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Shame On Me

di Tessa McWatt

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Interrogating our ideas of race through the lens of her own multi-racial identity, critically acclaimed novelist Tessa McWatt turns her eye on herself, her body and this world in a powerful new work of non-fiction. Tessa McWatt has been called Susie Wong, Pocahontas and "black bitch," and has been judged not black enough by people who assume she straightens her hair. Now, through a close examination of her own body--nose, lips, hair, skin, eyes, ass, bones and blood--which holds up a mirror to the way culture reads all bodies, she asks why we persist in thinking in terms of race today when racism is killing us.      Her grandmother's family fled southern China for British Guiana after her great uncle was shot in his own dentist's chair during the First Sino-Japanese War. McWatt is made of this woman and more: those who arrived in British Guiana from India as indentured labour and those who were brought from Africa as cargo to work on the sugar plantations; colonists and those whom colonialism displaced. How do you tick a box on a census form or job application when your ancestry is Scottish, English, French, Portuguese, Indian, Amerindian, African and Chinese? How do you finally answer a question first posed to you in grade school: "What are you?" And where do you find a sense of belonging in a supposedly "post-racial" world where shadism, fear of blackness, identity politics and call-out culture vie with each other noisily, relentlessly and still lethally?      Shame on Me is a personal and powerful exploration of history and identity, colour and desire from a writer who, having been plagued with confusion about her race all her life, has at last found kinship and solidarity in story.… (altro)
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I'm as white as the driven snow so I can never understand what brown, black, and other people of colour experience. But books like this one can give an insight into that experience and I applaud Tess McWatt for writing it.

Tessa grew up in Toronto in a family that had emigrated from Guyana (formerly called British Guiana) to Canada. McWatt has a varied ethnic background (Scottish, African, Chinese, Portuguese, Indian, Arawak) but because of her dark skin and negroid features she is often classified as black. And that has led to her being subjected to racial epithets and discrimination. She says "To strangers and even friends, I am images of violence and oppression." Just imagine how that changes interactions. It seems that McWatt has come to terms with her body and her colour but will the rest of us ever do so?

This was an audiobook listen which was read by the author. That made it very powerful. ( )
  gypsysmom | May 1, 2023 |
this is really well written; the structure she creates (science and anatomy) beautifully illustrates both the point she's making and also the investigation she makes into the idea of race and the idea of herself and her make up. i am impressed by this, and by her. this is excellent; there's a lot to think about here.

"But the body is a site of memory. If race is made by erecting borders, my body is a crossing, a hybrid many times over. My black and white and brown and yellow and red body is stateless, is chaos. Her body is stolen territory. I am the result of movement of bodies on ships. As captains, as cargo, as indentured servants, as people full of hope for a chance of survival."

"There is violence in making a border. There is pain in being behind a wall."

"We assign values to some people's lives over others; we believe in narratives of progress that leave many behind."

"While slavery was abolished, the structure that produced it still flourishes."

"The black radicalism of the 1950's that promised to free these writers and artists through collective radical action was supplanted in the US by the civil rights movement that strove for integration - an integration that has never truly arrived, and has never dismantled the structural inequality of the plantation."

"At the heart of racism is the border. And yet migration is part of what makes us human. From the movement of homo erectus out of Africa across Eurasia almost two million years ago through industrialization, war, famine, partition, and to the current unfathomable refugee crisis around the world, we move therefore we are. And borders create the 'us' and 'them' that is the seed of war."

"Skin as a marker of race is a false border, merely an illusion of a border between us and the outside world, between us and other bodies."

"...racial blackness was only possible because of the white state of mind that feared it most."

"'The master's tools will never dismantle the master's house.' -- Audre Lorde"

"Reversing economic oppression exposes one of the origins of racism: a basic assertion that there is not enough to go around, resulting in the belief that some must have less than others. Why does race exist? To do the accounting for who will have more and who will have less."

"'You have to act as if it were possible to radically transform the world, and you have to do it all the time.' -- Angela Davis" ( )
1 vota overlycriticalelisa | Jun 29, 2020 |
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Tessa McWatt is a Guyanese-born novelist, essayist, librettist and professor of creative writing at the University of East Anglia. Shame on Me is her memoir of growing up into a racialised identity foisted on her by what she calls “the plantation”, the ethnically divided, hierarchical world that we all inhabit, but in strikingly dissimilar ways. Like her, I am an expat middle-class Canadian working in an English university. But unlike her I am white – and though I know McWatt well, her book has come as a shock to me.
aggiunto da gypsysmom | modificaThe Guardian, Barbara Taylor (Dec 23, 2019)
 
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Interrogating our ideas of race through the lens of her own multi-racial identity, critically acclaimed novelist Tessa McWatt turns her eye on herself, her body and this world in a powerful new work of non-fiction. Tessa McWatt has been called Susie Wong, Pocahontas and "black bitch," and has been judged not black enough by people who assume she straightens her hair. Now, through a close examination of her own body--nose, lips, hair, skin, eyes, ass, bones and blood--which holds up a mirror to the way culture reads all bodies, she asks why we persist in thinking in terms of race today when racism is killing us.      Her grandmother's family fled southern China for British Guiana after her great uncle was shot in his own dentist's chair during the First Sino-Japanese War. McWatt is made of this woman and more: those who arrived in British Guiana from India as indentured labour and those who were brought from Africa as cargo to work on the sugar plantations; colonists and those whom colonialism displaced. How do you tick a box on a census form or job application when your ancestry is Scottish, English, French, Portuguese, Indian, Amerindian, African and Chinese? How do you finally answer a question first posed to you in grade school: "What are you?" And where do you find a sense of belonging in a supposedly "post-racial" world where shadism, fear of blackness, identity politics and call-out culture vie with each other noisily, relentlessly and still lethally?      Shame on Me is a personal and powerful exploration of history and identity, colour and desire from a writer who, having been plagued with confusion about her race all her life, has at last found kinship and solidarity in story.

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