Racialization And Colonialism In Claudia Rankine's Citizen: An American Lyric

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Racialization, Colonialism, and the Best Female Tennis Player of All Time Claudia Rankine’s book Citizen: An American Lyric provides racially charged commentary on the internal and external conflicts of black experiences in America. She uses various formats - poetry, short essays, and artwork- to articulate her ideas and nuance the various themes over which this conversation takes place. By addressing Rankine’s discussion on Serena Williams, the themes of racialization and colonialism interact with one another to produce a discourse on black womanhood in environments that prioritize whiteness. This discussion includes dialogue on the presence of black women’s bodies in spaces that are constructed as white, and on the trope of the “angry black woman” and how they intersect to subjugate Williams. Rankine explores the themes of racialization and colonialism as mutually constructed and dissects how they operate blatantly and covertly by looking at Serena’s experiences in the setting of tennis. Rankine features a piece of artwork by Glenn Ligon, which showcases the words “I do not always feel coloured” and “I feel most coloured when I am In this video, a man by the name of Hennessy Youngman focuses mainly on “cultivating an ‘angry nigger exterior’” as a mode to success (2014, p. 23). Hennessy’s use of anger as a mode to gaining notoriety feeds into the trope of the “angry black,” a stereotype we constantly see applied to Serena Williams. In the larger picture, racializing black citizens- more specifically, racializing black women- acts as a way to delegitimize resistance by people of colour against unfair treatment by writing them off as short-tempered and irrational. This process of attributing angry reactions to the character of the individual rather than as a reaction to injustices, allow colonialism and Euro-centrism to continue

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