
There is a long history of mixed couples in American literature and popular culture: Huck and Jim, Ishmael and Queequeg, Natty Bumppo and Chigachgook, the Lone Ranger and Tonto, Daniel Boone and Mingo, Jay Leno and Branford Marsalis. I’ve written before about the way many American pop songs belie a certain repressed anxiety about black Otherness. Within the most avid white believer in the virtue of black Americans, there may reside a modicum of repressed anxiety about black bodies. As Calvin Hernton has written, “There is a sexual involvement, at once real and vicarious, connecting white and black people in America that spans the history of this country from the era of slavery to the present, an involvement so immaculate and yet so perverse, so ethereal and yet so concrete, that all race relations tend to be, however subtle, sex relations” (
Sexism and Racism in America, p. 7).
Songs Linking Sensuality With Anxiety:Sonny Charles and the Checkmates, Ltd. –
Black PearlMerle Haggard –
Irma JacksonJanis Ian –
Society’s ChildPaul McCartney with Stevie Wonder –
Ebony and IvoryKenny Rogers & The First Edition –
Reuben JamesThe Rolling Stones –
Brown SugarStories –
Brother LouieThree Dog Night –
Black & WhiteTribe “Supremes” Trio –
White Boys (from the musical
Hair)
Neil Young –
Southern Man
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