In the world we’ve got, it’s the Black ancestor that sets the identity, because that’s still the racial fault line in America.

The “mixed race” community—powered to a significant (embarrassing?) extent by white mothers of kids who are not white—seeks a unique “mixed” identity, and Obama could be a poster child. But I don’t think we need poster children for mixed identity: we need a world in which a Black man can be president, no matter who his mother is. In such a world, “mixed” wouldn’t matter politically—we could still have our cultural identities, as many as we want, actually, us Americans with our occasional Cherokee grandmother, French great grandfather, Italian immigrant great, great grandmother, and maybe a couple of Jews and the occasional Black ancestor. Celebrating ethnicity can be fun. But race in America is not about fun or celebration: it’s about power. In the world we’ve got, it’s the Black ancestor that sets the identity, because that’s still the racial fault line in America.

Barbara Katz Rothman, “Obama’s Mixed Heritage: A Mother’s Perspective,” Beacon Broadside, February 14, 2008. http://www.beaconbroadside.com/broadside/2008/02/obamas-mixed-he.html.

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