Showing posts with label African-american/Black history. Show all posts
Showing posts with label African-american/Black history. Show all posts

Wednesday, December 07, 2011

Modeling Trailblazer Tracy Africa Norman



Time for a Black trans history moment. 

While Lea T may be the model that transpeople in the 2K10s are raving about on one level or another, she is following in the legacy of other transwomen who couldn't be as open as they are about repping the trans community.

One of those people was ballroom legend Tracy Africa Norman. 

She was photographed by renowned fashion photographer Irving Penn for Italian Vogue in 1971, did runway and showroom work in Paris as well as non-fashion commercial work in New York. 

During her modeling heyday in the 70's-80's since she resembled Beverly Johnson, the hot African-American model of the time, she found herself not only working for the third largest modeling agency in New York, but picking up major commercial contracts with Clairol, Ultra Sheen and Avon Cosmetics in addition to being booked for and doing five ESSENCE magazine shoots

She was making a name for herself in the fashion industry until some shady fool ruined a sixth ESSENCE magazine booking for the holiday issue and wrecked her modeling career by revealing her trans status.to then ESSENCE magazine editor Susan L Taylor. 

She went overseas to Paris and began doing runway modeling there until she moved back to New York and became one of the iconic figures in the ballroom community.   She was elected to the Ballroom Hall of Fame in 2001.

Tracy tells the story in a Luna Show interview



Friday, November 11, 2011

Historic SEC Football Game Tomorrow

It would be more fun if they were playing for the SEC East Division lead, but tomorrow's 12 noon EST game in Nashville between the Kentucky Wildcats and the Vanderbilt Commodores will be an historic event just the same.

In 2004 the SEC head coaching color line was broken when Sylvester Crooms became the head coach at Mississippi State.  He resigned in 2008 before the second and third African-American head coaches were hired in the persons of Kentucky second year coach Joker Phillips and Vandy's James Franklin who is in his rookie season.  .

Interestingly enough, the three Kentucky schools that play FBS level football all have African-American head coaches.   Floyd Keith, the executive director of the Black Coaches and Administrators noted that around 11 percent of FBS and Football Championship Subdivision football coaches are African-American   While two black college football coaches facing off is still a rarity, times have changed. "It's not as unique as it used to be and I think that's a sign of progress," said Keith. "That's a good thing." 

But it is in the SEC since they only just broke the college football head coaching color line in the 21st century and it will be more noteworthy when an elite SEC program like an LSU, Auburn or Alabama hires an African American to run that team. 

But back to the historic match up that is happening in Nashville.  Both teams are coming in with 4-5 records and the winner will not only even their records at 5-5 but keep their bowl hopes alive.

Best of luck to both of you in this historic game.
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Friday, October 28, 2011

We Black Trans People Need To Know Our Black Trans History

And I'm not just talking about our Black history, world history, or American history (although we need to be cognizant of that as well) but our Black trans history.

One of the reasons this blog is named TransGriot is because I was tired of Black trans people being unaware of the Black people who walked in our trans shoes before we arrived on this planet to pick up where they left off.  I was tired of us not knowing who our pioneering transpeople were and not being told our stories.  I was tired of our accomplishments and things we have done being erased.

As Chancellor Williams said in The Destruction of Black Civilization in 1975, "As long as we rely on white historians to write Black history for us, we should keep silent about what they produce."

And no, keeping silent about Black trans people being erased from trans history is not gonna happen on my watch.  To ensure that doesn't happen I started this Black History Month doing a Black Trans History quiz and as long as this blog is in operation will be doing it EVERY Black History month from now on.

Diamond Stylz in my recent Ten Questions interview with her pointed out how important knowing our trans history is, ensuring our stories are told, and why we need to proactive in passing them down to the next generation.
"One of my favorite parts about TransGriot is when you showcase some of our trans history.  It opens my eyes to a world in the past that I can't imagine living in. From Lady Java to Lucy Hicks Anderson, I appreciate knowing that we didn't just pop up in the millennium. We have been here fighting. It shows me that I have been handed a torch and I need to continue running with the torch."
That we have.   We have people like Avon Wilson, who was the first patient of the Johns Hopkins gender program.  The African descended people involved in the 1965 Dewey's Lunch Counter Sit-In in Philadelphia.  The people in the ballroom community which drew inspiration from the drag balls of the Harlem Renaissance and Finnie's Ball in Chicago.  Trans people who were clustered in Chicago, Pittsburgh, Philadelphia, New Orleans, Houston, San Francisco, Los Angeles, New York, Detroit and Atlanta just to name a few of the cities.

And oh yeah, I am one of four African-American IFGE Trinity Award winners along with Dawn Wilson, Dr. Marisa Richmond and Earline Budd

Much of the reasons we need to know our history is not only for our own knowledge and edification, but to point out we're intertwined with and share a common history and culture with cis African-Americans.

It's also to counter the haters.   If somebody comes at me with 'Black transpeople haven't don't anything' or the other foul stereotypes they aim at us, I can quickly counter with the fact that we helped organize GenderPac and NTAC.  We have a transwoman who was a member of the Mattachine Society.  We jumped off the first trans specific protest in 1965 and the Stonewall Rebellion in 1969.   A Black transwoman was the first patient in the Johns Hopkins Gender Program.  We have a transwoman in Pamela Hayes who has written and published novels.  We had people who modeled like Tracy Africa Norman and we had present as a delegate to the 2008 Democratic National Convention Dr. Marisa Richmond..       

And yes, some of the legal cases that are helping to define trans legal issues or fight discrimination against us have African American trans plaintiffs in them such as Patricia Underwood, Patti Shaw, KK Logan, Diana Taylor      

We also can't forget our African Diaspora cousins like Victor Mukasa, Audrey Mbugua, Mia Nikasimo  Jowelle De Souza and Skipper Mogapi just for starters or the people we've lost along the way.


We have people such as Janet Mock, Laverne Cox, Isis King, Tona Brown, Jordana and Diamond who are taking Black trans visibility to new levels.   They are paving the way for the acceptance and support we'll need to aim higher and fully integrate ourselves in the African American community so we can continue to make more history.   And yes, knowing our history is a vital building block to ensure we have the healthy self esteem and positive self images we'll need to deal with the slings and arrows of life that will get hurled at us.


I know we just didn't pop up in the late 90's and early 21st century.    Miss Major's existence tells us that along with Cheryl's, Sharyn's, and Marsha P. Johnson's.  And nope, not going to forget the transmen like Alexander John Goodrum, Marcelle Cook-Daniels,  Rev. Louis Mitchell, Kylar Broadus and countless others who are doing the work to not only advance our chocolate section of the trans community, but uplift our people at the same time.

It's past time for us to get to know ourselves by getting in touch with our Black trans history.


Tuesday, October 18, 2011

Alpha Man:The Brotherhood Of MLK

The African-American fraternities and sororities that we call the Divine Nine not only have an exalted place in our people's history, they have been movers and shakers in helping us uplift our community, this nation and in some cases the world.   

With the just concluded dedication Sunday of the MLK Jr. National Memorial, Alpha Phi Alpha, the first African-American Greek letter fraternity gets some well deserved love for their persistence in making this project happen.

As someone who comes from a family in which I have members who are members of Divine Nine frats and sororities, I was interested in watching this BET special entitled Alpha Man:The Brotherhood Of MLK. 

There have been some historical giants who have crossed the burning sands to become members of this over a century old fraternity such as the late Supreme Court Justice Thurgood Marshall, civil rights warrior and UN Ambassador Andrew Young, Olympian Jesse Owens,  former Jamaican Chief Minister Norman Manley and actor Paul Robeson, but the Rev. Dr. Martin Luther King, Jr. is probably one of the most recognized members of Alpha Phi Alpha. .    

This BET special focuses on Dr. King and his time as a member of Alpha Phi Alpha, their involvement in the Civil Rights Movement, and the 15 year effort to make the dream of a monument on the National Mall to him by his fraternity brothers become a reality.