Exposing the Lies of Whiteness
www.counterpunch.org/sandronsky12122005.html
December 12, 2005
Exposing the Lies of Whiteness
Thank You, Richard Pryor
By SETH SANDRONSKY
As a high school student, I began listening to the brilliant comedian
Richard Pryor. His recent passing reminds me of how he shaped my political
consciousness.
With wisdom and wit, Pryor spoke to individual and social relations in the
U.S. His special focus was on the color line, the main ingredient for
America's class system.
Listening and re-listening to Pryor caused me, slowly but surely, to reflect
critically on what I thought I knew about blacks and whites, and the
over-all status quo. With each laugh, I grew more aware of the concept of
race and class inequality.
Insanity, I thought. Though dimly aware of it at the time, I was beginning
to question what black author James Baldwin termed the "lie of whiteness."
What? Whiteness is a racial identity built upon negation.
One is white or believes in whiteness because s/he self-identifies as being
non-black, non-brown, non-red, and/or non-yellow. This is not an affirmation
of one's humanity but a declaration of one's un-humanity.
Here then, is what I understood to be a major social truth Pryor wrestled
with in his performances. Maybe this is why when I finally saw him he smiled
without a sign of it in his eyes.
It was a sight, I tell you. Did you see what I saw?
Pryor helped me to see what I had not seen, a nothingness of pigmentation
for what it is. How?
Credit his power of superb observation. To that end, Pryor had some people
who looked like me"but with greater authority, like the cops"down pat,
versus the African Americans under them.
Consequently, Pryor's white and black, male and female, characters banged
around my head. In 1974, the year I graduated from high school, Pryor was at
the top of his craft.
Pryor's incisive routines from that year included "Black and white life
styles", "Exorcist" and "Wino and junkie". They can be found on a recording
that won him a Grammy.
Thanks for educating me in ways that my formal teachers never did or could,
Richard Pryor. R.I.P.
Seth Sandronsky is a member of Sacramento Area Peace Action and a co-editor
of Because People Matter, Sacramento's progressive paper. He can be reached
at ssandron@hotmail.com
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