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I'm Black and I'm Proud, wished the white girl.: The Autobiography of Lynn Markovich Bryant

Contributor(s): Material type: TextTextPublication details: New York, Lincoln, Shanghai iUniverse 2003Description: xiv, 192 pages ; 23 cmISBN:
  • 978-0595274666 pbk
Subject(s):
Contents:
The hyphenated and blended smalls-Markovich family -- From 506 West Jefferson to Route 1, Box 209 -- The Bahá'i Faith's impact on my world -- The initiation, indoctrination, and education into the white world-southern style -- "Gal, who you tink you is" -- Racism raises its ugly head within what once beauty -- Additional lessons in black 101 -- My Grammy and bread puddin' -- Exposure, transformation, and infusion into soul -- Give me that ole time religion -- No cousin, no kin -- Beverly and the Dore family -- Friends in come in all sizes, ages and colors of packages -- "Work is worship" -- Raising the "younger set" -- Uncovering the myth: white schools superior to black schools -- "Momma, I hate white people" -- A test of faith: "why Richard?" -- At Clemson, trying to find the beat -- Why do you date only black guys -- Love hand over: discrimination at its deepest level -- Rounds with racist roommates -- Trials and tribulations abound -- "The came Bryant".
Abstract: Living within a Black World and coming to know racism first-hand is rarely the path traveled by the average white American. Lynn Markovich Bryant shares her story of living within a black environment and dealing with racism.After the remarriage of her mother to a black man and moving to South Carolina during the 1960s, she comes face to face with the shocking reality of two worldsa White World and a Black World. She learns rapidly the unwritten, yet understood, rules that govern the separation of these worlds.Raised within a family of varied hues: her white siblings, black stepbrothers and stepsisters, and the new offspring in her blended family, she realizes that she still isnt welcome in the White World. Since shes living in a black community, she even chooses to attend an all-black school. The Black World becomes her entire world.Lynn Markovich Bryant shares her transformation from wishing she were black and hating whites to celebrating her uniqueness and the journey in knowing and loving the Black World, in spite of the trials that accost blacks to this day. Yet she holds fast to her greatest belief that these worlds must truly come together as one.
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Item type Current library Call number Status Date due Barcode
Printed  or electronic book Printed or electronic book New Zealand National Baha'i Reference Library Available

The hyphenated and blended smalls-Markovich family --
From 506 West Jefferson to Route 1, Box 209 --
The Bahá'i Faith's impact on my world --
The initiation, indoctrination, and education into the white world-southern style --
"Gal, who you tink you is" --
Racism raises its ugly head within what once beauty --
Additional lessons in black 101 --
My Grammy and bread puddin' --
Exposure, transformation, and infusion into soul --
Give me that ole time religion --
No cousin, no kin --
Beverly and the Dore family --
Friends in come in all sizes, ages and colors of packages --
"Work is worship" --
Raising the "younger set" --
Uncovering the myth: white schools superior to black schools --
"Momma, I hate white people" --
A test of faith: "why Richard?" --
At Clemson, trying to find the beat --
Why do you date only black guys --
Love hand over: discrimination at its deepest level --
Rounds with racist roommates --
Trials and tribulations abound --
"The came Bryant".

Living within a Black World and coming to know racism first-hand is rarely the path traveled by the average white American. Lynn Markovich Bryant shares her story of living within a black environment and dealing with racism.After the remarriage of her mother to a black man and moving to South Carolina during the 1960s, she comes face to face with the shocking reality of two worldsa White World and a Black World. She learns rapidly the unwritten, yet understood, rules that govern the separation of these worlds.Raised within a family of varied hues: her white siblings, black stepbrothers and stepsisters, and the new offspring in her blended family, she realizes that she still isnt welcome in the White World. Since shes living in a black community, she even chooses to attend an all-black school. The Black World becomes her entire world.Lynn Markovich Bryant shares her transformation from wishing she were black and hating whites to celebrating her uniqueness and the journey in knowing and loving the Black World, in spite of the trials that accost blacks to this day. Yet she holds fast to her greatest belief that these worlds must truly come together as one.

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