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BackStory

Color Lines: Racial Passing In America

BackStory

BackStory

History, Education

4.52.9K Ratings

🗓️ 15 January 2016

⏱️ 65 minutes

🧾️ Download transcript

Summary

On this episode of BackStory, the Guys will consider how and why Americans throughout the centuries have crossed the lines of racial identity, and find out what the history of passing has to say about race, identity, and privilege in America. We’ll look at stories of African-Americans who passed as white to escape slavery or Jim Crow and find out how the “one-drop rule” enabled one blonde-haired, blue-eyed American to live a double life without ever arousing suspicion. We'll also explore the story of an African-American musician who pioneered a genre of exotic music with a bejeweled turban and an invented biography, and examine the hidden costs of crossing over. CORRECTION: This show includes a story about Sylvester Long, a man of mixed descent who styled himself as a pure-blooded Native American named Chief Buffalo Child Long Lance. We refer to him as a movie star who published a famous autobiography. In fact, Long Lance published his autobiography first—the popularity of the book catapulted him into movie stardom.

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Transcript

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0:00.0

This is backstory. I'm Peter Onough.

0:03.3

Are you an African-American woman?

0:05.9

Identify as black.

0:07.7

That's white civil rights activist Rachel Dolezal,

0:10.5

speaking with NBC's Matt Lauer last June.

0:14.1

Dolezal set off a media firestorm for passing as black,

0:17.9

but she was hardly the first white American to do so.

0:20.9

Take the 19th century explorer, Clarence King,

0:24.4

a famous white man in public.

0:26.7

And then he would go home to his African-American wife

0:29.5

and five children in Brooklyn who believed him to be

0:32.3

a black Pullman Porter named James Todd.

0:35.6

Today on Backstory, Colorlines will explore the people

0:38.7

who have bent or just not fit into America's rigid racial rules.

0:43.0

So whereas one drop of white blood does not make you white,

0:47.7

one drop of Indian blood does not make you Indian,

0:50.1

but bygally, one drop of African blood will make you black.

0:54.1

Coming up on Backstory, a history of racial passing.

0:57.5

Don't go away.

1:00.5

Major funding for Backstory is provided by the Shea Con Foundation,

1:04.3

the National Endowment for the Humanities,

1:06.3

the Joseph and Robert Cornell Memorial Foundation,

...

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