Color Lines: Racial Passing In America
BackStory
BackStory
4.5 • 2.9K Ratings
🗓️ 15 January 2016
⏱️ 65 minutes
🧾️ Download 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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