Black, White, and Jewish: Autobiography of a Shifting SelfIn a memoir about the power of race to share one's personal identity, the daughter of Jewish father and African-American mother recalls her confusing but ultimately rewarding life lived between two conflicting ethnic identities. When Mel Leventhal married Alice Walker during the civil rights movement in the late 1960s, his mother declared him dead and did not reconcile until after the birth of her first grandchild. After Mel and Alice divorced, their daughter, Rebecca, alternated homes every two years, spending time in Mississippi, Brooklyn, San Francisco's Haight Ashbury, Washington, D.C., the Bronx, and suburban Westchester. With each new place came a new identity and desperate attempts to fit in: as white or black, as Puerto Rican or Jewish, as a party girl, a fighter, or a lover. Confused, and mostly alone, she turned to sex, drugs, books, and a cast of dangerous and thrilling characters. Black, White, and Jewish is the story of a child's unique struggle for identity and home when nothing in her world told her who she was or where she belonged. Poetic reflections on memory, time, and identity punctuate this gritty exploration of race and sexuality. Rebecca Walker has taken up the lineage of her mother, Alice, whose last name she chose to carry, and has written a lucid and inventive memoir that marks the launch of a major new literary talent. |
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Page 18
... pick me up . Mrs. Cor- nelius's school is in her basement , which she has renovated with bright fluorescent lights , stick - down squares of yellow and white linoleum , and fake dark wood paneling . Every day at lunchtime at Mrs ...
... pick me up . Mrs. Cor- nelius's school is in her basement , which she has renovated with bright fluorescent lights , stick - down squares of yellow and white linoleum , and fake dark wood paneling . Every day at lunchtime at Mrs ...
Page 63
... pick me up on weekends . They might as well have told me we were moving to live with penguins on the North Pole , but I nod my head and help Mama pack books and generally move as if nothing is wrong , as if there isn't this big crack in ...
... pick me up on weekends . They might as well have told me we were moving to live with penguins on the North Pole , but I nod my head and help Mama pack books and generally move as if nothing is wrong , as if there isn't this big crack in ...
Page 121
... picking the red one , but I do it anyway . They bring me there and tell me to pick it out and so I pick a red one and we put it into our little car and bring it home . When I'm not riding my bike , I keep it in the walk - in closet with ...
... picking the red one , but I do it anyway . They bring me there and tell me to pick it out and so I pick a red one and we put it into our little car and bring it home . When I'm not riding my bike , I keep it in the walk - in closet with ...
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Common terms and phrases
Andrew arms blue body boys brown camp close color comes Daddy dark door drives everything eyes face father feel floor friends front girls give goes Grandma green hair hand hard head hear hold imagine inside Jewish keep kids kind kitchen late later laugh leave legs Lena light Lisa listen living look Mama means meet Michael mind mother move never night parents pick play pull pushing remember says shirt side Sing sister skin smile sometimes stand starts stay stepmother stop street sure talk tell thing told trying turn Uncle waiting walk wall watch wearing whole window woman women write yellow
References to this book
Grassroots: A Field Guide for Feminist Activism Jennifer Baumgardner,Amy Richards No preview available - 2005 |