Rachel Dolezalâs âPassingâ Isnât So UnusualPosted in Articles, History, Law, Media Archive, Passing, United States on 2015-06-16 19:07Z by Steven |
Rachel Dolezalâs âPassingâ Isnât So Unusual
The New York Times Magazine
2015-06-15
Daniel J. Sharfstein, Professor of Law
Vanderbilt University, Nashville, Tennesee
Daniel J. Sharfstein is the author of âThe Invisible Line: A Secret History of Race in America.â
Why do we care so much about Rachel Dolezal, the head of the Spokane, Wash., chapter of the N.A.A.C.P. who apparently misrepresented herself as African-American when, according to her parents, she is Czech, Swedish and German, with some remote Native American ancestry?
In one sense, itâs not at all surprising. Stories of white Americans âpassingâ as members of other racial and ethnic groups have often captivated the American public â though the cases that have most fascinated us have usually turned on the malicious hypocrisy of the protagonists. In 1965, The Times famously reported that Dan Burros, the Ku Klux Klanâs Grand Dragon in New York State and the former national secretary of the American Nazi Party, was once a Jew who not only was a âstarâ bar mitzvah student at his shul in Queens but also brought knishes to white-supremacist gatherings. In 1991, an Emory University professor drew headlines by unmasking Forrest Carter, the author of a best-selling Native American âmemoir,â as Asa Earl Carter, an Alabama Klansman and a speechwriter for George Wallace, the stateâs segregationist governor.
But nowhere in the details that reporters and Internet sleuths have uncovered about Dolezal is there any inkling of personal commitment to white supremacy; her work with the N.A.A.C.P., now finished, and as a professor of Africana studies suggests quite the opposite. Her story spins at a far lower orbit of oddity than the trajectories of Burros and Carter, yet she is attracting a similar level of attention. More puzzling still, her case has gone viral at a moment when we are learning that Rachel Dolezals have been much more common in this countryâs history than we once might have thought…
Read the entire article here.