Memoir of a Race Traitor: Fighting Racism in the American South
Written by Mab Segrest
Narrated by Mab Segrest and Brenda Currin
5/5
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About this audiobook
Mab Segrest
Mab Segrest, the Fuller-Maathai Professor Emeritus of Gender and Women's Studies at Connecticut College, is the author of Memoir of a Race Traitor, an Outstanding Book on Human Rights in North America and Editor's Choice for the Lambda Literary Awards, and A Peculiar Inheritance (both forthcoming from The New Press). She was a fellow at the National Humanities Center and lives in Durham, NC.
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Reviews for Memoir of a Race Traitor
6 ratings2 reviews
- Rating: 4 out of 5 stars4/5The south in the US is infamous for its racism and homophobia. As a white lesbian, Segrest decided to go against the grain and stand up against racism. There’s history woven in with the memoir, and exposes a lot of history that I’m sure many would like to keep buried. An interesting read overall, even if it felt a bit disjointed at times.
- Rating: 5 out of 5 stars5/5
What a great book! Segrest is a clear and perceptive thinker and an eloquent writer, and her story is definitely worth telling and remembering.
Most of the book tells us about Segrest’s work combating the Klan, the White Patriot Party, and other racist forces in the South. Alongside this is her own family’s story. She describes their history, their contradictions, and their adoption of the racist beliefs of their Southern community. And she details her own reaction to the dramatic events of the Civil Rights struggle, her turning away from her family’s beliefs, and her sense of herself as both insider and outsider.
When she came out as a lesbian, the outsider status became more defined, and she started working to bring all the different parts of herself together – as Southerner, as privileged white person, as invisible lesbian. It was then she began to join with others, and to take an active role in the struggle against hate crimes.
Segrest follows these personal and political histories with an essay, “A History of Racism in the US”, which describes the way racism has enabled a small elite to hang on to power throughout different economic models. It’s interesting to read how being “white” became an identity. Basically, it was a way of dividing up the underclass so they wouldn’t get together and fight the owning class. It was a privilege conferred, and it was shored up with lots of “us vs. them” propaganda. Definitely a clever diversion, and it hasn’t stopped working – at least not yet.
My favorite part of the book is the last essay, “A Bridge, Not a Wedge”, in which Segrest tells a gay and lesbian audience why we need to pay attention to racism – both in our community and outside it. It’s passionate, exciting, and beautifully written, and I think I will be referring to it for many years.