There’s a long history in America of white people imagining black people’s lives - in novels, in movies, and sometimes in journalism. In 1969, Grace Halsell, a white journalist, published a book called Soul Sister.
It was her account of living as a “black woman” in the United States. Lyndon Johnson provided a blurb for the book, and it sold over a million copies.
Halsell was inspired by John Howard Griffin’s Black Like Me, which came out in 1961. That was inspired by an even earlier book in the 1940’s.
It’s hard to imagine any of these projects happening now. It seems like a kind of journalistic blackface. But Halsell’s book raises a lot of questions that are still relevant today - about race, and the limits of empathy.
This episode is a collaboration with NPR’s Code Switch.
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The Ski Troops of WWII
When Nazis Took Manhattan
A Voicemail Valentine
The Border Wall
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The Song That Crossed Party Lines
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Serving Time 9-5: Diaries from Prison Guards
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Prisoners of War
Last Witness: Mission to Hiroshima
Nelson Mandela at 100
Busman’s Holiday
Last Witness: The General Slocum
Last Witness: Surviving the Tulsa Race Riot
Fly Girls
Strange Fruit, Revisited
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