Black Like Me, 50 Years Later
John Howard Griffin gave readers an unflinching view of the Jim Crow South. How has his book held up?
- By Bruce Watson
- Smithsonian magazine, October 2011, Subscribe
(Page 3 of 3)
Carrying just $200 in traveler’s checks, Griffin took a bus to Hattiesburg, Mississippi, where a recent lynching had spread fear through the alleys and streets. Griffin holed up in a rented room and wrote of his overwhelming sense of alienation: “Hell could be no more lonely or hopeless.” He sought respite at a white friend’s home before resuming his experiment—“zigzagging,” he would call it, between two worlds. Sometimes passing whites offered him rides; he did not feel he could refuse. Astonished, he soon found many of them simply wanted to pepper him with questions about “Negro” sex life or make lurid boasts from “the swamps of their fantasy lives.” Griffin patiently disputed their stereotypes and noted their amazement that this Negro could “talk intelligently!” Yet nothing gnawed at Griffin so much as “the hate stare,” venomous glares that left him “sick at heart before such unmasked hatred.”
He roamed the South from Alabama to Atlanta, often staying with black families who took him in. He glimpsed black rage and self-loathing, as when a fellow bus passenger told him: “I hate us.” Whites repeatedly insisted blacks were “happy.” A few whites treated him with decency, including one who apologized for “the bad manners of my people.” After a month, Griffin could stand no more. “A little thing”—a near-fight when blacks refused to give up their seats to white women on a bus—sent Griffin scurrying into a “colored” restroom, where he scrubbed his fading skin until he could “pass” for white. He then took refuge in a monastery.
Before Griffin could publish reports on his experiment in Sepia magazine, which had helped bankroll his travels, word leaked out. In interviews with Time and CBS, he explained what he’d been up to without trying to insult Southern whites. He was subjected to what he called “a dirty bath” of hatred. Returning to his Texas hometown, he was hanged in effigy; his parents received threats on his life. Any day now, Griffin heard, a mob would come to castrate him. He sent his wife and children to Mexico, and his parents sold their property and went into exile too. Griffin remained behind to pack his studio, wondering, “Is tonight the night the shotgun blasts through the window?” He soon followed his family to Mexico, where he turned his Sepia articles into Black Like Me.
In October 1961, Black Like Me was published, to wide acclaim. The New York Times hailed it as an “essential document of contemporary American life.” Newsweek called it “piercing and memorable.” Its success—translated into 14 languages, made into a movie, included in high-school curriculums—turned Griffin into a white spokesman for black America, a role he found awkward.
“When Griffin was invited to troubled cities, he said exactly the same thing local black people had been saying,” notes Nell Irvin Painter, a black historian and the author of The History of White People. “But the powers that were could not hear the black people. Black speakers in America had little credibility until ‘yesterday.’ Some CNN correspondents who are black now get to comment on America, but that’s a very recent phenomenon.”
As the civil rights movement accelerated, Griffin gave more than a thousand lectures and befriended black spokesmen ranging from Dick Gregory to Martin Luther King Jr. Notorious throughout the South, he was trailed by cops and targeted by Ku Klux Klansmen, who brutally beat him one night on a dark road in 1964, leaving him for dead. By the late 1960s, however, the civil rights movement and rioting in Northern cities highlighted the national scale of racial injustice and overshadowed Griffin’s experiment in the South. Black Like Me, said activist Stokely Carmichael (Kwame Ture), “is an excellent book—for whites.” Griffin agreed; he eventually curtailed his lecturing on the book, finding it “absurd for a white man to presume to speak for black people when they have superlative voices of their own.”
Throughout the 1970s, Griffin struggled to move beyond Black Like Me. Having befriended Thomas Merton, he began a biography of the Trappist monk, even living in Merton’s cell after his death. Hatred could not penetrate his hermitage, but diabetes and heart trouble could. In 1972, osteomyelitis put him back in a wheelchair. He published a memoir urging racial harmony, but other works—about his blindness, about his hermitage days—would be published posthumously. He died in 1980, of heart failure. He was 60.
By then, the South was electing black mayors, congressmen and sheriffs. The gradual ascent of black political power has turned Black Like Me into an ugly snapshot of America’s past. Yet Gerald Early thinks the book might be even more relevant now than in the 1960s: “Because the book talks about events that took place some 50 years ago, it might get people to talk about the racial issues of today in a calmer way, with a richer meaning because of the historical perspective.”
Nell Irvin Painter notes that while the country is no longer as segregated as it was a half century ago, “segregation created the ‘twoness’ Griffin and W.E.B. DuBois wrote about. That twoness and the sense of holding it all together with your daunted strength and being exhausted—that’s still very telling.”
Fifty years after its publication, Black Like Me remains a remarkable document. John Howard Griffin changed more than the color of his skin. He helped change the way America saw itself.
Bruce Watson is the author of several books, including Freedom Summer.
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Comments (9)
I remember when this book was written and read parts of it in the newspapers and also Reader Digest but never read the whole book until this last week. I lived in Milwaukee, WI and went to Hopkins St. School K thru 8th grade with people of different colors than I, we didn't always get along but it wasn't because of color. Griffin's book is true and as a officer during the 60's the epiloge was also right on.This is a book all should read especialy today. God Bless you.
Posted by Richard Erfert on June 13,2012 | 05:55 PM
I teach this essay in my college freshman composition course and it always provokes a lot of interest. I think we need to continue to teach about our segregated history, as ugly it was and uncomfortable as it makes us, because young people are fast "forgetting" where we have come from. I am always surprised at my students' level of ignorance regarduing this subject....For them it is "ancient" history, though their parents and grandparents likely remember these times. Why this is so is another, complex discussion, but we educators must continue to try to "connect the dots" for young people, in an effort to awaken in them empathy and self-understanding.
Posted by Carolyn on May 16,2012 | 07:38 PM
I know the world has changed for the better,but has it really. Look what they say about Obama. I was born in the fifties,but only read this book now. Its an eye opener. I read a book called "Gentelman's agreement in high school,as A NY jew I was surprised these things could happen also.
Posted by carrie on March 7,2012 | 10:34 AM
From African enslavement, Native American genocide, Chinese exclusion, Japanese internment, mosque defacement & Koran burnings to Arizona SB-1070, the victims are different, but the theme is the same: ethnocentrism, homophily, and vilification of The Other. Has the U.S. outgrown this theme? Judging by the righty-whitey make-up of Tea Party rallies and their Take-Back-America signs, it appears not.
Posted by Alan Headbloom on October 27,2011 | 01:23 PM
I read this book when I was in high school, during the Civil Rights movement years. I was living in California where schools had long been integrated -- if they ever were separate -- and where there were no "Whites Only" signs. But there was plenty of prejudice despite that outward appearance of calm. Other kids made hateful comments to me just because I was reading this book. Teachers routinely belittled black kids and punished their infractions more severely than those of white kids. I think the most important thing about Griffin's book is that it made so many white people think what it would like if they were on the receiving end rather than the dispensing end of prejudice -- a thought that had never occurred to most.
Posted by Diwiyana on October 14,2011 | 04:41 PM
There is no mention of the film starring James Whitmore, which further established the venture.
Posted by capnDave on October 6,2011 | 08:02 PM
I read this book in high school in the mid 1960's. It astounded me.I was born and raised in so. CA.my mom was born in the 1920's in austin,tx and couldn't wait till she could see tx in her rear view mirror.now I know why.she was living it and was disgusted. because of this i never knew prejudice was so rampant.she was way ahead of her time.I hate the fact that there are people in the US that still act this way.the jim crow signs may not be out in the open but you sure know that act is still there.it is really sad to see this in the US in the 21st century.now it has reappeared because of our election of Obama.how disappointing.
Posted by Consuelo on October 6,2011 | 03:53 PM
I still vividly recall reading Black Like Me in the 8th grade; it had a profound effect on me, as it did with an entire generation in the 1960s. It was a powerful vehicle for a country to experience, however vicariously, the demeaning inequity and discriminition of American racism, which judges people on the basis of skin color. This alone makes Griffin's work not only a classic, but a noteworthy piece of American history.
Posted by Renaldo on October 6,2011 | 03:53 PM
John Howard Griffin's implausible and often contradictory accounts of his career as a French monastic/resistance fighter/wounded US Army Air Corps veteran/concert pianist/photographer/"nonfiction novel" author and stoic hate crime victim plus his miraculous recoveries from blindness and total paralysis lead one to wonder if Black Like Me isn't one of the biggest literary hoaxes of the last half of the 20th century. Not only is Robert Bonazzi Griffin's "unofficial" biographer, but he's also the executor of the author's lucrative literary estate and married to his widow.
Posted by who+dares+wings on October 4,2011 | 09:17 PM