Pioneering Black Feminist Makes History Again
Chirlane McCary today (far left) with husband Bill de Blasio and children Dante and Chiara.
(Source: Bill de Blasio for Public Advocate)
If you took a women’s studies course during the late 1980s, then you may already be familiar with Chirlane McCray. Her poem, “I Used to Think,” was included in Homegirls: A Black Feminist Anthology (1983), a staple in both feminist studies and Black studies courses of the late 20th century. Here’s a brief excerpt from McCray’s poem:
[…]
I’ve spent my life as a Black girl
a nappy-headed, no-haired,
fat-lipped,
big-bottomed Black girl
and the poem will surely come out wrong
like me.
And, I don’t want everyone looking at me.
If I could be a cream-colored lovely
with gypsy curls,
someone’s pecan dream and sweet sensation,
I’d be poetry in motion
without saying a word
and wouldn’t have to make sense if I did.
If I were beautiful, I could be angry and cute
instead of an evil, pouting mammy bitch
[…]
–from “I Used to Think,” by Chirlane McCray
Her participation in the Homegirls anthology was not Chirlane McCray’s first or most courageous effort on the part of advancing Black women’s interests and issues. A member of the groundbreaking Combahee River Collective, she was also one of the first (if not the first) African American woman to write openly about lesbianism in a mainstream periodical. Her highly controversial article, “I Am a Lesbian,” appeared in Essence Magazine in 1979, where it sparked an intergroup dialogue around gender and sexuality in Black communities.
Today Chirlane McCray is a marketing executive for Brooklyn’s Maimonides Medical Center, but she is still challenging mainstream values and sensibilities, in even broader and more visible arenas. She features prominently in a recent series of campaign ads created in support of her husband, New York City political candidate Bill de Blasio. De Blasio is running for New York City Public Advocate, and the recent advertisements featuring the candidate with his wife and children are the first political ads in anyone’s memory to openly feature and Black-white mixed race couple.
In liberal New York these ads may well have been more of a boon than a distraction, but an article on Ben Smith’s Politico blog notes that even as recently as 2007, only 77% of Americans “approved” of interracial relationships. In 1994, that number was less than 50%. While de Blasio won the Democratic primary (via runoff) in New York, there is a significant likelihood that his campaign strategy (featuring his wife and children freely throughout his campaign) would have dissuaded more candidates that it attracted, had he run in a more conservative region of the country.
But dDe Blasio isn’t running in a more conservative region. He is running in New York; and he has a strong chance of getting elected to this post, which is only a couple of political steps away from becoming the mayor. I say, “Run Bill, Run.” And let this office be only the first step in a career that will take you all the way to Gracie mansion. How thrilling it would be for the greatest city in the world to have the first radical Black feminist as its first lady woman.
Posted by Ajuan Mance
Posted in African Americans, Current Events, race | 2 Comments »