than it should be. Even
those who “benefit” from the system are degraded and spiritually violated. And
those who fight the system fare badly almost across the board. It is easy to
forget just how much those who worked the real-life Underground Railroad risked
- and how many paid the ultimate price.
Colson
Whitehead’s style tends to be ironic and more than a bit snarky. This book
isn’t quite that way, because of the topic. There are certainly moments which seem
satirical, and there is enough of the combination of cynicism and determination
to survive to make it recognizable as a Whitehead book. I also found a certain
similarity between this one and Zone One. After all, the protagonist is
on the run from an overwhelming menace, and finds ways to survive. And the
ending is equally ambiguous. The book ends, but the journey doesn’t.
As usual, I
have to quote a few lines that were outstanding. First is this one, about the
first white man working on the Railroad that Cora encounters, a man named
Fletcher who offers Cora’s fellow slave Caesar a ride.
He had met this sort of white man
before, earnest and believing what came out of their mouths. The veracity of their
words was another matter, but at least they believed them.
That’s a
classic Whitehead observation, ironic, snarky, and uncomfortably true. Another
is essentially Ridgeway’s observation about the white immigrants and their
future role in America.
The possibilities lay before these
pilgrims like a banquet, and they’d been so hungry their whole lives. They’d
never seen the likes of this, but they’d leave their mark on this new land, as
surely as those famous souls at Jamestown, making it theirs through unstoppable
racial logic. If niggers were supposed to have their freedom, they wouldn’t be
in chains. If the red man was supposed to keep hold of his land, it’d still be
his. If the white man wasn’t destined to take this new world, he wouldn’t own
it now.
Here was the Great Spirit, the divine
thread connecting all human endeavor - if you can keep it, it is yours. Your
property, slave or continent. The American imperative.
Damn, that’s
ugly, stated that way. But what else is the meaning of Manifest
Destiny? What else is the meaning of the “peculiar
institution”? And, although my ancestors didn’t come to the US until
the 1880s, didn’t we just assume it was our right to free stolen land through
the Homestead Act? Didn’t we assume that we had the right to the benefits of a
segregated society? Alas, that’s the case, from what I can tell listening to my
ancestors. (And far too many of my extended family, sadly.)
While
slavery as it was no longer exists, the poisonous ideas linger. I was struck by
what Valentine, the free farmer in Indiana who is concerned about white
hostility and considering selling out and moving west, said about the
problem.
What we built here...there are too many
white people who don’t want us to have it. Even if they didn’t suspect our
alliance with the railroad. Look around. If they kill a slave for learning his
letters, how do you think they feel about a library? We’re in a room brimming
with ideas. Too many ideas for a colored man. Or woman.
And years
later, a woman born in freedom - a survivor of the destruction of the farm -
comments in a similar vein.
She said that white towns had simply
banded together to rid themselves of the black stronghold in their midst. That
is how the European tribes operate, she said. If they can’t control it, they
destroy it.
This is a
thread that runs through our history, as Carol Anderson details in White Rage.
(Highly recommended.) This too is something I still hear on a regular basis. An
acquaintance talked about moving out of California to a very white (and white
supremacist) part of Idaho. “A better cultural climate” was the goal. Which is,
well, code for...I don’t think I need to explain that. An older former neighbor
said he was planning to move because “when I got here, it was all Americans,
but now it’s Mexicans everywhere.” We live in a nice, middle class
suburb/exburb filled with professionals and government workers. Cops, lawyers,
doctors, teachers, firefighters. But yes, I guess there are a lot more
successful non-whites in the neighborhood than there were 30 years ago. I find
that rather nice, honestly, but a lot of whites apparently don’t. That makes me
sad.
And what is
the destruction of the public sector but an example of the “we’d rather destroy
it if we can’t control it and keep it away from brown people”?
I also want
to mention two interesting scenes. The first involves one of the several
“character background” chapters disconnected from the main narrative. It is all
about a corpse stealer - providing the medical schools with cadavers. I was
reminded of a chapter in Stiff by Mary
Roach. Like Roach, Whitehead notes that the advantage of stealing
negro corpses is that nobody noticed or cared. Yet another example of the
dehumanization inherent in racism.
The second
scene is one with Ridgeway and his servant Homer. Ridgeway sees Homer being
sold to pay a gambling debt, and buys him, then frees him. But Homer stays on.
There is a hint later in the book that some suspect Homer of being Ridgeway’s
lover, but Ridgeway has a rather simpler explanation:
“If he’s free, why don’t he go?”
“Where?” Ridgeway asked. “He’s seen
enough to know a black boy has no future, free papers or no. Not in this
country. Some disreputable character would snatch him and put him on the block
lickety-split. With me, he can learn about the world. Find purpose.”
And this,
contrasted with Cora’s experiences, gets at the truth. It wasn’t enough to end
slavery. It wasn’t enough to end official segregation. Equality requires true
equality: political, social, and economic equality. And until that happens, we
will never be a truly “free” country.
Colson
Whitehead is a fascinating author to me. His writing, as can be seen, has
“unliterary” features like contractions and simple sentences. But it is also
clearly literary, not boilerplate. It is accessible, but keeps you thinking
long afterward. And that includes his zombie novel, which continues to haunt
me. I have a few more of his books on my list, and it will be interesting to
read them. Not one is in the same genre as another, which is unusual for an
author. But so far, the themes in both of his books have some overlap. The
survivor against the odds, an ironic detachment, piercing insights into
reality, and a refusal to live in denialism of how America really works for
people who lack racial privilege.
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