Fans of Interracial Romance discussion
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message 1:
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Channasl
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Mar 07, 2013 10:31AM

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message 3:
by
Danielle The Book Huntress , Sees Love in All Colors
(last edited Mar 07, 2013 09:58PM)
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I think it's fine to acknowledge that some still have issues with interracial relationships and racism, but I think that it's also fine to have a story where this is not the major conflict. I can imagine that while this might be a stumbling block to some couples in IRRs, I don't think it has to be for everyone, depending on where they live and how they were raised, the culture at large.
People read for escapism, and some readers may not want to be confronted with the reality of racial tension every time they read a book.
I live near Austin, and I don't see IRRs being a huge deal. While that is probably not the case in other parts of Texas and smaller towns.
People read for escapism, and some readers may not want to be confronted with the reality of racial tension every time they read a book.
I live near Austin, and I don't see IRRs being a huge deal. While that is probably not the case in other parts of Texas and smaller towns.



I agree with Paganalexandria. The setup of the story is important. Before reading Being Plumville, I would've said that I prefer that race not be dealt with. Just describing characters and such was enough for me. But, when the story is setup well, and the trials of an IR relationship are realistic, then I'm all for it.

For instance, in some IRs there are family members or friends who are overtly disapproving or racist. But what if a family member or friend isn't racist or even disapproving but has never really interacted on a personal level with someone of a different race and says or does something racially insensitive?
Or what if the racial issue isn't external but rather internal. Say you have a non-white heroine who has never wanted to date cross-racially. Now she finds herself in a great relationship with a white guy finds it necessary to adjust her long held expectations in light of her feelings for this guy. Family and friends all say what a great couple they make. Her brain has to catch up with her heart.
I prefer that whatever conflict an IR couple has not to be about race especially if it is a contemporary romance and the conflict is external. But I do think within that context an author can still acknowledge the difference in creative ways.
message 10:
by
The FountainPenDiva, Old school geek chick and lover of teddy bears
(last edited Mar 12, 2013 01:48PM)
(new)

If we're talking historical then it also depends upon setting. Race was thought of far different in Ancient Egypt or Rome than it would be in 1950's/1960's America. In Egypt as in Rome, you were either a citizen or you were a barbarian. That was it. And setting is importance to the relevance of race. A contemporary IR couple in Seattle or San Francisco is less likely to deal with the same attitudes that are sadly still prevalent in the South (though the rate of IR marriages in these regions has been growing steadily go figure).
I've said this for years: Not every IR book needs to be or should be about race. There are so many other issues IR couples face in their day to day lives and those issues are seldom dealt with. Pardon my frankness but falling back on race as plot (unless it is pivotal to the characters/situations) just smacks of laziness.

message 12:
by
The FountainPenDiva, Old school geek chick and lover of teddy bears
(new)

That's one huge reason I go absolutely insane when certain authors (especially in erotica) treat and market interracial romance as "taboo". Taboo to me is something like incest (a popular sub-genre of erotica) or bestiality.
I have to agree with The FountainPenDiva, that I don't think the onus should be on every interracial writer to make race an issue in their stories. In fact, an IR writer can tell a perfectly wonderful story without ever using race as a conflict.

Now, I get reflecting parts of reality- and racism is a reality but as the main story it gets tiresome. Plus, it makes it seem as if the characters have no depth beyond their skin color. I want to read more BWAM romances for ex. But I swear if I have to read another blurb @ how his Chinese/Korean/ Japanese parents won't accept her because she's black (and that's it) I will just quit trying. I want an HEA, sexiness, fun, adventure not a lecture on race relations.
Sorry to ramble.:)
mrsbookmark wrote: "I agree with TheFountainPenDiva too. I read IR books because I like having characters of color in fiction rather that the mainstream romances where everyone is white. I like to see heroines & heroe..."
I don't think you were rambling at all mrsbookmark :) I'd like to see more bw/am romances too.
I don't think you were rambling at all mrsbookmark :) I'd like to see more bw/am romances too.

THIS! Excuse me for yelling. I'm not sure how IR ended up being known as books about race issues, but the ones I love usually aren't. They don't touch it with a ten foot pole. I'm not against it, but so often it's either a throwaway or done in a hamfisted way I end up annoyed. But, really, I want that romance.
Well said, mrs bookmark. It's kind of irritating because there is underlying assumption that every person of color is exactly the same and struggles with the same issues.
To me, an interracial relationship isn't an issue, and my family would accept my spouse because he's the man I chose, and they have to deal with my choice. If I encounter people at large who have an issue, that's no worse than I might encounter as far as racism in society that I would deal with even if I was married to a black man.
To me, an interracial relationship isn't an issue, and my family would accept my spouse because he's the man I chose, and they have to deal with my choice. If I encounter people at large who have an issue, that's no worse than I might encounter as far as racism in society that I would deal with even if I was married to a black man.
message 18:
by
The FountainPenDiva, Old school geek chick and lover of teddy bears
(new)


Once In A Blue Moon. Her family liked her old black boyfriend more, and the heroine had to decide what she wanted in life, and that it was more important than what her family thought.

Thanks for the reminder!
Books mentioned in this topic
Once in a Blue Moon (other topics)Pussycat Death Squad (other topics)
Being Plumville (other topics)