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Damn Near White: An African American Family's Rise from Slavery to Bittersweet Success Hardcover – October 10, 2010

4.6 out of 5 stars 16 customer reviews

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Product Details

  • Hardcover: 192 pages
  • Publisher: University of Missouri; 3 edition (October 10, 2010)
  • Language: English
  • ISBN-10: 0826218997
  • ISBN-13: 978-0826218995
  • Product Dimensions: 6.1 x 1 x 9.2 inches
  • Shipping Weight: 1 pounds (View shipping rates and policies)
  • Average Customer Review: 4.6 out of 5 stars  See all reviews (16 customer reviews)
  • Amazon Best Sellers Rank: #927,240 in Books (See Top 100 in Books)

Customer Reviews

Top Customer Reviews

Format: Hardcover Verified Purchase
Damn Near White is both a vivid memoir and a gripping detective story. Inspired by her great-aunt's tales of mysterious ancestors, professional musician and college professor Carolyn Wilkins takes us on an exciting journey of discovery that unearths the hidden history of the Wilkins family. Expect some eye-openers.

The author's great-grandfather, John Bird Wilkins, was born into slavery circa 1850, possibly the son of a female slave and a white slave-owner. A chameleon-like figure who used various names, he taught school after the Civil War, first in Oxford, Mississippi, then in Memphis, Tennessee. He later became an inventor and a newspaperman. Still later, he became widely known as a charismatic Baptist minister.

He was also a bigamist, fathering several children with two different women.

One was the author's grandfather, J. Ernest Wilkins. After a detailed investigation of the John Bird Wilkins saga, the book focuses on J. Ernest Wilkins, and deservedly so.

During the 1950s, J. Ernest Wilkins rose to national prominence during the Eisenhower administration as the first "Negro" to serve in a high-ranking cabinet position. From 1953 to 1955 he served as Assistant Secretary of Labor. He also served on the first Civil Rights Commission (1957-1958) at a time when racial tensions in the South were high, a time when "Negroes" could legally be denied the right to use a public toilet.

The author's painstaking research involves multiple visits to many libraries--from a tiny library in Farmington, Missouri, to Harvard's Widener Library in Cambridge, Massachusetts--and countless interviews, by phone and in person. Her travels take her far and wide, from St. Louis to Chicago, even to a rural cemetery in Missouri.
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Format: Hardcover
I'm a genealogist, so I confess, I have a weakness for stories about people that become seriously involved with the lives of their great and great great grandparents. Carolyn Marie Wilkins is one of these people.
I feel her nervousness as she meets new relatives, living and dead, and carefully discovers as much as she can about them. I feel relieved to know that I'm not the only person who flew across the country to go to a library.

She manages to get her hands on enough photos to prove without a doubt that the lineage she claims is hers, as they really do pass facial features down the line, breathtakingly.
It does sadden me that our society is/was so rigidly racist, that people who look like Ms Wilkin's family do are even considered Black and that "blackness" is given as an excuse to hurt, exclude, degrade and ignore them, but they are and they will be for a long time, even in this country with a black president.
I hope this book encourages others to start digging and discover how their ancestors lived, it truly gives you a greater sense of self.

good read!
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Format: Hardcover
This poingnant inter-generational story is told with such honesty that the reader is compelled to feel compassion. One cannot help but gain insight as to the the complexity of the competing demands of these family members, including Ms.Wilkins, within each of their own historical contexts. The way Ms.Wilkins weaves her experience with that of her family's history makes for riviting reading. Those families who have an Aunt Marjory know how lucky they are. Ms. Wilkins brings forth the real truth and conflicts about color within the race from the presepctive of lighter African Americans,few have acknowledged. This is a must read for everyone who values African American history and appreciates the sophistical dynamics of African American families. Being a part of the "talented 10th" is as much of a responsibility, with diasspointments, as it has been a benefit. Ms. Wilkins reveals both sides of this truth. This is a wonderful addition to every library that includes African American history.
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Format: Hardcover Verified Purchase
I just finished devouring this moving interesting and entertaining book and wanted to congratulate the author and thank her for writing it.
As a light skinned " white african american " myself who grew up privileged in south africa , I resonate very much to the sub texts in the narrative and as a fellow jazz musician I rejoice in the fusion of african and european cultures that make Jazz possible . This personal memoir succeeds in taking the particular story of this family and illuminates a much more universal story that we can all share , care about and enjoy.
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Format: Hardcover
The author's voice comes across in the writing as quirky and affable. There's joy in the stories, and some parts that'll break your heart, but I won't forget these people. It satisfied my geeky love of history, and I kept reading it until I was done. It's a quick read and very entertaining; I suggested it to my book club, and would definitely recommend it to teenagers as well as adults.
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Format: Hardcover
The complexities of this story reflect the intrcacies of America. From her genealogy search to better understand her family and herself, to the accounts of the Civil Rights movement, the author demonstrates her tenacity and gifted writing skills. Her experiences navigating the labyrinth of genealogy research generate feelings of both frustration and excitement. Her desire to make sense of her grandfather, described as cold and unfeeling by some, results in the reader feeling compassion and admiration for the man. An inside look at how real people changed America! Incredibly reviting!
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