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Awareness of racial tension

PotomacBob 🚫
Updated:

This may not be the right forum for this request, but I guessed it was probably the closest one.

I'm looking for a story or stories that I have NOT read, in which a white boy or girl, accustomed to seeing racism in its many forms, only slowly begins to become aware of racial tension.

The stories could be from any section of the country where races were treated differently, where non-whites could be seen as "the other."

The stories I seek could be from any viewpoint - for more mixing of the races or against it. But I would like the subject to be treated seriously. That the subject matter is treated seriously does NOT mean that the story avoids humor.

Are there any such stories?

Replies:   joyR  hiltonls16  Jim S  red61544
Remus2 🚫

I'm curious about the assumption that America is the only place that happens?

The stories could be from any section of the country where races were treated differently, where non-whites could be seen as "the other."

You do realize that goes on world wide in many forms right?

Replies:   Reluctant_Sir
Reluctant_Sir 🚫

@Remus2

I'm curious about the assumption that America is the only place that happens?

Where does he say he is talking about America?

You realize that we have readers AND writers from many other countries, right?

Replies:   Remus2
Remus2 🚫

@Reluctant_Sir

I do realize that. As for my assumption, he is in America and stated "any section of the country."

I think that was a logical assumption.

oldegrump 🚫

Think Koreans in Japan. Chinese in Viet Nam, Arabs in Israel, and Jews in Muslim countries. Don't even talk about tribal problems in Black Africa. (I hate that phrase, but it means middle and southern Africa.

MarissaHorne 🚫

@oldegrump

Don't even talk about tribal problems in Black Africa. (I hate that phrase, but it means middle and southern Africa.

I suggest "sub-Saharan Africa."

joyR 🚫

@oldegrump

Don't even talk about tribal problems in Black Africa. (I hate that phrase, but it means middle and southern Africa.

North, Central, Southern Africa.

Remus2 🚫

@oldegrump

The examples you've listed are good, albeit a short list. It's been my direct observation that every race I've ever had interactions with has racist elements within them.

The apparent US centric premise that only whites can be racist is simply crap.

Replies:   Michael Loucks
Michael Loucks 🚫

@Remus2

The apparent US centric premise that only whites can be racist is simply crap.

And, amongst some of those faithful to that theory, your statement itself is proof of racism. It's a nice, neat circular argument.

Replies:   Dinsdale
Dinsdale 🚫

@Michael Loucks

Some of Jay Cantrell's stories approach that subject. Unforgettable Weeks is the biggie, A Flawed Diamond (or was it The Outsider?) also tends that way while Lifeline confronts the Southern Redneck (I think that was the description) at some point.

StarFleet Carl 🚫

@oldegrump

Think Koreans in Japan

Or pretty much anybody who's not Japanese in Japan. We're all gaijin to them.

Replies:   Michael Loucks  Remus2
Michael Loucks 🚫
Updated:

@StarFleet Carl

Or pretty much anybody who's not Japanese in Japan. We're all gaijin to them.

There are two words, ε€–ε›½δΊΊ (gaikokujin) which means 'foreign-country person'. It is a much nicer term than ε€–δΊΊ (gaijin), which means 'outside person' and is pejorative.

Outsiders who respect Japanese tradition and honor it, are gaikokujin.

Remus2 🚫

@StarFleet Carl

Or pretty much anybody who's not Japanese in Japan. We're all gaijin to them.

That used to be true up until 20 years ago. The majority still think the same, but a significant portion of their society no longer sees it that way. It'll take another decade or two for the change to take root in the majority.

Nulaak83 🚫

@oldegrump

Jews in Muslim countries? More like anyone that's not Muslim in Muslim countries. Asian countries are pretty openly racist towards black people as well, like 1800s in America racist.

joyR 🚫

@PotomacBob

I'm looking for a story or stories that I have NOT read, in which a white boy or girl, accustomed to seeing racism in its many forms, only slowly begins to become aware of racial tension.

How are we to tell which stories you have NOT read..??

If the white boy or girl are accustomed to seeing racism in its many forms, then it is hardly plausible they would not also be aware of racial tension.

No racism = no racial tension

No racial tension = no racism.

That the subject matter is treated seriously does NOT mean that the story avoids humor.

A party of tourists on their first day in South Africa were visiting Durban Beachfront. One of them politely asked a local, "Is that the Indian Ocean?"

"No" came the reply, "That's the White Ocean, the Indian Ocean is way down there..."

hiltonls16 🚫

@PotomacBob

Wes Boyd's Alone Together and the follow up Growing Together (on the spearfishlaketales site) are about two young people who end up estranged from their families because of racism on both sides.

Dinsdale 🚫

There is always Australian Story by Oz Ozzie, although the story name is a big clue as to where it is set.
A fair proportion of the authors here tend to mix characters of various races together with just occasional references to the "fact" that they "look different". They are characters first and white/black/red/green/orange - at most - second.

Jim S 🚫

@PotomacBob

Lubrican's Flossie's Revenge is the first story that comes to mind, but you've probably already have read it. Since it is still rated over 9.0, it seems to have wide acceptance here.

richardshagrin 🚫

You could try stories by VeryWellAged about white guys, usually older and girls and women from the Philippines. Filipinas.

red61544 🚫

@PotomacBob

Are there any such stories?

Bob, read this morning's Pittsburgh Post-Gazette. Representative Mike Kelly wonders why people get upset about the N-word and other degrading racial epithets because he doesn't get upset when people point out that he's Irish. As Bugs Bunny used to say: "What a maroon!"

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