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Reflection 2: Why do I choose Paris?


 

Mas como não tive chance de ter estudado em colégio legal

Muitos me chamam pivete

Mas poucos me deram um apoio moral

Se eu pudesse eu não seria um problema social

-        “Problema Social” by Seu Jorge

 

The multiplicity of existence can only reveal itself when inhabiting different spaces, be it in the social fabric of the built environment, or the imaginaries of the mind. Such multiplicity became apparent to me in the streets of Paris, where I was rendered invisible to the average Parisian eye. Can I actually say I am invisible? I should instead state that I am accepted in their society for I am not often stared at and I am never questioned for being in the spaces I am in. I am frequently asked where I am from, or what brings me to Paris, but never have I been meant to feel as though I do not belong. This differs greatly to my contested experience in Madrid, where every wandering eye that pierced through windows and crowds questioned my existence, hoping to erase my brown existence from their society. In contrast, my experience in Paris can be compared to that of New York, I can exist as I wish and just fade into the crowds of people that are more concerned about themselves than they are concerned with questioning the other. 


 

    

 

 


I suppose you would question why I would want to live geographically distant from New York if in both cities I could exist as I wanted. The reason is the atmospheric sense of freedom that encaptures you as you walk through the paved streets of Paris. Freedom, I came to realize in Paris, is something that seems aloof and can only exist the mere imaginaries of the black and latino population in New York. Through reading the works of black expatriates in Paris such as Richard Wright, one would see that Paris is a black man’s North because one exists in freedom, a freedom that is obscure, yet more tangible than it could be in the United States, the “land of the free.” In I Chose Exile Richard Wright proclaims, “I love freedom, and I tell you frankly that there is more freedom in one square block of Paris than there is in the entire United States of America […] I am not trying to persuade other Negroes to live abroad. My decision is predicated upon this simple fact: I need freedom” (Wright, 1). In other words, Wright felt the need to escape racial pressure of the United States. In France there is no gun violence, no racialized ghettoization, no lack of social welfare programs, no hyper police vigilance. Without knowing what I was going to encounter, I left Harlem, Dyckman and the Bronx (the neighborhoods that had shaped my upbringing) only to find the freedom I had not realized I was looking for.


My first trip to Paris I felt as though my blackness was actually desired in the society. This was evident in the street style that paid homage to that of all corners of New York, Harlem, the Bronx or SoHo. The French youth embodied the street swagger of those across the Atlantic, but they were of course still very much French. Appreciation for black culture was also apparent in the music. Jazz was brought to the French by the black American troops that fought along the French during the world war that reshaped and renegotiated global cultures and international relations. Today jazz is just as part of French culture as anything considerably deemed French (read: baguettes, museums, the right to protest, and free education and health care). Jazz is played in cafes or the Franprix supermarket just as American hip-hop, rap and trap are played in all the clubs mean to attract a young and engaging crowd. The appreciation for blackness in France manifests itself in plusier forms and its been revealed to me as if through a slow unrolling of a script, meant to be filtered in increments so that the existence of blackness can be properly
digested and understood.


         My lived experience in Paris has however left me in polarizing odds concerning my incessant need to be an activist under an all black agenda. Let’s consider France’s politics of assimilation. Anyone can be French as long as they adhere to the French values of secularism, liberty, equality and brotherhood (libertĆ© Ć©galitĆ© et fraternitĆ©). Diverse friend groups dominate cafes, malls, parks, clubs, and the strips along La Seine river. Interracial couples are in large quantities, and it is not questioned the ways in which it would be in the States. How can I fight for the inclusion of black people in Paris, if they seem to be just as integral to the social fabric as Hugo, Roseau, de Beauvoir and Sartre? When the existence of black people is not contested, how then can I import my radical notions of racial politics to France?




When in Paris, I often wonder if I should have studied something more practical like civic engineering, physics, or chemistry, all of which I have the foundation for but never perused. But how could I pursue these subjects when I felt a driving force to nourish my mind with a global understanding of the many ways in which colonial legacies have written out the histories of their subjects and expected them to be submissive, subservient second-class citizens (if they had citizen status at all).


As part of the transcultural-dialogue that occurs when one is part of the diaspora, I wake up every morning affirmed by my blackness. My academic works have been purposed to uncover the nuances of black identity and shed awareness of the socio-political dynamics that continue to oppress blacks and Latinos in the United States. The forms of marginalization and oppression are written in the veins of the leaves of the sycamore trees of the south, written in the history textbooks of public schools that seldom represent the narratives of non-whites, written in the statistics of who populates the prison system and who populates a college classroom. These are some of the tangible proofs that have motivated me to continue to learn about the black diaspora and to use my passion for writing for a purpose, black liberation. However, chaque fois that I am Paris, I ask myself, why work so hard to deteriorate my weary soul that is seldom listened to, when in Paris I can just reinvent myself and appeal to those negrophiliacs? My efforts to enlighten even my own people began to feel futile, unwarranted, I began to feel like a rebel without a cause, a rebel without a platform, a rebel with no audience.


As I sat down to write this, the Brazilian artist Seu Jorge sings “Se eu pudesse eu nĆ£o seria um problema social,” (If I could, then it would not be a social problem). And so I thought to myself the most obvious, I would not need to come to Paris if I could just exist unencumbered by my social class or my perceived racial background (as the one drop rule has determined me to be black before I could even understand what being treated as other meant).


In France my liberty to navigate as a person before my race allows me to have the peace of mind necessary to engage in theory and devote time to analyze my lived experiences with care and integrity. Might I be able to experience this level of freedom because my skin color is more palatable to the French? I am drawn to this question because of France’s obsession not only with black American culture, but with seemingly mixed race/ lighter skin people. I am drawn to this question because of my racial background, which has always been an internal struggle. I cannot think about my skin color without thinking about the one drop rule, I cannot think about the one drop rule without thinking about my interacial parents, and I cannot think about them without thinking about the colonial history of the Dominican Republic. I cannot think about the colonial history of the Dominican Republic without acknowledging France as having been one of the leading colonial powers. Why then would former subjects of the French colonial regime express different sentiments to the global north metropole than a black-identifying American?

 

 


  

 

 

 

 

 

“France Degage!”

Translation: “France, get out!”

Dakar, Senegal

  June, 2018

 

 

Reflection 1: Why do I choose blackness?


 

"Fuck the man, Uncle Sam, I won't sell your crack, I won't fight your wars, I won't wear your hat I'ma pass your classes, I'ma learn your craft I'ma fuck your daughters, I'ma burn your flag” – “Miss America” by J. Cole



 

Aligning myself with an identity has grown to be increasingly difficult. I can’t place myself in one framework, as I am eager to embody the multiple forms of existence. I embody the theoretical scholar that can conform and exist within the boxes of western knowledge. I embody the post structuralist that aims to critique these very modes of thinking. At the same time, I seek to be free of all forms of thinking and be guided by my own lived experiences and desires. To be a global citizen. To be a product of New York City multiculturalism. To be so transcultural that I aspire for it to be uniform across the board. I seek this multiplicity of existence because I’ve always internally combatted the looming structures that aimed to minimize me, to see me as a problematic person of color that’s welfare hogging, psychologically unstable, low income and unmotivated. Without my fully being able to understand where these fears came from, or how to contextualize them, I’ve reacted against them. This traction has been my mode of thinking and reacting since my ability to form comprehensible thoughts. It has always been the structures of class differences, racial imaginaries and academic hierarchies that have influenced me to react against the social order, and define myself as the complete opposite of what is expected of me. But where does that leave room to define myself in relation to myself?


How do I imagine myself for myself? This is where my determinate answer is muddled. America tells me I’m Latina, Dominicans call me morena or negra, South Africans tell me I’m colored, the French tell me I’m metisse and black people tell me I’m light skin black. In other words, I’ve only ever adopted the structures of racial categorization from how the other sees me. I know how I do not imagine myself, for I know what I am not. Black, brown, metisse, creole, colored, mixed race; by definition I can claim these all, but to know who I am is difficult. I know what I want to be, what I like and what I emulate. But who am I really, if not fragmentations of other things? A composition of everything I wish to be and not to be. An embodiment of code switching and adapting in order to survive.


Why it is that I have chosen to adopt blackness as my transcultural understanding of the world? This is a long overdue conversation that I’ve needed to have with myself, for even black identifying people have asked me. The answer lies in the fact that my reactions have always been Newton’s third law, equal and opposite to the systems of power. Logically the polar opposite of whiteness is blackness. I have defined and redefined myself always in relation to the contested systems that don’t integrate me despite my being included in them. As the only brown-skinned person in the Columbia University History & Literature program and in my classes at L’ Ɖcole Normale SupĆ©rieure, I often silence myself, hoping to remove my urban lexicon out of the discourse so as to not be seen as predictable. We postulate theories of race, culture and ethnicity, all the while these are all categories that have led me to battle the systems that compartmentalize me. 


Nonetheless, blackness has allowed me to understand myself outside of the confinements of academia. By allowing myself to become familiar with the narratives of black Americans I realized that their form of articulating their contested relationship with the social order resonated with me. It is through black artists, musicians, writers and intellectuals I began to find ways to articulate my disdain, pains and griefs.


Hauled over a desk with a hunched back and askew hair, the literary perspectives I’ve gathered have been some of the primary ways I’ve tried to read the societies that I have lived in. Malcom X, James Baldwin, Richard Wright, Ralph Ellison, Ta Nehisi Coates, W. E. B. Du Bois, Audre Lorde, Bell Hooks Nella Larsen, and Angela Davis to name some Americans. Chimamanda Ngozi Adichie, Trevor Noah, Ousmane SembĆØne, Leopold Senghor, and Yambo Ouologuem to name some Africans. Frantz Fanon, AimĆ© CesairĆ©, Ɖdouard Glissant, Maryse CondĆ©, Junot Diaz, Elizabeth Acevedo to name some Caribbeans. These have all been some of the intellectuals from whom I came to understand the power structures that shaped our racialized experiences transnationally. My colonial and postcolonial understandings have allowed me to grapple with the constructs of Black Consciousness, Negritude, Black Romanticism and Creolization.




Collage by: Samantha Pinheiro

(NYU College of Arts & Science)

On Culture

Richly mixed with the influences of culture. Each person carries the history of their nation, let's all find our roots and symbiotically exist with each other. Let us understand the human experience and delight with joy what series of events got us to where we are now-- being alive. Are you living? Follow your soul and splurge in all that which makes you happy. Shout out to the mother land Africa-- humanity has evolved to what it is starting from the upbringing of this magic continent. If it weren't for humanity starting in your wonderful womb, everything that makes the life that exists today would not be the same. And I thank the gruesome wars of France and Spain and the Revolution against the control of Haiti, for if these horrifying events of colonization and exhortation did not occur in my secretly precious island, I would not be here today loving the fruitful ways of life. #DominicanaSoy (gracias a la educación y la historia, en ti me encuentro) 

Notes From Abroad (A Call to Action)



I had often expressed to close friends that the revolution was coming, that narrative unfolded quicker than I could have imagined. I have chosen several times to leave New York for Paris because I felt that French colorblind politics would allow me to breathe, collect my thoughts, and use the time I’m not worrying about race to put into fruition what I would like to manifest in the future. However, every time I leave New York to be in solitude I find that I always miss my connection to my Black American and Afro-Latinx community above anything else. I miss the person I am when I am in spaces where it is applauded to be unapologetically yourself and to relish in your individuality. Where it is collectively understood that we are navigating within a system that was not created to serve us. This was the Black community I found at NYU and it was always the space that I felt affirmed: my intelligence noted, my determination respected, and my art supported. 


Starting university during 2015 meant I was entering a predominantly white space affirmed by my Afro-Dominican identity. The reason for this was because the natural hair movement had spread and so had the mobilization of activists through the Black Lives Matter movement. The unification of Black people allowed me to find my place of acceptance, my place of belonging. However, it is hard to feel fully connected to your chosen family when abroad. I am limited to Instagram posts and FaceTime calls. No longer can I walk through SoHo, Harlem, the Heights and the Bronx with my friends, photographing the beauty of their Black essence because it’s what I wanted others to see. My transient habit that I developed when I scored that full scholarship to NYU allowed me to envision myself outside an oppression / liberation binary. Studying abroad allowed me to see the ways in which my experiences were shaped by  racialized and gendered socialization. This allowed me to imagine myself outside of the context of American racial context. 


At first, the news from overseas seemed to not shake me with the 8 degree magnitude earthquake in the way that it would in New York; the Parisian atmosphere is not putrid of the stench of institutional racism in the way it is in America. One need only to look at the statistics of who populates a college classroom and who populates a prison (though let us not forget France’s colonial history in the Americas, Africa and Asia, nor its current role as a neo-colonial state). 


However the collective pain of the grief of spilled blood in order to uphold a racist patriarchy has eventually burned my soul with the generational and diasporic pain of Black subjugation under the imperial structure. When I feel an emotion my whole body feels it. My back gets tense. My shoulder gets tense. My chest hurt. My heart throbs. My spirit feels wounded and weakened. I cry hysterically. This was how my body reacted all of 2015, yet the pain comes as a surprise every time. Each cramp tighter. Each breath heavier. Every thought more cynical. 



All of quarantine I have been practicing meditation in order to align my spirit, to move with intention. I intend to always uplift the morale of Black people because we must never fold to the order of the capitalist regime. Because writing is my purpose and my source of therapeutic relief, I will be sharing a series titled “Notes From Abroad.” I will share writing concerning the ways in which my experiences are shaped by racialized and gendered socialization. I will also be comparing the works of Black diasporic authors to give nuance to 20th century black liberation efforts. Since IG is a limiting platform for vocalizing sentiments on such a dense subject, I will be sharing my thoughts on my website for my various written works. I hope to facilitate group or individual discourse, it is important to stay educated, mobilized and spiritually at peace.


To my Black women, we all know we are always supporting Black men, but please let us nuance the ways in which we are also impacted by race-sex paradigms. Our narratives are important, our pain is illicit, our voices must be heard. It is not a battle of who suffers more, it is a matter of representing ourselves, getting comfortable in our narratives so that others cannot tell them for us. This work, though laborious, is needed because liberation has always been taught as attainable first for Black men and Black women as secondary. This inherited belief exists even today. Stop police violence. Stop imprisoning non-violent black men. Protect the black male body. But when will the women who have fallen subject of male violence be protected. When will their concerns be voiced?


Above all, to all my Black artists, please keep creating. We are the generation that will set the foundation for this century's evolution of Black consciousness and expression. This is not a light task. Be careful with yourselves. Self preservation is the greatest form of resistance.