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Blackass
Blackass: A Novel | A. Igoni Barrett
Furo Wariboko, a young Nigerian, awakes the morning before a job interview to find that he's been transformed into a white man. In this condition he plunges into the bustle of Lagos to make his fortune. With his red hair, green eyes, and pale skin, it seems he's been completely changed. Well, almost. There is the matter of his family, his accent, his name. Oh, and his black ass. Furo must quickly learn to navigate a world made unfamiliar and deal with those who would use him for their own purposes. Taken in by a young woman called Syreeta and pursued by a writer named Igoni, Furo lands his first-ever job, adopts a new name, and soon finds himself evolving in unanticipated ways.A. Igoni Barrett's Blackass is a fierce comic satire that touches on everything from race to social media while at the same time questioning the values society places on us simply by virtue of the way we look. As he did in Love Is Power, or Something Like That, Barrett brilliantly depicts life in contemporary Nigeria and details the double-dealing and code-switching that are implicit in everyday business. But it's Furo's search for an identity--one deeper than skin--that leads to the final unraveling of his own carefully constructed story.
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review
sarahlandis
Blackass: A Novel | A. Igoni Barrett
Mehso-so

interesting novel.

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Bertha_Mason
Blackass: A Novel | A. Igoni Barrett

"Private provision of public services had turned everyone into judge and executioner and turned everyone‘s backyards into industrial wastelands. Every man the king of his house, every house a sovereign nation, and every nation its own provider of security, electricity, water. Lagos was a city of millions of warring nations."

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Bertha_Mason
Blackass: A Novel | A. Igoni Barrett

"As they tramped past the silent houses, the crunch of sand beneath their shoes sounded like ghouls in conversation."

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Bertha_Mason
Blackass: A Novel | A. Igoni Barrett
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Bertha_Mason
Blackass: A Novel | A. Igoni Barrett

"Furo Wariboko awoke this morning to find that dreams can lose their way and turn up on the wrong side of sleep."

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bookitaabuku
Blackass: A Novel | A. Igoni Barrett
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No one asks to be born, to be black or white or any colour in between, and yet the identity a person is born into becomes the hardest to explain to the world.

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WanderingBookaneer
Blackass: A Novel | A. Igoni Barrett
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2BR02B Great quote. 7y
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WanderingBookaneer
Blackass: A Novel | A. Igoni Barrett
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The author is a character in this one.

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WanderingBookaneer
Blackass: A Novel | A. Igoni Barrett
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WanderingBookaneer
Blackass: A Novel | A. Igoni Barrett
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Furo was asked this question at a job interview. What would be your answer? I read Jacqueline Woodson‘s Another Brooklyn this morning and followed it up with Ragnar Jonasson‘s Snowblind.

BkClubCare Yea, huh. My answer: “Yesterday. You?” 7y
MelissaSue81 30 seconds ago, and I‘ve read 4 in the last week, but there are times where I go months without reading a book. 7y
GarthRanzz Ten minutes ago before I got caught up on Litsy? 😊 7y
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rubyslippersreads I would love to know how most people answer this. 7y
trueisa4letterword This morning before deciding I should probably get out of bed. 7y
Purrfectpages Sadly, I think most people outside the world of places like Litsy would be hard pressed to answer this question. 😞 7y
nadine_swartz @Purrfectpages I think you're right, whereas most of us would say yesterday or today! 7y
Lreads About five hours ago while waiting for sandwiches at a restaurant. 7y
Maria514626 What a great question! The answers might be very sad. At lunchtime. 7y
StillLookingForCarmenSanDiego That would be the best interview question. 7y
rajithr Yesterday on my flight to Dubai, was a lovely book in my local language, based on the great Indian epic Mahabharata ✈️ 7y
CouronneDhiver I‘ve been asked that in an interview too. So weird! 7y
81 likes12 comments
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Hooked_on_books
Blackass: A Novel | A. Igoni Barrett
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#TBRBingo update! I started this back in October and have intermittently tended to it. It appears as though I‘m actively avoiding getting bingo. 🤣 I think I‘ll read either The Feminist Porn Book or Blackass next just to continue the trend. 🤷🏼‍♀️

WhatDeeReads Close but no cigar! 7y
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missberlyreads
Blackass: A Novel | A. Igoni Barrett
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Chelleo I‘m loving the title Blackass! 7y
28 likes2 comments
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Liberty
Blackass: A Novel | A. Igoni Barrett
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#RiotGrams, Day 16: Today's prompt is "black books." ???

vivastory Black Moon is so great. Really underrated. 7y
quietjenn "I just really want to buy a book." 7y
bookishbunny I ❤Bernard Black! Black Books is a classic. 7y
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Dorianna “Don‘t you dare use the word ‘party‘ as a verb in this shop!” 7y
Moray_Reads "The music was too loud, the food was cold. The drinks were few and the people were many. It was everything I expected and less, I'm never going outside again unless I need someplace to throw up" 7y
jmtrivera Black Books is so great! 7y
152 likes1 stack add6 comments
review
ontheBL
Blackass: A Novel | A. Igoni Barrett
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Pickpick

The modern retelling of Kafka's Metamorphosis explores racism, perception, classicism, feminism, identity, and more in this novel about and by a Nigerian. Barrett is both witty and probing as he looks into what it means to be white in Africa.

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missberlyreads
Blackass: A Novel | A. Igoni Barrett
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BookishFeminist Perfect book stack ✨✨ 7y
16 likes2 comments
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TheBookStacker
Blackass: A Novel | A. Igoni Barrett
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#BIGYELLOWBALL a modern day take on the Kafka classic The Metamorphosis this book explores race in Nigeria. Very interesting premise and a swelteringly good novel.

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magictoyshop
Blackass: A Novel | A. Igoni Barrett
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For day 4 of #marchintoreading, I offer for your consideration "Blackass". Based on Kafka's The Metamorphosis, the protagonist in Blackass wakes up one morning in #Lagos to find himself transformed into a white man, with the exception of his ass, which remains black. What a premise, right? Imagine my disappointment when I realized the whole thing was about white privilege and nothing else. #didntlikeitstillfinished #blackauthors

magictoyshop I didn't have space to add that the female characters were poorly drawn as well. One was a Twitter-crazy airhead, another was a rich man's mistress and yet another was a pining mother. Gah. Why. 8y
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Reese_Pearly.Pages
Blackass: A Novel | A. Igoni Barrett
Mehso-so

⭐️⭐️⭐️I was hooked in the beginning and was very interested to see how Furo would react to his unexpected transformation into a white man. He begins to take advantage of his newfound privilege. He abandons his family but claims "He has nowhere to go! There's no one else he can ask." ? Furo's personality transformation and fear of changing back into a black man was particularly interesting. In the end I nicknamed him: Furo the Fraud ????

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Reese_Pearly.Pages
Blackass: A Novel | A. Igoni Barrett
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New audiobook. I have a ton of reading to do. Why not add to the pile??

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azulaco
Blackass: A Novel | A. Igoni Barrett
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#riotgrams day 3: #onewordtitles. Currently starting this one-word title from my TBR pile. Appropriately enough, it was suggested by @Liberty and @rebeccaschinsky on the #AllTheBooks podcast last year.

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Kenny
Blackass: A Novel | A. Igoni Barrett
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My Favorite Books of 2016

No. 9: Blackass by A. Igoni Barrett. There is an edge, a fire, the beginning of trouble. This is Kafka for the Kanye generation.

JoshCook Could be my staff pick of the year. I'm still deciding. 8y
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kgriffith
Blackass: A Novel | A. Igoni Barrett
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I made the mistake of parking by the fiction shelves to try and get reading done for class. #diverseathon

flyfarther79 I just want to copy sections of Hyperbole and post them around. Or hand them out when people don't understand my depression or anxiety 8y
Jencristalli I read both of these books this year. I cried and laughed through Hyperbole 8y
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MandyJo
Blackass: A Novel | A. Igoni Barrett
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#septphotochallenge Day 4: POC Author
Read this on a trip through the Deep South. Not even kidding, the guest room I stayed in had a rebel flag on display.

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Nabutilu
Blackass: A Novel | A. Igoni Barrett
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StephBengtson
Blackass: A Novel | A. Igoni Barrett
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Finishing this tonight. #Nigeria #diversitymonday #blm

BookishFeminist Yes! Such a good book. 8y
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StephBengtson
Blackass: A Novel | A. Igoni Barrett
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StephBengtson
Blackass: A Novel | A. Igoni Barrett
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britt_brooke Lovely picture! 8y
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katrrosee
Blackass: A Novel | A. Igoni Barrett
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Pickpick

So my initial impression was that this book was a little too on-the-nose retelling of The Metamorphosis, but my god, I'm glad I stuck through. Relevant and funny, insightful and strange and interesting, this book is a highlight and begs for rereading.

Taylor This is one of my favorite contemporary novels. I met the author and had him autograph my copy! 8y
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RebeccaH
Blackass: A Novel | A. Igoni Barrett
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The shelf with some of the most recently-acquired books on my TBR list (which is approaching 600 books).

BookBabe 😁🙌🏻 8y
32 likes1 comment
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jamreads
Blackass: A Novel | A. Igoni Barrett

"I was finding out that appearances would always be the point of conflict. Male or female, black or white, the eye of the beholder and the fashion sense of the beholden, all of these feed into our desire to classify by sight." - Furo Wariboko

JessicaBates Very interesting quote. 👌🏼 8y
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jamreads
Blackass: A Novel | A. Igoni Barrett
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Panpan

I had high hopes but it just wasn't for me. Although there were metaphoric themes scattered throughout, I never became invested in the characters. The premise of a Nigerian man waking up to discover that he's now white however his "ass" remains black sounded intriguing but the story fell flat. 2?
#Blackass #jamreads

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WanderingBookaneer
Blackass: A Novel | A. Igoni Barrett
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Another interesting beginning from today's massive book haul.

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Karenmyers
Blackass: A Novel | A. Igoni Barrett
Bailedbailed

I loved it in the beginning but couldn't finish it. It never seemed to go anywhere and there were too many convenient coincidences that drove the plot. The writing was great and I loved reading the rich descriptions of life in Nigeria but I just couldn't stay interested enough to finish it.

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Garbi87
Blackass: A Novel | A. Igoni Barrett
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...we only see ourselves through external sources, whether as images in mirrors, pixels on the screen, or words on the page, words of love from a mother, words of hate from an ex-lover...I was already trying to say what I see now, that we are all constructed narratives.

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Hooked_on_books
Blackass: A Novel | A. Igoni Barrett
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Book mail! Very excited to have used my B&N Apple refund on these babies.

BookNotes I liked "Brain on Fire." Haven't read the rest. 8y
WordWaller Rebecca Solnit! 🙌 8y
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KiskyLuella
Blackass: A Novel | A. Igoni Barrett
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"But in this war of selves, I had switched sides. Despite the snake of maleness that still tethered me to the past, I was more than man, interrupted.
I was whoever I wanted me to be."

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Karenmyers
Blackass: A Novel | A. Igoni Barrett
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"The woman's curses were more colourful, her delivery more dramatic, and her well of invention ran deeper." She and I would be great friends!! Loving this book so far BTW. ❤️

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GregZimmerman
Blackass: A Novel | A. Igoni Barrett
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Pickpick

Enjoyed this, as much for living in Lagos for a few days as for the satire. Best cover of the year, also.

Simona @GregZimmerman Funny photo 👍 8y
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booksbythecup
Blackass: A Novel | A. Igoni Barrett
Panpan

So I won't call this a review- more of a VENT....the premise of the story pulled me in, Nigerian man (black) wakes up one day and he is white, all accept his backside. Does life in literally another skin mean more than when lived in the skin you were born in? Does it really matter?

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balletbookworm
Blackass: A Novel | A. Igoni Barrett
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Mehso-so

I have use the dreaded "it's probably not the book, it's me" here. I liked the writing and the concept a lot but I don't know if I missed some cultural cues since I didn't find this as satirically funny as I expected (mostly I felt frustrated by Furo's actions). Will revisit.

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Venus
Blackass: A Novel | A. Igoni Barrett
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Barrett on Twitter 😱

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Sajorenna
Blackass: A Novel | A. Igoni Barrett
Pickpick

Love this book! Wicked funny :)

RaimeyGallant A belated welcome to Litsy! #LitsyWelcomeWagon #LitsyLove P.S. A bunch of us posted Litsy tips a few days back. Check about 8 posts back on my page. :) 7y
1 like1 comment
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Venus
Blackass: A Novel | A. Igoni Barrett
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Ready, set, go.

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Yossarian
Blackass: A Novel | A. Igoni Barrett
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Brag Post for slow readers! Only finished five. One by a transgender woman, two by Authors of Color, if Salman Rushdie counts. Favorite was Blackass, where the author is male, but wrote himself into the story as a transgender female.

Riveted_Reader_Melissa Love it! And I read one about Teddy too! 8y
Yossarian @Riveted_Reader_Melissa Also, I'm assuming my book about Roosevelt was by a white guy, but that was probably a unwarranted assumption to assume that only white people would write non-fiction about Bull Moosers that only touch tangentially on race issues. 8y
KateTheBookworm I don't think 5 books in a month can be considered "slow" by any stretch of the imagination. 8y
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Riveted_Reader_Melissa @Yossarian Mine was written by a white women, so you never know! 8y
LitHousewife If I read more than 4 or 5 books in a month, I must have bee on vacation without my family. 8y
BookishFeminist 5 is great! Definitely not slow. Any reading is good reading. 👍🏼 Salman Rushdie def counts as a POC. Really looking forward to reading Blackass. 8y
BarbaraTheBibliophage Props to all of us for reading at all. There are so many people who don't crack even one book a year. 8y
ramyasbookshelf So glad to see a number that is actually relatable:) @Yossarian you crack me up! 8y
Amandajoy I love TR! In my quest to read a book about each president, I've just mostly read biographies about him. 8y
Yossarian @Amandajoy All 44 Presidents can all be adequately summarized as how they compare to Teddy. He probably wasn't anyone's first choice for "best," but he was always trying so hard! 8y
Sue @Yossarian You're awesome. 😊 8y
TheWellReadOwl Love this 😊 8y
Ellsbeth I am really happy to finally find a community that thinks 5 books a month is slow! Keep reading what you want, how you want. ❤️📚 8y
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evelynnalfred
Blackass: A Novel | A. Igoni Barrett
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...he learnt how it felt to be seen as a freak: exposed to wonder, invisible to comprehension."

DarthDeadpool I have this book on my wish list. How are you liking it? 8y
evelynnalfred @DarthDeadpool I'm intrigued so far. 8y
Donna_sBookMinute Interesting quote. I've seen this title but, for some reason, didn't stop to find out what it was about. It's on my TBR now. And thank you, @evelynnalfred, for the follow. 8y
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review
Kenny
Blackass: A Novel | A. Igoni Barrett
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Pickpick

Blackass, with its black, Nigerian protagonist waking up in the body of a white man, immediately calls to mind Kafka's Metamorphosis, but this is something more. Race, politics, humor. There is an edge to Blackass, a fire, the beginning of trouble. This is Kafka for the Kanye Generation.

JessicaTripler Really enjoyed this one 9y
TheNextBook This sounds really good! 9y
emmaleegough Sounds like an interesting one. 9y
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Bigeyeblue Sounds interesting and thought provoking. 9y
CynCruz23 Nice description ? especially "Kanye generation" 9y
sherrynuts I just put this one on my To Read list earlier this month! Glad to hear it was good. 9y
RickMoody Think I'm gonna teach this book next year. 9y
Kenny @RickMoody I would take that class. 9y
FeastingOnFiction How can I not read something described as "Kafka for the Kanye generation"? Great description. I'm completely intrigued. 9y
Dmbulan @RickMoody What do you teach? 8y
RickMoody @Dmbulan--MFA program at NYU 8y
StephTKO While I'm always down for a witty alliteration, I cringe at calling any generation "the Kanye generation." I want to read the book though. 8y
MisterWhitaker Kafka x Kanye is a win. Adding to my list! 8y
Jekjek19 I just finished this and indeed enjoyed the edge and fire. I enjoyed it despite not really loving Furo! 8y
ninthpossibility I wanted to know more about this book and somehow failed to anticipate the kinds of search results I would get after googling "blackass." Oh dear. 8y
zembla This sounds intriguing! And the premise makes me think of Black No More by George Schuyler. 8y
literatethoughts Really, really need to pick this one up. 8y
booksbythecup Interesting concept but didn't really like it after all..😶 8y
Tillie Just read Metamorphosis. Still thinking about it... 8y
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bookshopsc
Blackass: A Novel | A. Igoni Barrett
Pickpick

A young Nigerian wakes up to discover that, with the exception of his ass, which remains black, he‘s a red-headed white man. That is the sole reason I picked up this book and it did not let me down. Lagos comes alive in rich detail, a fleshed out character in its own right. —Rachel

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Stefani
Blackass: A Novel | A. Igoni Barrett
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Today's a free day which means reads in the park.

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Yossarian
Blackass: A Novel | A. Igoni Barrett
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Pickpick

Really thought provoking and fun, if unexpectedly dark at places. Most surprising, the author wrote himself in to the story as a transgender woman (in reality he is male) who hasn't undergone surgery -- thus making him female except for her MaleAss, a direct comparison. What would Rachel think?

ramyasbookshelf Definitely going to read this next! 9y
BookMusings Looking forward to reading this one! 9y
LisaAnnGallagher Rachel is the very definition of "righteous ignorance" 9y
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Yossarian @LisaAnnGallagher She seems to upset a lot of people. I guess I'm more laissez faire. Let her do her thing as long as it isn't hurting anyone. 9y
TheBookbabeblog84 I have a serious problem with Rachel; as an African American I find it offensive that she thinks it's 1) okay to lie about her hertiage 2) that she is trying on "blackness"; which she can remove anytime. I can't do that. 9y
Yossarian @TheBookbabeblog84 I hear you, and I see similar responses from many African Americans. The novel, though, draws a direct comparison with a transgender woman, raising the issue of how you can distinguish Rachel from a man "lying" and "trying on" the female gender. 9y
Yossarian As a white person, I can see both sides, but I haven't really understood how "transgender" can be okay, but "transracial" cannot. I might just be missing something important, but the arguments seem comparable. 9y
Procrastireader @Yossarian think of it like this: A Caucasian person, born into a white family, who never has contact with people of other races or ethnic subcultures will never identify as other than Caucasian. A transgendered person, no matter how much they try--or how much others impose their birth gender on 9y
Procrastireader @Yossarian them--will always identify as other than their genetic gender 9y
Yossarian @Procrastireader So a boy raised in a community with only men...? 9y
Procrastireader @Yossarian a good example, but even if a transgendered person somehow was unaware there was another gender, they *would* be aware that their responses and identity etc were somehow different from others', even if they couldn't identify the difference 9y
Yossarian @Procrastireader And a black (or white) person raised in an single race society is intrinsically different than my example because ....? 9y
Procrastireader @Yossarian because biologically there is no such thing as race--even though you would say your eyes tell you differently, BIOLOGICALLY race in humans simply doesn't exist. Please Google this before you answer--I am not making this up, I am not a loon. Gender, however, is a very complex biological 9y
Procrastireader @Yossarian state. Hermaphroditism is just one aspect of the truly non-binary nature of gender and sexuality. It's not a bell curve, but it is a continuum. The combination of 2 half-sets of chromosomes allows for a *lot* of variation. 9y
Yossarian @Procrastireader I don't disagree with you about race at all. Just that gender is necessarily different. Sex may have a wide range between male and female and intersex, based in DNA, but "gender" has always been seen as a social construct, just like "race." At least until last year, it seems. 9y
Yossarian @Procrastireader I am old enough to remember when feminism required me to believe that "gender" was a myth. Now, it requires me to believe it is an absolute. I am a slow evolver. 9y
Procrastireader @Yossarian how gender is *expressed* has many social components, but gender itself is biological. Biology includes not only the body but the brain and the limbic system--and we are only just now starting to understand how all the parts work together. *Sexuality* on the other hand, may have more 9y
Procrastireader @Yossarian of a cultural component, although it is probably *most* strongly driven by genetics 9y
Procrastireader @Yossarian yeah, the conflation of gender roles and expectations with gender itself has caused no end of confusion. But the understanding of the biology gets a little clearer all the time. We're all slow to evolve when change goes in every direction😊 9y
Yossarian @Procrastireader then maybe it's just semantics, because I don't see how gender can be "biological" and simultaneously require hormones and/or other biological changes to be expressed. The argument seems to involve too much sleight of hand. 9y
Procrastireader @Yossarian well, hormones *are* biology....or do you mean taking additional hormones to change to the gender you identify as? 9y
Yossarian @Procrastireader Yes. "Change to the gender." If I identify as female because of biology, that's fine. But then if I need to take hormones, that implies (1) I wasn't (fully) that gender before; and (2) there is a "right way" to be female that the hormones will let me achieve. 9y
Procrastireader @Yossarian first, let me say how much I am enjoying our discussion, and how much I liked all your Prince posts💜 OK--don't forget that there's a difference between secondary sexual characteristics unleashed at puberty by our hormones (body hair, breasts, deeper voice, etc) and gender itself. Trans 9y
Procrastireader @Yossarian people generally want to acquire the secondary sexual characteristics of the gender they identify with--thru hormone therapy and/or surgery. The *identification* takes place in the brain (we think now) and is probably so integral (somehow) that it cannot be altered. This is still terra 9y
Procrastireader @Yossarian very incognita, tho, as are many aspects of identity. How does a toddler know it's a girl or a boy so definitely? Many parents of trans kids say their kids knew pretty much from jump that their gender identity was not the one they were born with. It's a question were not close to answe 9y
Yossarian @Procrastireader I recently read an interesting article in Grants in the issue. Check it out. The part about "Liam/ Lucy" goes with what you are saying, but the part about "Rose/ Fynn" complicates it. I feel like the politics requires people to talk in absolutes. 9y
Yossarian @Procrastireader when the reality is probably much messier. http://granta.com/self-made-man/ 9y
Procrastireader @Yossarian tx for the link! Agree--until we can unhitch from our Puritan past we'll never get to just pursue the science of it. In the meantime, let's just all use the men's room😳😇 9y
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Orbeck33
Blackass: A Novel | A. Igoni Barrett
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