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This Is Major: Notes on Diana Ross, Dark Girls, and Being Dope This Is Major: Notes on Diana Ross, Dark Girls, and Being Dope by Shayla Lawson
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“Despite my having grown up in the south, Portland is the most racist place I have ever lived. This is because being anti-racist isn't about using politically correct buzzwords and giving lip-service to sensitive conservation topics. Being anti-racist is about constructing a landscape that is safe for dark people to inhabit. It is not about white people trying to prove they are "woke" by putting up yard signs. That is not even what "woke" means. "Woke" is a territory of open-eyed, unsuperficial, cultural awareness white people are nowhere close to occupying; they are not even in the neighborhood. But being anti-racist in this dangerous era is something they can do, by going out of their way to make non-white people feel safe.”
Shayla Lawson, This Is Major: Notes on Diana Ross, Dark Girls, and Being Dope
“It reminds me of how often we educated, higher-class black people change the tone in our voices, like we’re getting ready to sing an old Negro spiritual anytime we quote from “Ain’t I a Woman.” Sojourner Truth never said “Ain’t I a Woman.” She said, “I am a woman’s rights.” The phrase that elucidates how Truth saw herself—an enslaved black woman—as central to any conversation America can have about the law. She did not need to be rich or privileged to do this. She did not ask anyone if she was human enough to be of consideration. Truth’s speech, which was published in the Anti-Slavery Bugle weeks after her extemporaneous delivery, was “translated” by a white female abolitionist twelve years later to sound like minstrel black English. The transcription from the Bugle looks nothing like “Ain’t I a Woman.” Truth’s speech was originally delivered, and printed, in scholarly American English. Yet, here we are, Truth inscribed in even our memories as some white person’s version of her. I think”
Shayla Lawson, This Is Major: Notes on Diana Ross, Dark Girls, and Being Dope
“I had a responsibility to hold whiteness above even myself. This made me a white supremacist; it took me an entire childhood of racist discrimination to learn anything different.”
Shayla Lawson, This Is Major: Notes on Diana Ross, Dark Girls, and Being Dope