The Guardian (Charlottetown)

Media focusing on Markle’s ‘otherness’

- BY SHREE PARADKAR TORONTO STAR Shree Paradkar writes about discrimina­tion and identity for Torstar Syndicatio­n Services. @shreeparad­kar

Oyez. Oyez. Oyez. The proclamati­on is done and dusted. It’s time to have a seat. Fan ourselves back to cool and calm after going all aflutter with the news of a royal marriage.

Monday morning delivered a spot of brightness that spread cheer in defiance of the bleak times: a blue-blooded prince is turning a biracial commoner into a princess. Miscegenat­ion in the age of the Alt-Right, or a resurgent white supremacy — it’s practicall­y an act of subversion, and from the British royals, no less.

With her engagement pushing Meghan Markle to stratosphe­ric celebrity status, it’s safe to say the new poster girl of “unconventi­onal” is here, who by her existence will challenge the fallacy of post-racialism.

Former U.K. foreign secretary Malcolm Rifkind told the media Markle’s mixed-race background (her mother is Black, her father white) is not news anymore. “It’s the least interestin­g aspect of the day’s news,” he said. “It’s not an issue. There is no controvers­y. The world has moved on.”

The woman in question feels differentl­y.

In the couple’s first joint interview on Monday, Markle said she found the focus on her heritage “dishearten­ing.”

If her race does not matter, why are people being asked to comment on it? Why would the media affect such nonchalanc­e while talking about Markle’s non-whiteness, and why do we see such a quick emergence of ways to describe her “otherness.”

Markle is a “new kind of royal,” says The Associated

Press.

Sure. She’s a woman of colour. A divorcee. An actress. An American.

It describes her as an “outspoken woman comfortabl­e talking about her background.”

This brings the implicit assumption, the unspoken expectatio­n that she talk about her background at all, a demand placed only on people who are not white.

“Background” for Kate Middleton, now the Duchess of Cambridge, meant her “commoner” status as a multimilli­onaire family, not her whiteness.

“How do you identify yourself?” is never a straight question for people from multiracia­l lineage — who are, in fact, being asked which of their ethnicitie­s they favour.

Markle defines herself as “mixed-race” in an Elle magazine essay. A seemingly innocuous statement can be a sensitive one: was calling herself mixed a rejection of her Blackness, a sign of internaliz­ed racism? Based on her story, in which she also talks about her Black ancestors who were enslaved, and the pain of hearing her mother being called the n-word, it did not appear to be so.

More power to her, but under the glare of public scrutiny, Markle will find her “non-white” parts continuall­y rejected or held under the microscope or fetishized more than ever, until one day, she’ll be forced to take sides.

Under the liberal brand of racism, she will be “exotic.” Or even “ethnic.” How lucky she is to have a perennial tan, they will coo. And look, cute mixed-race royal babies who will end racism once and for all. Because clearly, that worked out really well after the Barack Obama presidency.

“Obviously, seventy years ago, Meghan Markle would have been the kind of woman the Prince would have had for a mistress, not a wife. Things have changed,” states a piece in the Spectator, within hours of the engagement news. Obviously.

And then: “Meghan Markle is unsuitable as his wife for the same reason that Wallis Simpson was unsuitable: she’s divorced and Harry’s grandmothe­r is supreme governor of the CofE.”

Right. Never mind that her in-laws-to-be are both divorcees.

At the very least, being married to Markle offers Harry a window to the racial gaze that befalls people of colour. This is a good thing. Just images of a mixed-race royal will signal that “British” need no longer translate into white.

For those still anxious about this dilution of Britishnes­s, take heart. This is a native developmen­t; after all, outsiders as rulers is a very British concept.

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