David Krasner, "Migration, Fragmentation, and Identity:
Zora Neale Hurston's Color Struck and the Geography
of the Harlem Renaissance" (page 2 of
4)
My People!
Implicit in her desire was racial self-loathing. And twenty years later I
was still wondering about how one learns that. Who told her? Who
made her feel that it was better to be a freak than what she was? Who
had looked at her and found her so wanting, so small a weight on the
beauty scale?
-Toni Morrison
(1994)[38]
The friction between emerging urban "New Negroes" of the Harlem
Renaissance and rural, working-class southern African Americans provides a useful
point of entry for the opening scene of Color Struck; but rather than beginning
with the play itself, it will prove more illuminating if we first turn our attention to
Hurston's 1942 autobiographical study, Dust Tracks on a Road. In this work, she
revisits the class divisions within middle-class African America that appears in a
similar way in the opening of the play. First, Dust Tracks:
My People! My people! From the earliest rocking of my cradle days, I have
heard this cry go up from Negro lips. It is forced outward by pity, scorn and
hopeless resignation. It is called forth by the observations of one class of Negro
on the doings of another branch of the brother in black.[39]
The term "My People" brackets certain African Americans who experience the
prevailing class-division. Hurston draws an example:
For instance, well-mannered Negroes groan out like that [My people!] when
they board a train or a bus and find other Negroes on there with their shoes off,
stuffing themselves with fried fish, bananas and peanuts, and throwing the
garbage on the floor. Maybe they are not only eating and drinking. The
offenders may be "loud talking" the place, and holding back nothing of their private
lives, in a voice that embraces the entire coach. The well-dressed Negro shrinks
back in his seat at that, shakes his head and sighs, "My people! My people!"[40]
In the opening of Color Struck, actors represented "loud-talking Negroes
while the audience was likely to be "well-mannered" middle-class African
Americans. This observer-and-observed dynamic appears 17 years later in Dust Tracks.
The play's stage directions state:
Before the curtain goes up these is the sound of a locomotive whistle and a stopping engine,
loud laughter; many people speaking at once, good-natured shrieks, strumming of a stringed instrument, etc.
The ascending curtain discovers a happy lot of Negroes boarding the train
dressed in gaudy, twdry [sic] best of 1900. They are mostly in couples - each couple bearing
a covered-over market basket which the men hastily deposit in the racks as they scramble for seats.
There is a little friendly pushing and shoving. One pair just miss a seat three times,
much to the enjoyment of the crowd. The women are showily dressed in the manner of the
time, and quite conscious of their finery. A few seats remain unoccupied.[41]
The play's opening is conceived with the spectator in mind. The black audience
Hurston may have had in mind might have reacted to the "loud-talking"
characters on the railcar with the refrain, "My People! My People!"[42] In addition, the
place - a railway car - has numerous significatory ramifications. The car sets the
stage for movement, which implies freedom and mobility. Being able to move
freely is important in African American culture, particularly in the South, where
freedom to travel during slavery was nonexistent. Yet movement was, as we shall
soon see, not an option open to everyone at the turn of the century.
In the opening scene, Emma's rival in the cakewalking contest and for
John's affections, Effie, a "mulatto girl," enters the car looking for a seat. She is
"greeted" immediately by the men seated in the car. One says "Howdy do. Miss
Effie, you'se lookin' jes lak a rose."[43] Effie spurns his advances. This opening
contains a frequently overlooked theme, one that will continually resurface:
John's attraction to Effie. Critic Lynda Marion Hill asserts that the conflict in
the play "escalates as Emma convinces herself that John is 'carryin' on with the
light-skinned Effie." For Hill, Emma is jealous as well as fearful that Effie will
steal John away because she is more friendly, attractive, light-skinned, and a
better cakewalker.[44] Yet John encourages Effie, suggesting either a prior affair
or John's philandering nature. John's behavior is hardly innocent: his words and
the speed with which he embraces Effie at the dance indicate involvement and
desire on a deeper level than surface observations imply.
When we first see Emma and John, they are late in boarding the railcar
John explains the reasons for their lateness, claiming that Emma "says I wuz
smiling at Effie on the street car and she had to get off and wait for another one."
Emma replies furiously: "You wuz grinning at her and she was grinning back just
like a ole cheesy cat!" John denies this, but Emma Insists: "You wuz. I seen you
looking jes lake a possum." She adds: "Jes the same every time you sees a yaller
face, you takes a chance. (They sit down in peeved silence for a minute)."[45] In this
exchange, the question of who is telling the truth is not obvious; for the most part,
critics have accepted John's words. The next dialogue from John is to Effie.
John: (looking behind him). Hellow, Effie, where's Sam?
Effie: Deed, I don't know.
John: Y'all on a bust?
Emma: None ah yo'bizness, you got enough tuh mind yo' own self. Turn 'round!
Emma has warned John not to talk to Effie, yet John almost immediately turns to
Effie and asks why her dance partner, Sam, is missing. This is not innocent banter;
rather, John is obsessed with Effie. His approach is bold. He ignores completely
Emma's plea to avoid her. Emma thus has every reason to fear John's betrayal. It is
John who initiates conversation with Effie, not the other way around.
After John and Emma strut the cakewalk through the aisle of the train,
Effie takes her solo turn. John comments:
John: (applauding loudly) If dat Effie can't step nobody can.
Emma: Course you'd say so cause it's her. Everything she do is pretty to you.[46]
John is applauding loudly, despite Emma's protest against his flirtation. At the
very least, he should show restraint and a little sensitivity toward Emma. His
relationship to Emma is tenuous at best and appears likely to be severed at any
moment. John is, in fact, less than subtle; though he does what he can to caress
Emma and assure her of his love, his gestures smack of "hedging his bets."
Applauding loudly for one woman and caressing another is slim evidence of loyalty;
Emma has every reason to be jealous.
The second scene takes place outside the dance hall just before the
cakewalking contest. Emma is now so enraged that she refuses to join in the
cakewalk. Since Emma refuses, John takes on another partner, who happens to be
the light-skinned mulatto Effie. John and Effie win the contest and bring honor
to their town-and just as Emma predicted, John leaves with Effie for parts
north. The haste of his embrace of and elopement with Effie suggests that Emma
was correct all along.
In the final scene of Color Struck, John has returned twenty years later from
the North. John's departure was not only a betrayal; it also symbolized his new-
found mobility. Despite urban poverty and overcrowding, northern cities
produced hope. His unfaithfulness, as the play suggests, had consequences beyond
romance. Emma must live with the understanding that not only is her ex-lover
now enjoying life with her rival, but also enjoys the possibilities opened by a new
life in the North.
For black women travel was risky business and few cared to take their
chances. A black woman traveling alone was a tempting target for any predator.
Moving through unfamiliar terrain presented dangers. In Dust Track on the Road
Hurston makes us aware of this; in her own anthropological search for what she
called the "knowledge of things," her life "was in danger several times." As she
says, if "I had not learned how to take care of myself in these circumstances, I
could have been maimed or killed on most any day of the several years of my
research work."[47] Hurston's research was based on the desire to reveal the life of
rural black women trapped in stultifying conditions. Rather than focusing on
those who escaped, Hurston turns her attention to those left behind. In Color
Struck, Emma is left to fend for herself. Emma's tragedy resides in the fact that
she lacked what critic and cultural historian Carole Boyce Davies calls black
women's agency, which is based on "migration, mobility, movement, departure,
return, re-departure and transformation."[48] Mobility, however, was seldom an
option available to African American women at the time.
Black women avoided northward travel for a number of reasons.[49] Not only
did women traveling alone face numerous dangers; there was also little
opportunity of work. For women, work was far from guaranteed, even during
industrialization. Factories were often closed to black women, and European and Asian
immigrants competed with African Americans for domestic labor. Moreover,
black women had little or no assurance of hotel residency. Forced sometimes to
sleep outside in wooded areas or alleyways increased the potential for rape and
robbery. Added to this was minimal and sometimes nonexistent legal protection.
Unfamiliarity with the surroundings also complicated the search for a safe
haven. Travel for men represented privilege, freedom, and a chance to start fresh
and make over mistakes. By contrast, women travelers were, as anthropologist
James Clifford puts it, "forced to conform, masquerade, or rebel discreetly
within a set of normatively male definitions and experiences."[50] Women faced
more frequent bias and danger, forcing them to sometimes "act tough" in the
form of masculine norms of behavior. Often belligerent behavior was used to
establish a protective aura. Given the pioneering spirit of American life that began
to flourish in the nineteenth century, a man traveling alone was not unusual; but
a woman alone was often met with either disdain or sexual advances.
According to Houston A. Baker, Jr., African American literature is marked
by "transience." Baker maintains that the railway juncture, with its implication of
movement, way station, migration, and the blues, represents "the liminal
trickster on the move." Black literature is symbolized by a lineage that is "nomadic,"
the crossing signs of a railway station signifying "change, motion, transience,
process."[51] Yet Hurston's Emma is the very opposite of change; while she desired
the results accompanying movement, she was denied access to if. Hazel Carby
says succinctly that migration for black women "often meant being left behind:
'Bye-Bye Baby' and 'Sorry I can't take you' were the common refrains of male
blues."[52] Hurston's Emma lives amidst uncertainty, tearful that John may leave
at any moment-and indeed, that is what happens.
Hurston's Emma turns against the big city, with all its emphasis on
efficiency and productivity, its culture of expediency and novelty. Instead, she looks
toward the provincial, inner world of her rural black community for spiritual
sustenance. Yet her own community, as portrayed in the play, rejects Emma as
well. Emma, as a woman of color, uneducated yet knowledgeable to her limits,
holds on to what is most tangible: home. However, because of her dark skin, she
remains an outcast in both the black and white worlds; even "home" becomes
unsatisfying. Emma's darker hue and the social conditions that are imposed on
"blackness" make her subject to exclusion both externally and Internally.
As a refugee of sorts, Emma exists in what Edward Said calls the "perilous
territory of not-belonging," a territory where "people are banished."[53]
Throughout the play, Hurston's protagonist exemplifies displacement and dislocation.
Emmas diasporic condition is one of homelessness, fragmentation, and
non-identity. Hurston has created a female character existing in social limbo. Emma's
dilemma resides in instability, of knowing and not-knowing, dwelling and not-dwelling,
presence and absence. Emma's classification as black, female, poor,
powerless, and disenfranchised leads to dislocation. If her reaction seems
extreme, it is owing to the extremes of her condition.
It is for this reason that her actions seem irrational. In her study of the
geography of modern drama, Una Chaudhuri raises the point that homelessness and
displacement "constitute the insistent and pervasive challenges to home," which
transform "the apparently simple figure into a powerful irreality, something on
the order of a fantasy, fable, myth, or impossible dream."[54] In Color Struck, not
only does homelessness lead to a condition of extreme anguish, it creates
instability and a detachment from others.
Emma's alienation is apparent in every scene. In scene one, Emma and
John are on the Jim Crow railroad car headed to Eatonville and the cakewalk
contest. Despite his flirtations with Effie, John is frustrated by Emma's
accusations of betrayal; Emma replies, in essence, that she can only love a man if he is
faithful. Her love is, moreover, expressed in her jealousy, but jealousy is all that
she can claim. Jealously, at least, reflects a feeling of "ownership"; given a world
that limits her possession of "things," jealousy is an emotional possession,
providing a fixed point in life:
Emma: (sadly) Then you don't want my love, John, cause I can't help mahself
from being jealous. I loves you so hard, John, and jealous love is the only
kind I got.
(John kisses her very feelingly)
Emma: Just for myself alone is the only way I knows how to love.[55]
The "self alone," cut off from place and movement, expresses an autonomy that is
nothing more than a prison house of flesh. In such a condition, self-assertion
often becomes a matter of boisterous public display. For example, in scene two,
John again flirts with Effie and Emma admonishes him. When he tries to hush
her up, she replies with bravura:
Ah-Ah aint gonna bite mah tongue! If she don't like it she can lump it. Mah
back is broad - (John tries to cover her mouth with his hand). She calls herself a big
cigar, but I kin smoke her![56]
This sassy reply or put-down in a public space is part of Emma's assertion of
self-worth in a world that offers her little. When faced with betrayal, Emma lashes out
satirically. Her irrepressible rage is always just below the surface, triggered by the
slightest inducement. Yet beneath her rage lies a deeper, more poignant signification.
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