Thursday, February 27, 2020

Commercialized Love


The images of interracial relationships often seen in today’s media, and real life, usually consist of a black man with a woman of another race when the interracial component involves a person of color.

Some argue that this dynamic speaks to America’s racial progress since the Antebellum South, Jim Crow and the tragic death of Emmett Till – times when the lives of African Americans were at risk for even thinking of the forbidden and accused of such. The truth in this argument validates itself, bearing historical consequences that bred fear, which is now replaced by male-liberation and possibly victorious-pride to defy a system that was so punitive to the extent of dictating whom one could and could not love.

Even the dictates over the longevity of black love during slavery, and the prices paid after families were separated for financial gain, carried over as forbidden remnants during the early TV era when images of black love were not seen, nor authenticated in the media. 

Quality films and their memorable scores like Love Story, and The Way We Were, had no counter-equivalents aside from rare gems as, Lady Sings the Blues­­­­­­­­­­­­­­­­­­­, and Mahogany, whose protagonists' conflict added richness to these stories and their mainstream counterparts. 

After Lady and Mahogany, there was a wide disparity in black love dramas with a rich undertone, till such films as, DuVernay’s, Middle of Nowhere, Jenkins’ Beale Street adaptation,  and currently, The Photograph by producer Will Packer who’s among today’s leading creatives elevating the “black love” genre.

The task to bring these stories to the cultural landscape amid disproportionate images of black-male “interracialization” is imperative, as it offers balance and reminds us that black love does exists and is a sustainable option as any other love.