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Understanding Representation Jen Webb

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International Journal of Cultural Studies
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Oprah’s Book Club and the politics of cross-racial empathy

Kimberly Chabot Davis

Harvard University, Massachusetts, USA, kim.davis{at}rcn.com

Cultural critics often view the sympathy that white audiences may feel when encountering African-American culture as a process of co-optation that does little to upset racial hierarchies. To complicate the predominant critical view that cross-racial sympathy is inevitably imperialistic, this article offers a reception study of Oprah Winfrey’s televised Book Club programs, focusing on white female fans discussing black women’s fiction. While some white readers displayed a problematic ‘color-blindness’ with imperialist overtones, others experienced transformative identifications with black subjects and a reflective alienation from white privilege. Although cross-racial sympathy can often devolve into a colonizing appropriation, my reception analysis underscores the important role that empathetic crossings within cultural space can play in the development of anti-racist coalitions. In examining the relationship of fiction reading to political change, I argue that the public and private spheres are intertwined rather than diametrically opposed.

Key Words: affect • identification • Oprah • race • reception studies • sympathy • whiteness

International Journal of Cultural Studies, Vol. 7, No. 4, 399-419 (2004)
DOI: 10.1177/1367877904047861


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