Denzel As Race Man
December 24, 2007 by Marc Lamont Hill
Denzel Washington and the “Race Man” Syndrome
from the Washington Post (Outlook)
RACE MAN
Does Denzel Always Have to Represent?
by Mark Anthony Neal
For most of his career, Denzel Washington has been the epitome of a “race man” — a well-mannered, well-intentioned role model thoroughly committed to black uplift. He’s maintaining that tradition in “The Great Debaters,” a new film in which he plays a champion debate coach in the segregated South.
But his recent portrayal of the murderous Harlem drug lord Frank Lucas in “American Gangster,” following his Oscar-winning performance as the corrupt cop Alonzo in “Training Day,” has shaken his standing as a race man — and has prompted speculation that, after years of playing characters who symbolized African Americans’ mainstream acceptance, he’s finally selling out to a commercial culture eager to make a buck off of portraying black men as thugs.
That’s not how I see it. To me, the more important question that Washington’s career choices raise is: Why, as the nation grows to appreciate the many different ways of being black, do we still need race men at all?
“Race man” is a term from the beginning of the 20th century that describes black men of stature and integrity who represented the best that African Americans had to offer in the face of Jim Crow segregation. It has lost some of its resonance in a post-civil rights world, but it remains an unspoken measure of commitment to uplifting the race. Race men inspire pride; their work, their actions and their speech represent excellence instead of evoking shame and embarrassment. Thus the pundit Tavis Smiley and the Rev. Jesse Jackson (even with an illegitimate child) can be race men, whereas the comedian Dave Chappelle and the rapper/mogul Jay-Z can never be.
Sidney Poitier had impeccable race-man cred. The legendary black actor was one of the first to achieve mainstream success, and he never wavered. In films such as “The Defiant Ones” (1958), “In the Heat of the Night” (1967) and even “Guess Who’s Coming to Dinner” (1967), he made us proud to be black. At the height of the black-power movement, when his articulate, educated and even affable characters were often measured against fiery political icons such as Malcolm X and the Black Panther leader H. Rap Brown, some blacks felt ambivalent about Poitier. But the actor’s willingness to support the civil rights movement appeased those who wanted a more radical image.
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7 Comments
1. ChgoSista wrote:
I liiiiked this article.
December 24, 2007 @ 11:43 am2. DCI74 wrote:
Lol @ Blaxx, I was thinking the same thing.
This was a good article.
December 24, 2007 @ 11:57 am3. Blaxx wrote:
The bootleg is already out, I watched it from the comfort of my own home, but I certainly wouldn’t feel bad if they got my $11 for me to watch it again.
December 24, 2007 @ 2:05 pmLeave a Reply

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