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2008-07-20 Home Front: Politix
Michelle Treated Unfairly, Just Like All the Other Sucessfull Black Women
I post. You decide.
There she is -- no, not Miss America, but the Angela-Davis-Afro-wearing, machine-gun-toting, angry, unpatriotic Michelle Obama, greeting her husband with a fist bump instead of a kiss on the cheek.

It was supposed to be satire, but the caricature of Barack Obama and his wife that appeared on the cover of the New Yorker last week rightly caused a major flap. And among black professional women like me and many of my sisters in the Alpha Kappa Alpha sorority, who happened to be gathered last week in Washington for our 100th anniversary celebration, the mischaracterization of Michelle hit the rawest of nerves.

Welcome to our world.

We've watched with a mixture of pride and trepidation as the wife of the first serious African American presidential contender has weathered recent campaign travails -- being called unpatriotic for a single offhand remark, dubbed a black radical because of something she wrote more than 20 years ago and plastered with the crowning stereotype: "angry black woman." And then being forced to undergo a politically mandated "makeover" to soften her image and make her more palatable to mainstream America.
How about taking her children to a hate-filled church?
Sad to say, but what Obama has undergone, though it's on a national stage and on a much more prominent scale, is nothing new to professional African American women. We endure this type of labeling all the time. We're endlessly familiar with the problem Michelle Obama is confronting -- being looked at, as black women, through a different lens from our white counterparts, who are portrayed as kinder, gentler souls who somehow deserve to be loved and valued more than we do. So many of us are hoping that Michelle -- as an elegant and elusive combination of successful career woman, supportive wife and loving mother -- can change that.

"Ain't I a woman?" Sojourner Truth famously asked 157 years ago. Her ringing question, demanding why black women weren't accorded the same privileges as their white counterparts, still sums up the African American woman's dilemma today: How are we viewed as women, and where do we fit into American life?

"Thanks to the hip-hop industry," one prominent black female journalist recently said to me, all black women are "deemed 'sexually promiscuous video vixens' not worthy of consideration. If other black women speak up, we're considered angry black women who complain. This society can't even see a woman like Michelle Obama. All it sees is a black woman and attaches stereotypes."

Black women have been mischaracterized and stereotyped since the days of slavery and minstrel shows. In more recent times, they've been portrayed onscreen and in popular culture as either sexually available bed wenches in such shows as the 2000 docudrama "Sally Hemings: An American Scandal," ignorant and foolish servants such as Prissy from "Gone With the Wind" or ever-smiling housekeepers, workhorses who never complain and never tire, like the popular figure of Aunt Jemima.

Even in the 21st century, black women are still bombarded with media and Internet images that portray us as loud, aggressive, violent and often grossly obese and unattractive. Think of the movies "Norbit" or "Big Momma's House," or of the only two black female characters in "Enchanted," an overweight, aggressive traffic cop and an angry divorcée amid all the white princesses.

On the other hand, when was the last time you saw a smart, accomplished black professional woman portrayed on mainstream television or in the movies? If Claire Huxtable on "The Cosby Show" comes to mind, remember that she left the scene 16 years ago.

The reality is that in just a generation, many black women -- who were mostly domestics, schoolteachers or nurses in the post-slavery Jim Crow era -- have become astronauts, corporate executives, doctors, lawyers, engineers and PhDs. You name it, and black women have achieved it. The most popular woman on daytime television is Oprah Winfrey. Condoleezza Rice is secretary of state.

And yet my generation of African American women -- we're called, in fact, the Claire Huxtable generation -- hasn't managed to become successfully integrated into American popular culture. We're still looking for respect in the workplace, where, more than anything else, black women feel invisible. It's a term that comes up again and again. "In my profession, white men mentor young whites on how to succeed," a financial executive told me, but "they're either indifferent to or dogmatically document the mistakes black women make. Their indifference is the worst, because it means we're invisible."

As someone who recently left a large law firm to work in the corporate sector, I have to agree. I liked my firm, but I always felt that I had to sink or swim on my own. I didn't get the kind of mentoring that I saw white colleagues, male and female, getting all around me. The firm was actually one of the better ones when it came to diversity, and yet of 600 partners, only five were black women.

A 2007 American Bar Association report titled "Visible Invisibility" describes how black women in the legal profession face the "double burden" of being both black and female, meaning that they enjoy none of the advantages that black men gain from being male, or that white women gain from being white.

Invisibility isn't the only problem. I run an organization dedicated to supporting African American professional women and often run empowerment workshops at various conferences. At a recent such workshop, I asked the participants to list some words that would describe how they believe they're viewed in the workplace and the culture at large. These are the kinds of words that came back: "loud," "angry," "intimidating," "mean," "opinionated," "aggressive," "hard." All painful words. Yet asked to describe themselves, the same women offered gentler terms: "strong," "loving," "dependable," "compassionate."

Where does the disconnect come from? Possibly from the way black women have been forced into roles of strength for decades. "Black women are the original multitaskers of necessity," says one nonprofit executive. "We've perfected it because we've been doing it for so long. But people don't appreciate the skill it requires, and they don't recognize the toll it takes on us as human beings."

For all our success in the professional world, we have paid a significant price in our private and emotional lives. A life of preordained singleness (by chance, not by choice) is fast becoming the plight of alarming numbers of professional black women in America. The fact is that the more money and education a black woman has, the less likely she is to marry and have a family.
And yet the stereotype is that the less money and education a black women has, the less likely she is to be married. It's so unfair!
Consider these stunning statistics: As of 2007, according to the New York Times, 70 percent of professional black women were unmarried. Black women are five times more likely than white women to be single at age 40. In 2003, Newsweek reported that there are more black women than black men (24 percent to 17 percent) in the professional-managerial class. According to Department of Education statistics cited by the Journal of Blacks in Higher Education, black women earn 67 percent of all bachelor's degrees awarded to blacks, as well as 71 percent of all master's degrees and 65 percent of all doctoral degrees.
That's 'cuz the dudes are all playin' sports. Sorry.
With all the challenges facing professional black women today, we hope that Michelle Obama will defy the negative stereotypes about us. And that, now that a strong professional black woman is center stage, she'll bring to light what we already know: that an accomplished black woman can be a loyal and supportive wife and a good mother and still fulfill her own dreams.
Wait for the speech at the Convention.
The fact that her husband clearly adores Michelle is both refreshing and reassuring to many of us who long to find a good man who will love and appreciate us.

Recently, a friend who's a married professional mother of three girls wrote to me: "I think one of the most interesting things about Michelle Obama is that what she and her husband are doing is pretty revolutionary these days -- and I don't mean running for president. For a black man and woman in the U.S. to be happily married, with children, and working as partners to build a life -- let alone a life of service to others -- all while rearing their children together is downright revolutionary."

It's how so many black professional women feel. And our hope is that if Michelle Obama becomes first lady, the revolution will come to us at last.
Posted by Bobby 2008-07-20 08:10|| || Front Page|| [6 views ]  Top

#1 Mr. Perception, I'd like you to please meet Mr. Reality. Oh, you two already know one another?
Posted by Besoeker 2008-07-20 10:24||   2008-07-20 10:24|| Front Page Top

#2 For a black man and woman in the U.S. to be happily married, with children, and working as partners to build a life ...all while rearing their children together is downright revolutionary.

Being married and raising a family is considered 'revolutionary'? That is the saddest thing I have read all week.
Posted by SteveS 2008-07-20 11:34||   2008-07-20 11:34|| Front Page Top

#3 black women also suffer from the perception that their achievements in school, business have been though affirmative action and not of their own doing. As with all overly-general perceptions, they start with some nugget of truth. AA and quotas do more to damage, in my mind, than help.
Posted by Frank G">Frank G  2008-07-20 11:39||   2008-07-20 11:39|| Front Page Top

#4 We're still looking for respect in the workplace, where, more than anything else, black women feel invisible.

Congratulations, you've achieve American middle class. We're all an invisible gray. We buy into a concept in which there is no color, only status by merit. What you are articulating is that the original goals of the 50s and 60s Civil Rights movement have been achieved, only that's not what you really wanted. You want to be 'special', along with the perks and powers that come with being 'special'.
Posted by Procopius2k 2008-07-20 12:08||   2008-07-20 12:08|| Front Page Top

#5 On the other hand, when was the last time you saw a smart, accomplished black professional woman portrayed on mainstream television or in the movies?

Law & Order, Law & Order SVU, CSI Miami, Without a Trace, Heroes, Boston Legal... and that's with about five minutes of searching.

Posted by Pappy 2008-07-20 12:08||   2008-07-20 12:08|| Front Page Top

#6 dammit, Pappy, you're busting the meme
Posted by Frank G">Frank G  2008-07-20 12:13||   2008-07-20 12:13|| Front Page Top

#7 This is like a "Baby On Board" placard: Yuppies congratulating themselves (and bragging to the world) for doing what LOTS of people with less money and fewer advantages managed to do out of innate decency and moral fiber. WooHoo...
Posted by M. Murcek">M. Murcek  2008-07-20 13:07||   2008-07-20 13:07|| Front Page Top

#8 "loud," "angry," "intimidating," "mean," "opinionated," "aggressive," "hard."

Sorry, dahlink, but if you are going to go into a traditionally male profession, you are going to run the risk of being characterized that way by some of the guys there, regardless of your color, if you dare to occasionally speak up against behavior you find unacceptable. It has nothing to do with your pigmentation.

Deal with it or go somewhere there are more women colleagues.
Posted by Swamp Blondie in the Cornfields 2008-07-20 14:30||   2008-07-20 14:30|| Front Page Top

#9 But Michelle, do tell us about that $200,000 raise you got for your clerical job when your hubby became US Senator. That smells like a dead hippo.
Posted by wxjames 2008-07-20 14:49||   2008-07-20 14:49|| Front Page Top

#10 If, and I still say its a big If, Obama gets elected POTUS, this lady will make Hillary look like a Sunday school teacher. She will be spitting dragon fire around the country and head butting everyone of us to get with the program - which is, of course, repatriation. Don't believe me? Watch.
Posted by Jack is Back!">Jack is Back!  2008-07-20 16:27||   2008-07-20 16:27|| Front Page Top

#11 Oh boy. At least four more years of hearing people with more power and a LOT more money than I am BITCH about how much life sucks for them.
Posted by Abdominal Snowman 2008-07-20 16:36||   2008-07-20 16:36|| Front Page Top

#12 Jack, I suspect you mean reparations, Yes?
Posted by lotp 2008-07-20 17:05||   2008-07-20 17:05|| Front Page Top

#13 If a woman chooses a professional career but really wants a husband and family, she'd better hold the wedding right after her graduation ceremony. The male marriage pool shrinks with age (despite divorces), as the women for whom marriage and family are important take the interested men out of circulation, and many of those remaining refuse to be tested against someone's Platonic ideal (ok, perhaps platonic isn't quite the right word here). It's an interesting bit mathematical theory, as it turns out, which should be great fun for those of you able to follow it. Certainly our baby boomer black female professional has no business complaining about what holds equally true for her non-black equals.

As for the rest of the whine, if she wanted everyone to be see her as gentle and supportive instead of ball-busting, she should have chosen a career in housewifery, where the odds of that are better. Although, "loud," "intimidating," "opinionated," "aggressive," and "hard" are often compliments in the business world... even a gentle and supportive little housewife like me knows that.
Posted by trailing wife ">trailing wife  2008-07-20 17:09||   2008-07-20 17:09|| Front Page Top

#14 Being married and raising a family is considered 'revolutionary'? That is the saddest thing I have read all week.

It is and it is. :(
Posted by .5MT 2008-07-20 18:18|| www.cybernations.net]">[www.cybernations.net]  2008-07-20 18:18|| Front Page Top

#15 "they're either indifferent to or dogmatically document the mistakes black women make. Their indifference is the worst, because it means we're invisible."


Be damned glad it's indifference. If you're as arrogant, loudmouthed and incompetent as most of the professional blacks I met in my career, "indifference" would have been replaced with an active and well-merited effort to have you fired for cause.

Just because you're black doesn't mean you're entitled to ANYTHING. Most people are indifferent to other people; so what? There aren't that many Mother Teresas running around. As for a lack of mentoring, it seems to me there are thousands of things like the "Journal of Blacks in Higher Education" out there. Nobody else gets those; only you poor, misguided, mistreated blacks.

I'm sick of the underperformance, the unwarranted arrogance, the attitude of presumptive entitlement, the constant "race card" playing, and, most particularly, the vastly disproportionate violent criminal activity. So are lots of other people, which is why most people of other races tend to see blacks negatively and avoid dealings with them when they can.

There she is -- no, not Miss America, but the Angela-Davis-Afro-wearing, machine-gun-toting, angry, unpatriotic Michelle Obama, greeting her husband with a fist bump instead of a kiss on the cheek.

Yeah, I can see why blacks wouldn't like that. It's too close to the real truth.
Posted by Jomosing Bluetooth8431 2008-07-20 18:45||   2008-07-20 18:45|| Front Page Top

#16 Oprah Winfrey is not amused.
Posted by Woozle Unusosing8053 2008-07-20 19:34||   2008-07-20 19:34|| Front Page Top

10:49 Super Hose
10:47 Super Hose
10:46 Grom the Reflective
10:41 Deacon+Blues
10:32 Grom the Reflective
10:22 Angstrom
10:20 Grom the Reflective
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10:10 DarthVader
10:09 Frank G
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10:00 Warthog
09:46 alanc
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08:53 Super Hose
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