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Mixed Experience History Month 2015: John James Audubon, naturalist

May 15, 2015 by admin Leave a Comment

mehm15_james_audonbonJohn James Audubon (1785-1851) was the son of a French sea merchant and a French chambermaid.  Audubon, born in Saint Domingue, became an accomplished ornithologist and wildlife artist.  He wrote the seminal, Birds of America, in which he painted and described birds of America and its territories.  The Audubon Society is named in his honor.

From the research I have done, there are conflicting accounts concerning whether Audubon himself was Mixed.  He was definitely raised in a Mixed household.

“According to his earliest written testimony, he was born around 1780 at his father’s plantation in Louisiana , the son of an exceptionally beautiful Spanish Creole woman and a French admiral. In fact, he was born Jean Rabin on April 26, 1785 in Les Cayes, Saint Domingue (later Haiti ), the illegitimate son of a French sea captain and merchant, Jean Audubon, and a French chambermaid, Jeanne Rabin. When he was 3, young Jean was brought to France and placed in the care of his father’s indulgent wife. He and his mulatto half-sister Rose were formally adopted by the Audubons in 1794 and he was re-named Jean Jacques Fougere Audubon.”

Audubon2_2I was particularly intrigued to learn about Audubon’s Mixed heritage because of the importance of birds and bird-watching for the character Brick in my book The Girl Who Fell From the Sky.  Brick is a light-skinned African-American mistaken for Mixed, becomes obsessed with identifying birds–he loves the certainty of being able to name something with just a visual cue.-Heidi Durrow

Mixed Experience History Month is the annual blog post series created by The New York Times best-selling author Heidi Durrow celebrating the history of the Mixed experience. Established in 2007, Mixed Experience History Month is an effort to highlight the long history of folks and events involved in the Mixed experience.  Please look for archived profiles of people, places and events of the Mixed experience every weekday of May at Lightskinned-ed Girl, the blog!  Thanks for reading.  And check out some of the previous year’s profiles: 2007, 2008, 2009, 2010, 2011, 2012,  2013, 2014. Copyright 2015.

Filed Under: Mixed Experience History Month Tagged With: biracial, mixed experience, mixed experience history month, mixed race

Mixed Experience History Month 2015: Elizabeth Keckley, White House seamstress & memoirist

May 12, 2015 by admin 1 Comment

Mixed Experience History MonthElizabeth Keckley (1818-1907), a mixed-race woman bought her freedom in 1855 for $1200.  Keckley was an accomplished dressmaker and went on to become the seamstress and confidante of First Lady Mary Todd Lincoln.

In 1862, Keckley established the Contraband Relief Organization, a women’s organization that helped former slaves seek refuge in Washington D.C.  In 1868, she published her autobiography Behind the Scenes; or, Thirty Years a Slave and Four Years in the White House.  Her public discussion of White House life was unprecedented and was roundly criticized as a salacious tell-all.  Keckley was ostracized and the book was pulled from bookstores.  She died in the Home for Destitute Colored Women & Children in 1907.-Heidi Durrow

Here’s my Mixed Experience History Minute about Keckley.

Mixed Experience History Month is the annual blog post series created by The New York Times best-selling author Heidi Durrow celebrating the history of the Mixed experience. Established in 2007, Mixed Experience History Month is an effort to highlight the long history of folks and events involved in the Mixed experience.  Please look for archived profiles of people, places and events of the Mixed experience every weekday of May at Lightskinned-ed Girl, the blog!  Thanks for reading.  And check out some of the previous year’s profiles: 2007, 2008, 2009, 2010, 2011, 2012,  2013, 2014. Copyright 2015

Filed Under: Mixed Experience History Month Tagged With: biracial, growing up biracial, heidi durrow, mixed experience, mixed experience history month, mixed race, mixed remixed festival, multiracial

Mixed Experience History Month 2015: Charles Chestnutt, writer & activist

May 6, 2015 by admin Leave a Comment

Mixed Experience History MonthCharles Chestnutt (1858-1932) was an accomplished writer and important civil rights activist.

Chestnutt was born in Ohio.  His parents were “free persons of color.”  Chestnutt could easily pass as white.  However, he identified as black and noted that he was 7/8ths white.

Charles Chestnutt, writer & activist. Mixed Experience History Month 2015. #multiracial

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At age 9, Chestnutt’s family moved to North Carolina.  He studied to become a teacher and eventually became the assistant principal at a school that trained black students to become teachers.

In 1878, Chestnutt married.  The couple moved to Ohio where Chestnutt studied law.  He made a good living from the court reporting business he established.

On the side he wrote fiction and published his first short story in 1887 in The Atlantic Monthly.

Chestnutt published two short story collections (The Conjure Woman and The Wife of His Youth and Other Stories of the Color Line) before publishing his first novel, The House Behind the Cedars in 1900.

He continued to write and publish but his books were not commercially successful.  In 1928, he was awarded the Spingarn Medal for lifetime achievement.  He died in 1932.

Mixed Experience History Month is the annual blog post series created by The New York Times best-selling author Heidi Durrow celebrating the history of the Mixed experience. Established in 2007, Mixed Experience History Month is an effort to highlight the long history of folks and events involved in the Mixed experience.  Please look for archived profiles of people, places and events of the Mixed experience every weekday of May at Lightskinned-ed Girl, the blog!  Thanks for reading.  And check out some of the previous year’s profiles: 2007, 2008, 2009, 2010, 2011, 2012,  2013, 2014. Copyright 2015.

Filed Under: Mixed Experience History Month Tagged With: Charles Chestnutt, mixed, mixed experience history month, mixed race, multiracial

Season 2, Episode 26: Mixed And Irish

April 27, 2015 by admin Leave a Comment

RECORDED 5/18/15: I really enjoyed speaking with a group of Mixed/Irish writers who discussed the spectrum of what it means to their writing and what they claim as their heritage when Mixed Irish-ness is a discussion that the Irish are just beginning to explore.  You can listen to the episode here, or download the episode from itunes.-Heidi Durrow

murphemail-1-214x300Stephen Murphy-Shigematsu is an Irish-Japanese psychologist, author, and storyteller. Born in Tokyo, raised in Massachusetts, educated at Harvard, his life has been between Japan and the U.S., exploring borders of cultural identities. He uses this life experience in his writing about mixed heritage for both academic and general audiences, most recently in When Half is Whole and a blog for Psychology Today. He teaches mindfulness and narrative psychology at Stanford. @drshigematsu

 

 

 

 

 

 

What are you? Mixed and Irish! Listen in to this great conversation! #multiracial

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Clare-Ramsaran Clare Ramsaran was born and raised in England, but checks “other” on forms when asked to define her heritage – or creates her own category of “Indo-Guyanese/Irish”.  She is an alumna of the VONA Voices workshop and is an MFA candidate at the University of San Francisco. She is currently working on a novel about two Caribbean brothers who join other young immigrants to London in their pursuit of love (of the inter-racial and queer varieties) and justice. She blogs for Mixed Remixedand her writing has been published in anthologies in the USA and England, and in journals including the St Sebastian Review. Visit her blog at: clareramsaran.blogspot.com

dylanDylan Amaro-McIntyre is a reformed former misanthrope who finds beauty in the details because the big picture terrifies him. He draws words and writes pictures. He also writes poems, sometimes well. He has been published in various poetry collections and has been featured as a performer at well known venues throughout the Bay Area. On Thursday nights he binge eats peanut butter; he recently discovered Macadamia butter and it is ruining his life.

 

 

 

 

Caroline Mei-Lin Mar was born and raised in the Bay Area. Carrie is a queer mixed-race Chinese-Irish femme who was raised to cause trouble by her radical lefty parents (her first childhood St. Patrick’s Day parade participation involved staging a pro-IRA “die-in”). She currently works as a secondary Special Education teacher and owes great gratitude to her students and colleagues for Carrie-Marwhat they teach Flag-Pins-Ireland-Guyanaher every day. A recent graduate of the MFA Program for Writers at Warren Wilson College and an alumna of the Voices at VONA workshop, Carrie is seeking publication of her first book, Special Education. Her poems have been published in The Collagist, Shadowgraph, As Us, and others.

Filed Under: Episodes Tagged With: biracial, growing up biracial, mixed, mixed experience, mixed festival, mixed race, mixed remixed festival, mixed roots, mixed roots festival, multiracial

Season 2, Episode 24: Mike Twitty, AfroCulinaria Blogger and Author

March 24, 2015 by admin Leave a Comment

michael-in-harlem-twoRECORDED 5/4/15: I was excited to talk with blogger and author Mike Twitty about his work, faith, food, and his forthcoming book The Cooking Gene.  He really breaks it down in terms of claiming the Mixed experience through food.  You don’t want to miss this interview.  You can listen here. Or download it on itunes.–Heidi Durrow

michael twitty kitchen_sepia_emailMichael Twitty, blogger at Afroculinaria, speaks with us. Twitty (@koshersoul) is a food writer, independent scholar, culinary historian , and historical interpreter personally charged with preparing, preserving and promoting African American foodways and its parent traditions in Africa and her Diaspora and its legacy in the food culture of the American South. Michael is a Judaic studies teacher from the Washington D.C. Metropolitan area and his interests include food culture, food history, Jewish cultural issues, African American history and cultural politics. Afroculinaria will highlight and address food’s critical role in the development and definition of African American civilization and the politics of consumption and cultural ownership that surround it.

Filed Under: Books, Episodes Tagged With: mixed, mixed experience, mixed festival, mixed race, mixed remixed, mixed remixed festival, mixed roots, mixed roots festival, multiracial

Season 2, Episode 22: Pulitzer Prize Winner Tracy K. Smith & Her New Memoir

March 22, 2015 by admin Leave a Comment

tracysmithbookcoverRecorded 4/20/15: I was thrilled to speak with Pulitzer Prize-winning poet Tracy K. Smith about her new memoir Ordinary Light.  I met Tracy many years ago at Bread Loaf and it’s been a joy to see her star rise.  She’s incredibly talented, warm and witty, and nice to boot.  Listen in to our conversation.  You’ll love her answer to the “What are you?” question.  And make sure you get her book as well!  You can listen to her interview here or download it from itunes—Heidi Durrow

I interviewed Pulitzer Prize Winner Tracy K. Smith!

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tracy smith poets and writersTRACY K. SMITH is the author of three acclaimed poetry collections, including Life on Mars, which was awarded the Pulitzer Prize. She has received a Whiting Writers’ Award and a Rona Jaffe Foundation Writers’ Award, and currently teaches at Princeton University.

When a poet of Tracy Smith’s considerable lyric talent turns her attention to prose, she sets the bar ever higher.” Julia Alvarez

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Filed Under: Books, Episodes Tagged With: heidi durrow, mixed, mixed experience, mixed festival, mixed race, mixed remixed, mixed remixed festival, mixed roots, mixed roots festival, multiracial, pulitzer prize, pulitzer prize winner, the mixed experience, tracy k. smith

Season 2, Episode 21: Writer Jennifer Teege My Grandfather Would Have Shot Me: A Black Woman Discovers Her Family’s Nazi Past

March 22, 2015 by admin Leave a Comment

jennifer_teege_book_coverRECORDED  4/13/15: I was so excited to speak with Jennifer Teege, author (with Nikola Sellmair) of My Grandfather Would Have Shot Me: A Black Woman Discovers Her Family’s Nazi Past.  She tells the fascinating and horrifying story of how she discovered that she was related to Amon Goeth, the vicious Nazi commandant depicted in Schindler’s List.  In our conversation we talk about the book, Jennifer’s upbringing as “black” in Germany and her relationship to identifying as German, and we raise the very difficult subject of making peace with our ancestor’s violent past and how that relates to the African-American experience. She’s doing an extensive tour of the U.S. Don’t miss her.  You can find the book tour information below. You can listen to the interview here or download it on itunes.-Heidi Durrow

An interview with Jennifer Teege, a black woman who discovered her family’s Nazi past. #multiracial

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jenniferteegeephotoJennifer Teege is the daughter of a German woman and a Nigerian father and was adopted at a young age by white parents.  She has worked in advertising since 1999 and lives in Germany with her husband and two sons.  In her twenties, she studied for four years in Israel, where she learned fluent Hebrew.  She holds degrees from Tel Aviv University in Middle Eastern and African Studies.  This is her first book.

“We can decide for ourselves who and what we want to be.” Jennifer Teege #multiracial

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Jennifer Teege Book Tour Information

 Jennifer Teege

Filed Under: Books, Episodes Tagged With: growing up biracial, heidi durrow, jennifer teege, memoir, mixed, mixed experience, mixed festival, mixed race, mixed roots festival, multiracial

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Host Heidi Durrow

Host Heidi Durrow

Heidi Durrow is the New York Times best-selling writer of The Girl Who Fell From the Sky and the founder of the original mixed roots film and book festival and now the founder of Mixed Remixed Festival , an annual film, book and performance festival, which will be held next on June 10-11, 2016 at … [Read More]

Recent Posts

  • Season 5, Episode 3: Award-Winning Writer Amina Gautier November 14, 2017
  • Season 5, Episode 2: New York Times Bestselling Writer Julie Lythcott-Haims October 12, 2017
  • Season 4, Episode 19: Writer/Literary Critic Janet Savage July 3, 2017
  • Mixed Experience History Month 2017: Paula Gunn Allen, writer and scholar May 17, 2017
  • Mixed Experience History Month 2017: Gertrude Simmons Bonnin, Educator & Activist May 16, 2017

The Mixed Experience Minute Vlog

the mixed experience by heidi durrow

The Mixed Experience Minute

In 2007, I instituted Mixed Experience History Month to celebrate historical stories of the Mixed … [Read More...]

Guest Host Jennifer Frappier

Guest Host Jennifer Frappier

I'm so excited that Jennifer Frappier will join The Mixed Experience as a guest host on future … [Read More...]

Podcast Episodes

the mixed experience by heidi durrow

The Mixed Experience Podcast

You can find all episodes and information about guests of The Mixed Experience podcast here and also … [Read More...]

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