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Acting Black

DOI link for Acting Black

Acting Black book

College, Identity and the Performance of Race

Acting Black

DOI link for Acting Black

Acting Black book

College, Identity and the Performance of Race
BySarah Susannah Willie
Edition 1st Edition
First Published 2003
eBook Published 16 December 2003
Pub. location New York
Imprint Routledge
DOI https://doi.org/10.4324/9780203449547
Pages 224 pages
eBook ISBN 9780203449547
SubjectsSocial Sciences
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Willie, S. (2003). Acting Black. New York: Routledge, https://doi.org/10.4324/9780203449547

Sarah Willie asks: What's it like to be black on campus. For most Black students, attending predominantly white universities, it is a struggle. Do you try to blend in? Do you take a stand? Do you end up acting as the token representative for your whole race? And what about those students who attend predominantly black universities? How do their experiences differ?

In Acting Black, Sarah Willie interviews 55 African American alumnae of two universities, comparable except that one is predominantly white, Northwestern, and one is predominantly black, Howard. What she discovers through their stories, mirrored in her own college experience , is that the college campus is in some cases the stage for an even more intense version of the racial issues played out beyond its walls. The interviewees talk about "acting white" in some situations and "acting black" in others. They treat race as many different things, including a set of behaviours that they can choose to act out.

In Acting Black, Willie situates the personal stories of her own experience and those of her interviewees within a timeline of black education in America and a review of university policy, with suggestions for improvement for both black and white universities seeking to make their campuses truly multicultural. In the tradition of The Agony of Education (Routledge, 1996) , Willie captures the painful dilemmas and ugly realities African Americans must face on campus.

TABLE OF CONTENTS

chapter 1|9 pages

Introduction

chapter 2|18 pages

Blacks in College: Past and Present

chapter 3|9 pages

One Black in College: Quaker Friends and Baptist Sisters

chapter 4|4 pages

Methodist Northwestern and Congregationalist Howard: Briefly Introduced

chapter 5|33 pages

The Ivory Tower: Life At Northwestern

chapter 6|27 pages

The Ebony Tower: Life At Howard

chapter 7|9 pages

Coda: “Everybody Used to Be Radical”

chapter 8|9 pages

Race

chapter 9|23 pages

Blackness

chapter 10|7 pages

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