What Birdie learns is that race, like many other issues of identity is mutable, if your appearance is "passable." One thing that is particualy interesting is that blackness is an ideal in the work, and the white daughter (Birdie) is not the favored daughter. "Danzy Senna's 1998 novel, Caucasia, casts blackness as the ideal, desired identity. For protagonist Birdie Lee and her sister, Cole -- offspring of a civil rights movement union between their white activist mother and black intellectual father -- whiteness simply pales in comparison. (Harrison-Kahan 19) to a great degree whiteness is constructed as a lesser identity to blackness, based on cultural richness and identity, through appearance and inner knowledge. This is reflective of the Black Power movement that is idealized in this work by the Black Panther movement. To be black was to be a personal source of pride and any lessor version of it elicited less power and should elicit less pride.
Upon separating, from her Father and sister Birdie finds herself in a mutable state of the unknown, where her name and identity can change on the whim of her mother and her reality is shockingly different than her historical development of black identity. The resolution for Birdie is the development of self acceptance that begins with a reunion with her sister and ends with the melding o her self-identity as both black and white, rather than one or the other.
Although Caucasia, as I stated at the beginning of this article, privileges blackness over whiteness, the novel does not end with the act of "loving blackness" alone (see hooks 9-20). Instead, Caucasia concludes with a validation of multiplicity. At the end of the novel, Birdie rediscovers her black self when she is reunited with Cole. The two sisters decide to make a new home together in the culturally diverse, liberal landscape of Berkeley, California where biracial children are "a dime a dozen" (412). In the last paragraph of the novel, Birdie indulges in her own fantasy of...
She believes in a new identity and a new meaning of whiteness and blackness, which transcends the centuries-old restrictive ideas about race. Senna argues that skin-based identity is the shallowest and most hollow form of identity construction since it can be easily fabricated. Identity on the other hand should be more a matter of who you are internally than how you look. It must be based on various affiliations
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