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Black Girl / White Girl Hardcover – October 17, 2006
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3.6 out of 5 stars

100 ratings



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In 1975, racial tension still runs high at Genna Meade's mostly white Schuyler College in Pennsylvania. Her outcast black roommate, Minette Swift, is a D.C. preacher's daughter; Genna is descended from the college's founder. Minette misses home desperately; Genna, in contrast, avoids her "hippie" mother's phone calls while yearning for a visit from her absentee father, activist lawyer Maximilian Meade. Despite their differences, the girls muster an effortful friendship, due to the near-fetishization of black culture that Genna's parents have inculcated in her. When racist incidents begin to plague Minette, Genna tries to protect her, but Minette lapses into an antisocial, dangerous depression. Meanwhile, Genna has her own problems—she's gradually piecing together clues to a mystery whose solution may lie far too close to home for comfort. Eventually, Minette's downward spiral prompts a shocking epiphany for Genna that will alter the course of her family's life. Oates bravely grapples with the fallout of the Civil Rights movement, the early '70s backlash against Summer of Love optimism, and the well-intentioned but ultimately condescending antiracist piety of privileged white liberals, but this anecdotal novel feels slight compared to her best work. (Oct.) Copyright © Reed Business Information, a division of Reed Elsevier Inc. All rights reserved.
Volumes will be written about Oates' young women narrators, their vulnerability and covert power, their passive-aggressive quests for love and their penchant for revenge. Complicated young women like Generva Meade, heir to a fortune and a legacy of activism. Her Quaker ancestors were abolitionists, her namesake was a famous pioneering feminist, and her father is a notoriously radical hippie attorney. A signature theme for Oates is the psychology of race relations, and a favorite rite of passage is a young woman's first year away at college, preoccupations that shape this acutely provocative novel. It's 1974, and Generva, called Genna, is a freshman at a college founded by her great-grandfather. Her roommate, Minette Swift, is a black scholarship student and the pious, anxious, and aloof daughter of a minister. She also appears to be the target of hate crimes. Genna tries so desperately to befriend Minette that there is something suspect about her avid fascination. As events unfold, Genna's growing frustration over the unbridgeable gap between her and Minette fuels her anger with her elusive father, who may be in danger due to his involvement with a protest bombing. Oates is a master at injecting potent personal and social psychology into the lean musculature of a thriller, a feat that, in this case, starkly exposes key paradoxes at work in the American soul. Donna Seaman Copyright © American Library Association. All rights reserved
“Masterful…Black Girl/White Girl is another success for its author.” -- BookPage

Publisher

:

Ecco (October 17, 2006) Language

:

English Hardcover

:

272 pages ISBN-10

:

0061125644 ISBN-13

:

978-0061125645 Item Weight

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1.1 pounds Dimensions

:

6.12 x 0.97 x 9 inches


3.6 out of 5 stars

100 ratings



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Black Girl/White Girl is a beautifully written exploration of the complexities of race, family and the impact of social pressure. A privileged white girl, Genna, made by her radical lawyer father to feel deeply guilty about her privileges, tries to relate to her room-mate Minette, an emotionally disturbed daughter of a prominent black preacher. Both struggle to adjust to the harsh social norms of an elite college. Both struggle to deal with domineering fathers. Genna also has to deal with her beautiful, insecure, pill-popping mother enraged by her husband's abandonment. Joyce Carol Oates avoids the cliches of much writing about relations between black and white in America. She shows us the complex impact of American racism and how difficult it is to unravel feelings about race within one's own self. Rejection of overt racism becomes an inverted kind of racial bias that for Genna leads to her inability to deal effectively with her difficult roommate. Oates evokes a time in America when racial and social hatred dominated public life and when supposedly "good" people were willing to kill for their beliefs. Despite desperate, self-denigrating efforts, Genna fails to help Minette. She acquires new levels of guilt when her roommate dies in a fire and she inadvertently betrays her father to a life in prison. One of the few books I have read that I knew immediately I would have to read again.












genna meade, white granddaughter of the founder of an exclusive college for women, narrates this story of her freshman year shared at her familial college with black room-mate, minette swift, merit scholar, from washington d.c. , daughter of a race conscious minister of a non-denominational church. genna's intention was to tell the story of the events leading up to minette's death, but as her story progressed, genna became aware of the emergence of what she called a shadow text of her father, a lawyer/activist. mad max meade's involvement with draft-dodgers and radicals during the 1960s placed him and his family under scrutiny and surveillance of the f.b.i. for more than a decade. unlike the daughters, the two fathers never meet, even as the issue of racial harassment of minette escalates from minette's sensitivity to a crack in a window during a storm to a demeaning photo and racist epithets in anonymous letters. before oates is finished with her novel, the reader is caught in two horror stories. readers familiar with nella larsen's QUICKSAND will like the story of minette, and readers of peter straub will recognize oates' macabre morality of the meade story. classic oates.












This book by Joyce Carol Oates is quite different than any of her other books I've read. A girl from a very dysfunctional family narrates the story. She has quite an imagination and sees relationship with her Black college roommate far more meaningful than her roommate. She carries her feelings for her roommate into her adulthood, long after the roommate dies, thinking of her as a sister who died at age 18. I found the book a little strange and had a difficult time relating to the tale. The sexual and violent content is from the narrators childhood memory. Oates went way out with her imagination for this story line. I would hesitate to recommend it heartily though it was thought provoking to some extent.












Joyce Carol Oates delivers in this haunting story of two college roommates, one black, one white and the relationship they establish. Set in the 1970's and told through the eyes of the privileged white girl, it leaves the reader wondering what the black girl would have said. Things happen, strange things and the two change. We are left wondering what is the truth here. But the book makes us care.












JCO is a writing machine. Clearly that is her life. She'll pick a theme or subject and then write. The average novel of her output is not optimistic, but you can count on it to be well written. This one is above average re her output and has some very serious social statements (not unlike Tom Wolfe) not taking sides in the current political climate.












I found it very hard to get a grasp on any of the main characters except for one whom I found thoroughly repellant. I also found the protagonist's motives for her behavior unfathomable. I am not usually this negative about a book: sounds like I should have rated it even lower. It was intriguing enough to keep reading to find some answers but any answers were ultimately unsatisfying.












I was mesmerized by the story and the way Oates' once again captures us from the point of view of a young women affected by her family's function, or dysfunction. I couldn't put this book down. And, at the end, the reader is satisfied with the conclusions, explanations, doubts, shifts, and emotions evoked in this really tragic tale.












I read this as I hadn't read any Joyce Carol Oates books and thought I should. The book was interesting to me as it was set in my generation. As I'm a Senior Citizen now I found it a bit dated and also a bit predictable. In spite of that, I read it avidly and can recommend it.


5.0 out of 5 stars









Excellent Read












Fantastic author to recommend to A level and English Lit degree students.


5.0 out of 5 stars









Thought-provoking.












Thought-provoking. Interesting. Troubling. Frustrating. Very enjoyable read.


3.0 out of 5 stars








Jeux de miroirs












Genna, la narratrice, se situe "idéalement" à la croisée de plusieurs chemins. Celui suivit par son père un avocat investit jusqu'à la tragédie dans les luttes pour les droits civiques et contre la guerre du Vietnam, celui de Minette Swift, sa colocataire à l'université, fille d'un pasteur noir emprunte de "bonnes manières" et loin des combats du père de Genna, celui de sa mère perdue dans les dérives de la contreculture hippie... Tous ces personnages et ces destins se répondent en un jeu de miroirs déformants où Genna se construit à la recherche de son identité et de sa place dans la société américaine. Maintenant ce roman n'a pas pour moi la force et la puissance narrative des meilleurs récits de Joyce Carol Oates. Le fil qui tient le récit est trop ténu, trop fragile pour emporter le lecteur. Le personnage du père qu'elle finit par trahir n'évite pas les clichés sur les militants des années soixante forcément dangereux même s'ils s'engagent pour des causes que l'histoire a fini par légitimer : mouvements des droits civiques et contre la guerre...



2.0 out of 5 stars









Didn't Like It












I'm having a hard time finishing the last 20% of the book. The story isn't what I was expecting at all. And Genna's obsession with trying to get Minette to like her is irritating and way to long drawn out.
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