[On July
11th, 1960 Harper Lee’s novel To Kill a
Mockingbird was first published. One of the most
taught books in American classrooms, Mockingbird
offers (among other things) a flawed but vital representation of race in American
society and history. So this week I’ll AmericanStudy a handful of such complex
racial representations, leading up to a weekend post on mystery fiction and
race!]
On two swelting
interracial romances that work particularly well in combination.
I don’t have hard proof for this,
but I believe that when we Americans think and talk about interracial
relationships, we do so first and foremost, and perhaps much of the time solely,
through the lens of black and white. As is often the case, my starting point
for this idea is my own perspective, my own engagement with such simplifying
national narratives—despite my past interracial marriage to someone whose
identity falls outside of that binary, I believe that I do tend to link the
topic explicitly and consistently to issues of black and white (as illustrated
by an
earlier post on cultural representations of controversial issues, where I
mentioned Guess Who’s Coming to Dinner and All in the Family/The Jeffersons in relation to interracial relationships). And
moving beyond my own individual perspective, I would cite two quick (and very
distinct) examples of this trend at work more broadly: the Supreme Court case
that overturned all remaining state laws outlawing interracial marriage, Loving v. Virginia (1967), was
responding not only to a marriage between a white man and a black woman but
also to a statute that framed the issue in terms of those two races, and thus
the Court’s decision likewise focused (not entirely, but at times) on how such
laws treated “the white and Negro participants in an interracial marriage”; and
one of the best scholarly works on images of this topic in our literary
history, Werner Sollors’ Neither Black Nor White Yet Both: Thematic
Explorations of Interracial Literature (1997), likewise focuses (as its
title indicates) on those two racial identities and communities.
The respective prominence of two films
released within a year of one another, Spike Lee’s Jungle Fever (1991) and Mira Nair’s Mississippi Masala (1992), provides another illustration of
this trend, as well as an opportunity to move beyond any one understanding of
interracial marriage and toward a more meaningful analysis of the issue in
American culture and identity more broadly. Both films were successful at the
(domestic) box office, especially in relationship to their respective budgets
and releases: Lee’s film grossed $32.5 million, on a budget of roughly $14
million and a wide release; Nair’s grossed $7.3 million, on a budget of under
$1 million and a pretty limited release. Both similarly received prestigious
recognition from film festivals and awards ceremonies dedicated to supporting
independent films: Nair’s triumphed at the Venice Film Festival and won an
Independent Spirit Award (among others); Lee’s won at Cannes and a New York
Film Critics Circle Award (ditto). Yet it seems clear to me that Lee’s film has
lasted in our public consciousness in a way that Nair’s has not. While there
are any number of plausible factors for that difference, many of which have
little to do with race—Lee was only two years removed from Do the Right Thing (1989), the film that had put him on the map
in a major way, while Nair had directed only one other, relatively unknown
feature film, Salaam Bombay! (1988); Lee’s film
featured a star-making, award-winning turn from Samuel L. Jackson as a
mercurial crack addict (although Nair’s film did star Denzel Washington in an
award-winning role, just two years after winning an Oscar for Glory, so this factor doesn’t quite hold
up)—I think it’s fair to say that Lee’s portrayal of a romance between an
African-American architect and an Italian-American secretary tapped into our
dominant narratives about interracial relationships much more fully than Nair’s
depiction of a Ugandan-Indian-American motel employee falling for an
African-American carpet cleaner.
One could get plenty of mileage
trying to figure out which factors have most contributed to the two films’
respective legacies (or, quite possibly, discovering that I’m wrong about those
legacies), but again and as usual my ideal would be a different and I believe
more broadly productive emphasis: what we can gain by watching both films, not
only individually but also as a pair of contemporaneous cultural
representations of interracial relationships in the closing decade of the 20th
century. And I think that both are particularly interesting, and particularly
if complicatedly interconnected, in their depictions of the protagonists’
families and social networks. I don’t mean just how those families and networks
respond to the interracial relationships themselves—certainly the
near-universal judgments and critiques from all three (or four, if New York
African American is considered distinct from Mississippi African American)
cultural communities are telling, but I think the films are at least as
interesting in how they construct the complex worlds of their respective
settings and the familial and social networks within them. That means in each
case both a kind of immigrant community (very literally and recently for the
Ugandan Indian family in Mississippi;
more as a vibrant and ongoing heritage for the Italian Americans in Jungle) and a homegrown African American
one, but also includes other social and cultural factors—such as drug culture
or the rise of an African American urban middle class in Jungle and the dictatorship and impact of Idi Amin or African
American life in the post-Civil Rights South in Mississippi—that add significant layers and complications to any
black and white vision of these different communities.
Next
representation tomorrow,
Ben
PS. What do you
think? Other representations of race you’d highlight?
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