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The Autobiography of an Ex-Coloured Man
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September 2015- The Autobiography of an Ex-Colored Man by James Weldon Johnson


I finished a factual book on black people in art, music, theatre and literature from the 1700s - early 1900s recently (check my 'read' list) which if you have not read, I highly recommend that you both do. Especially the detailed bibliography.
I will definitely go back to that list.

Has anyone else got the edition with the Gates introduction? I remember reading another short book where he had written a massive introduction which was almost as long as the book, which was very interesting, so I was rather hoping for the same again here!


I totally forgot it was September already. I'll be starting this one soon!


I do have the 1912 preface in my paperback too. There's also a "note on the text" saying that in the 1927 edition some spellings were changed by the publisher, Knopf, and in particular the UK spelling of "coloured" was used. Some editions still use this spelling.




I thought he must have some connection to music, as he writes about this so well in the novel.




I can see what he means, but it hadn't struck me that way when reading the book - I felt more that he had to be good at many different things so that the book can be so wide-ranging.
Also there are some things he isn't particularly good at, such as gambling!


I was noticing that he seems good at everything (speaking Spanish better than the Cubans, really?), but I do agree with the last comment (Roisin? Sorry, can't look while replying on my phone) that he kind of has to be.
I'm really enjoying this. Thanks for the nomination, Pink. It's one I'd never heard of before. I'm really glad to be reading it.

Hhm, in this article he starts out by saying the hero needed to be a conceited ass, but then he gives a great account of the reasons why a strong and talented narrator made this book so good. I'm not sure I agree he was conceited, I thought he was more of a talented man, though certainly flawed and not nearly as exceptional as Johnson himself.


This was still a dangerous time for black people, particularly in the South. I think the lynching of a woman and her children from a bridge, which clearly had an impact on Woody Guthrie, who wrote an anti-lynching songs and his father was involved in this lynching, I think happened a year before the publication of this. I think??





I'm up to chapter 4. I haven't gotten to his speaking Spanish yet. The comments make me think of how even now African Americans or women of any color have to work twice as hard to be thought of as not nearly good enough.


You are right, black people do have to work quite often twice as hard to be seen as successful or taken seriously.

www.youtube.com/watch?v=1m-4qxz08So
Do try to watch it if you have not seen it. Very good!

Found the above article on white people passing for black. Quite interesting. In America this makes sense especially when it was illegal in some state to be married to someone who was black.
Something that occurred to my husband when reading some very vitriolic comments about Ms Dolezal by Piers Morgan, was the negativity towards looking naturally black and how this isn't valued, or considered beautiful. Lusitania Nyongo has meant that some ad campaigns do feature naturally black looking women. So much was made about her trying to look black, but do people pass judgement on black women trying to look, white? Through relaxing hair and skin lightening products.

Not to mention focusing on inner beauty, rather than externals...
I was amazed watching the trailer that Roisin posted....human hair is India's #1 export??!
My daughter was married to an Indian for a while and knew many Indian and Pakistani women. Without exception, they used skin lightening products. They were already so beautiful, but felt compelled to look whiter.
Too bad we can't love ourselves as we are.
OK, off my soapbox now.
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Enjoy!