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They Were Black. Their Parents Were White. Growing Up Was Complicated.


They Were Black. Their Parents Were White. Growing Up Was Complicated.
Georgina Lawton (Left), Rebecca Carroll (Right)Credit. Jamie Simonds/Loftus Media, Laura Fuchs
By Bliss Broyard
By Georgina Lawton
By Rebecca Carroll
For most of us, racial identity is a combination of inheritance (you are what your parents are) and influence (you’re a product of where and how you were raised). But what if you are raised by people who didn’t look like you, in communities where you were the only one, steeped in a culture whose power was amassed through your oppression?
In a pair of new memoirs “Surviving the White Gaze,” by the American cultural critic Rebecca Carroll, and “Raceless: In Search of Family, Identity, and the Truth About Where I Belong,” by the British journalist Georgina Lawton two women recount growing up as Black girls with white parents who loved them deeply but failed them miserably by not seeing and celebrating them for who they were. ....

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We Published Nearly 2,800 Stories in 2020. Here Are 22 of Our Favorites of the Year


We Published Nearly 2,800 Stories in 2020. Here Are 22 of Our Favorites of the Year
We take a look back at some of the most serious, most joyful, and most compelling stories of 2020 with a selection of staff favorites.
December 29, 2020
A protester speaks to a crowd from the pedestal that once hosted the statue of Edward Colston. Photo by Giulia Spadafora/NurPhoto via Getty Images.
There’s no way around it: it’s been a bruising year.
The coronavirus pandemic taught us (as if we needed another lesson) that no one is an island. The police killings of George Floyd, Breonna Taylor, and too many others reminded us that struggles for political justice are only just beginning. And the election of President Joe Biden suggested a potential return to order but really, how can things ever be as they were? ....

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