Mar
1, 2012 - Issue 461 |
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Maid in America
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When
Viola Davis lost the Oscar for best actress, portraying an African American
maid in Katherine Stockett’s “The Help,”
to Meryl Streep portraying former Britain
Prime Minister Margaret Thatcher in “The Iron Lady,” at the 84th
Academy Awards ceremony, there was a collective sigh of relief from many
of us African American sisters. Tulane
University Professor Melissa Harris-Perry, the author of an upcoming book
on racial stereotypes, summed up my feelings best when she told MSNBC that “what killed
me was that in 2011, Viola Davis was reduced to playing a maid.” Earlier
during the Academy Awards ceremony Octavia Spencer won best supporting
actress for her stereotypical role as the sassy, tart-tongued “mammy-fied”
maid, Minny Jackson, in “The Help,” making
Spencer the fifth African American women to received the coveted Oscar,
and the second sister portraying a maid. Sixty-two
years earlier, in 1940, in Jim Crow America, Hattie McDaniel became the
first African American to win an Oscar, and for her supporting role as
a maid called “Mammy” in “Gone With the Wind.”
When civil rights groups, like the NAACP, criticized McDaniel for
her portrayal as “Mammy,” McDaniel famously retorted, “I would rather
get paid $700 a week for playing a maid than $7 for being one.” Knowing
of the controversial legacy stemming from McDaniel’s role, Spencer,
too, had trepidations portraying a maid, telling reporters that her mother
was a maid in Alabama, and “Her heart sank
when Stockett gave her the manuscript to read, worried that she
might appear as a character like Mammy from Gone With the Wind. ‘And then
I read it and I couldn’t stop reading it. It was brilliant.’” In
this “post-racial” Obama era, the subject of race and the politics of
black representation in films are not constrained by political correctness,
personal enlightenment, nor moral consciousness. For
example, in 2010 the historical legacy of the devaluation and demonization of
black motherhood was both applauded and rewarded at that year’s Oscars.
And the point was clearly illustrated with Mo’Nique,
capturing the gold statue for best supporting actress in the movie “Precious,” based on the novel
Push by Sapphire, as a ghetto welfare mom who demeans and demoralizes
her child every chance she can. Mo’Nique’s role juxtaposed to Sandra Bullock’s, who captured her Oscar as
best actress in the movie “The Blind Side,” offerring
the hand of human kindness to a poor black child in need of parenting. But
the images of African-American parenting have historically been viewed
through a prism of gendered and racial stereotypes. And the image of Mo’Nique
as the “bad black mother” and Sandra Bullock as the “good white mother”
is nothing new. The images of the “bad black mother” have not only been
used for entertainment purposes but also used for legislating welfare
policy reforms. With
international stars like Iman, Oprah, Whoopi
Goldberg, and Beyonce, to name a few, signaling that women of the African
Diaspora have come a long way, what’s up with Hollywood’s, and much of
white America’s, fixation on us as their maids and welfare moms? “Portraying
African-American women as stereotypical mammies, matriarchs, welfare recipients,
and hot mommas has been essential to the political economy of domination
fostering Black women’s oppression,” sociologist Patricia Hill Collins
writes in Black
Feminist Thought: Knowledge, Consciousness, and the Politics of Empowerment. In
a skit imagining what actors are thinking, Oscar host Billy Crystal said
the following, referring to The
iconography of black women is predicated on four racist cultural images:
the Jezebel, the Sapphire, Aunt Jemima, and Mammy. With the image of the
strong black women who can endure anything and “make a way out of no way,”
her strength is either demonized as being emasculating of black men or
impervious to the human condition. The Aunt Jemima and Mammy stereotypes
are now conflated into what’s called “Big Mamma” in today’s present iconography
of racist and sexist images of African-American women. While
the Aunt Jemima and Mammy stereotypes are prevalent images that derive
from slavery, for centuries both of them have not only been threatening,
comforting and nurturing to white culture but also to African-American
men like Tyler Perry’s “Medea.” The dominant culture doesn’t see and hear African
American women voices on this issue because our humanity is distorted
and made invisible through a prism of racist and sexist stereotypes. So,
too, is our suffering. And
our suffering is exacerbated when black women’s stories are told and/
or scripted through a universally popular feel good but nonetheless
racist trope of the white hero / rescuer. This
trope principally conveys the following: black liberation comes about
through white agency. While
white guilt and paternalism are clearly pawned off in this trope as compassion
so, too, is its accompanying fictive narrative about black people. And
given our unresolved and embarrassing history of race relations in this
country, only such a trope as the white hero / rescuer could be believed
and made in BlackCommentator.com
Editorial
Board member, the Rev. Irene Monroe, is a religion columnist, theologian,
and public speaker. She is the Coordinator of
the African-American Roundtable of the Center for Lesbian and
Gay Studies in Religion and Ministry (CLGS) at the Pacific School of Religion. A native of Brooklyn, Rev. Monroe is a
graduate from Wellesley College and Union Theological Seminary at Columbia
University, and served as a pastor at an African-American church before
coming to Harvard Divinity School for her doctorate as a Ford Fellow.
She was recently named to MSNBC’s list of 10 Black Women You Should Know. Reverend Monroe is the author
of Let Your Light Shine Like a Rainbow Always: Meditations on Bible Prayers
for Not’So’Everyday Moments.
As an African-American feminist theologian, she speaks for a sector of
society that is frequently invisible. Her website
is irenemonroe.com.
Click here to contact
the Rev. Monroe. |
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