In Full Color (memoir)

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In Full Color: Finding My Place in a Black and White World
In Full Color.jpg
AuthorRachel Dolezal and Storms Reback
CountryUnited States
GenreAutobiography
PublisherBenBella Books
Publication date
2017
Media typePrint
Pages304
ISBN978-1-944648-16-9 (Hardcover)

In Full Color: Finding My Place in a Black and White World is the personal memoir of Rachel Dolezal.[1] It was published in 2017 by BenBella Books, almost two years after the controversy about her racial identity in June 2015. The Guardian reported that 30 publishing houses turned down the manuscript before BenBella Books printed it in March 2017.[2]

Summary[]

In Full Color is an overview of Dolezal's life with an emphasis on how she came to identify as "black". Dolezal begins by describing her upbringing by "fundamentalist Christian"[3] parents in the foothills of the Rocky Mountains in Montana, United States. From an early age, she describes being fascinated with Africa and African culture. While Dolezal was a teenager her parents, Larry and Ruthanne Dolezal, adopted four African-American children. Dolezal describes that "while I was teaching my younger siblings about Black culture and history: I began to feel even more connected to it myself. I began to see the world through Black eyes and anything that had to do with Blackness or Africa always grabbed my attention."[4] Dolezal moved to Jackson, Mississippi in 1996 to attend Belhaven College where she became involved in the Black Student Association. At college, she describes adopting a more "Afrocentric look"[5] and living in a predominately African-American neighbourhood of West-Jackson.[6] While living in West-Jackson and working at the local United Parcel Service distribution centre, Dolezal met and then married Kevin Moore. After graduating from Belhaven, Dolezal enrolled in a Master of Fine Arts at Howard University. In her final year at Howard, she became pregnant and gave birth to a son, Franklin. Dolezal, Moore and Franklin then moved to Bonners Ferry, Idaho. Dolezal says Moore was abusive, and she describes him at one point shoving her against a wall.[7] Dolezal left Moore, moved to Coeur d'Alene, Idaho, and secured custody of Franklin. Over time Dolezal became estranged from her parents but remained in contact with two of her siblings; Esther and Izaiah. (She would eventually be awarded custody of Izaiah in 2010.) Dolezal later found solace in Albert Wilkerson, who became for her, a type of father-figure.

In 2005, Dolezal was appointed as an adjunct professor at North Idaho College teaching illustration, design and art history. Then in 2007 she also took on a teaching role at Eastern Washington University teaching African-American Art History. Dolezal went on contribute to a variety of classes such as "The Black Woman's Struggle, African American History: From 1877 to Present, and Introduction to Race and Culture Studies" at Eastern Washington University.[8] While also teaching at the two universities Dolezal worked part-time at the Human Rights Education Institute. During the 2000s Dolezal says she began to live her life as a "black woman" and she observes that "it made my life infinitely better".[9] Although, it also made her life harder because she felt stigmatized by racist comments and behaviour.[10]

Dolezal describes how difficult it became to communicate how she identified herself.

Understanding how miseducation about race and the cultural boundaries and codes that have been put into place in American society might conflict with my true nature, I decided that the most honest and real way for me to live was to be Black without any explanations, reservations, apologies, or room for negotiation. It had taken me so many years to finally embrace who I was and love myself that I didn't want my understandings of myself to be muddled by other people's perceptions of misunderstandings.[11]

Dolezal became a self-described "academic activist"[12] joining the local chapter of the NAACP and serving on a police oversight board. She also describes some of the racism Izaiah and Franklin experienced at school.

In early 2015, Dolezal received a suspicious package in the NAACP post office box. On June 10, 2015, a reporter, Jeff Humphrey, from local television station KXLY-TV confronted Dolezal, and asked her first about the circumstances surrounding the discovery of the package and then eventually asked if she was African American. She replied after a pause that "I don't understand the question" and ducked away as Humphrey asked if Wilkerson was her father. In the ensuring media storm, the NAACP national leadership initially issued a supportive press release. However, the local chapter was not supportive so Dolezal resigned. Initially, the City of Spokane was going to sue Dolezal for "checking Black"[13] on the application she filled out for the Police Oversight Board but dropped the suit later. Her contract at the Eastern Washington University was then not renewed.

Dolezal was determined to tell her side of the story but found that despite being promised a favorable hearing at a number of television interviews she was asked pointedly about her racial identity and how she practically appeared as Black. Matt Lauer on The Today Show asked how Dolezal had changed her appearance. On The View, asked if Dolezal "was willing to acknowledge that level of white privilege that you took in choosing to be Black."[14]

Themes[]

Dolezal writes that "cultural appropriation is a tricky subject".[15] She describes it as the pejorative use of ethnic stereotypes as opposed to the authenticity of a lived experience.[16] Throughout African-American history, some light-skinned Black people have "passed" as white in order "to accure the same advantages white people have enjoyed."[17] Dolezal then writes that she "wasn't merely 'passing' as a Black woman" but "identifying" as Black.[18] She described committing to the Black "look"[19] as a way of creating a Black family with Izaiah and Franklin. Dolezal views race as a social construct,[20] writing that "Black is the closest descriptive category that represents the essential essence of who I am."[21]

Reception[]

In Full Color had a mixed reception. Brian Josephs from Spin wrote that "her writing lacks the empathy required to sell herself as, in her words, 'a fully conscious, woke soul sista.'"[22] Baz Dreisinger's highly critical review in The Washington Post noted that: "Dolezal's conception of blackness is steeped in a fetishizing of struggle, pain and oppression."[23] Other reviewers were more positive, for example Jasmine Steele from Sojourners wrote: "In Full Color, Rachel is portrayed to be a highly intelligent and creative person."[24] Helen Dale argued in Quillette that the book deserved a wide audience. "What it does do – and why it deserves to be widely read – is raise a mass of awkward questions about religion, race, sex, and identity."[25]

See also[]

References[]

  1. ^ Exploring the Joy of Trash: Rachel Dolezal's In Full Color: Finding My Place In A Black and White World - Nathan Rabin's Happy Place
  2. ^ Aitkenhead, Decca (February 25, 2017). "Rachel Dolezal: 'I'm not going to stoop and apologise and grovel'". The Guardian. Retrieved May 21, 2018.
  3. ^ Dolezal, Rachel (2017). In Full Color: Finding my place in a Black and White World. Dallas, Texas: Ben Bella Books. p. 5. ISBN 194464816X.
  4. ^ Dolezal, Rachel (2017). In Full Color: Finding my place in a Black and White World. Dallas, Texas: Ben Bella Books. p. 63. ISBN 194464816X.
  5. ^ Dolezal, Rachel (2017). In Full Color: Finding my place in a Black and White World. Dallas, Texas: Ben Bella Books. p. 85. ISBN 194464816X.
  6. ^ Dolezal, Rachel (2017). In Full Color: Finding my place in a Black and White World. Dallas, Texas: Ben Bella Books. p. 90. ISBN 194464816X.
  7. ^ Dolezal, Rachel (2017). In Full Color: Finding my place in a Black and White World. Dallas, Texas: Ben Bella Books. p. 125. ISBN 194464816X.
  8. ^ Dolezal, Rachel (2017). In Full Color: Finding my place in a Black and White World. Dallas, Texas: Ben Bella Books. p. 146. ISBN 194464816X.
  9. ^ Dolezal, Rachel (2017). In Full Color: Finding my place in a Black and White World. Dallas, Texas: Ben Bella Books. p. 148. ISBN 194464816X.
  10. ^ Dolezal, Rachel (2017). In Full Color: Finding my place in a Black and White World. Dallas, Texas: Ben Bella Books. p. 149. ISBN 194464816X.
  11. ^ Dolezal, Rachel (2017). In Full Color: Finding my place in a Black and White World. Dallas, Texas: Ben Bella Books. p. 155. ISBN 194464816X.
  12. ^ Dolezal, Rachel (2017). In Full Color: Finding my place in a Black and White World. Dallas, Texas: Ben Bella Books. p. 165. ISBN 194464816X.
  13. ^ Dolezal, Rachel (2017). In Full Color: Finding my place in a Black and White World. Dallas, Texas: Ben Bella Books. p. 225. ISBN 194464816X.
  14. ^ Dolezal, Rachel (2017). In Full Color: Finding my place in a Black and White World. Dallas, Texas: Ben Bella Books. p. 239. ISBN 194464816X.
  15. ^ Dolezal, Rachel (2017). In Full Color: Finding my place in a Black and White World. Dallas, Texas: Ben Bella Books. p. 91. ISBN 194464816X.
  16. ^ Dolezal, Rachel (2017). In Full Color: Finding my place in a Black and White World. Dallas, Texas: Ben Bella Books. p. 92. ISBN 194464816X.
  17. ^ Dolezal, Rachel (2017). In Full Color: Finding my place in a Black and White World. Dallas, Texas: Ben Bella Books. p. 148. ISBN 194464816X.
  18. ^ Dolezal, Rachel (2017). In Full Color: Finding my place in a Black and White World. Dallas, Texas: Ben Bella Books. p. 148. ISBN 194464816X.
  19. ^ Dolezal, Rachel (2017). In Full Color: Finding my place in a Black and White World. Dallas, Texas: Ben Bella Books. p. 173. ISBN 194464816X.
  20. ^ Dolezal, Rachel (2017). In Full Color: Finding my place in a Black and White World. Dallas, Texas: Ben Bella Books. pp. 246–247. ISBN 194464816X.
  21. ^ Dolezal, Rachel (2017). In Full Color: Finding my place in a Black and White World. Dallas, Texas: Ben Bella Books. p. 271. ISBN 194464816X.
  22. ^ Josephs, Brian (March 29, 2017). "Rachel Dolezal's Book In Full Color Presents No Good Reason For Her Assumed Blackness". SPIN. Retrieved May 21, 2018.
  23. ^ Dresisinger, Baz (March 24, 2017). "When saying you're black and being black are two different things". The Washington Post. Retrieved May 22, 2018.
  24. ^ Steele, Jazmine (May 5, 2017). "Why I Thank Rachel Dolezal". Sojourners. Retrieved May 21, 2018.
  25. ^ Dale, Helen (March 27, 2017). "The Changeling — A Review of 'In Full Colour' by Rachel Doležal". Quillette. Retrieved May 21, 2018.
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