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Caucasia book
Caucasia book




caucasia book

The story is narrated from the point of view of Birdie and although she feels just like her sister, there were already signs of their differences in the behaviour of those closest to them.

caucasia book

Cole leaves for Brazil with her father and Birdie is on the run with her white activist mother fleeing the authorities. While their parents are together it is less of an issue, but when they separate and move away from each other, each daughter departing with one parent, they will discover how much their colour dictates other people’s perceptions of them. The rest of society judges them on appearance, for Birdie appears white and her older sister Cole appears to be black.

caucasia book

You can read the article linked below, I hope to read the book soon, and all this to say how I came across the author Danzy Senna, who wrote From Caucasia, With Love, a novel about a mixed race family and the effect on their two daughters, when they separate, on account of the differing colour of their skin.īirdie and Cole are two sisters, so close, they have their own made up language they speak fluently, that no one else can understand. * To much of the public, an oreo is a black biscuit with white cream filling, in the African-American community however, it is a racial slur used to insult a black person who appears to act white. Sadly, Fran Ross died at a young age of cancer, little known in the literary world, this her only published work. Though it had been written 20 years before, the book seemed to speak of their present and in her article she reflects on the narratives that had tended to gain traction and audience, those like Roots that looked back at slavery and oppression and then those that had been ignored, like Oreo, narratives that looked forward, that addressed modern issues, where no one is immune to criticism. Senna read Oreo in the late 1990’s, when she was living in a neighbourhood of what she called ‘ Brooklyn’s dreadlocked élite‘ talented, up and coming, young black musicians, film-makers, artists said to be backed by the likes of Tracy Chapman and Alice Walker. A Longish Intro on How I Came Across this Bookĭanzy Senna reviewed a book in the New Yorker in May 2015, a work she refers to as that hilarious, badass novel Oreo* by Fran Ross, an overlooked classic, a satire about race, originally published in 1974 without a stir, the novel everyone remembers from that time published two years later, had the title Roots.






Caucasia book