Chicago Sun-Times

Sometimes ‘ cultural appropriat­ion’ is the sincerest form of f lattery

- BY DON ROSE Political consultant Don Rose writes for the Chicago Daily Observer, where this was posted.

I’ ve been wrestling with this issue of cultural appropriat­ion and losing— probably eroding my lefty bona fides in the process.

Take the matter of that poor teen who wore a beautiful, traditiona­l Chinese dress to her prom and caught holy hell from hundreds of social media trolls for the sin of cultural appropriat­ion, some actually calling her a colonialis­t. ( No protests from China.)

The world has been exchanging indigenous clothing styles for generation­s. The French revel in exporting their haute couture. Blue jeans, the most all- American of garments— invented 145 years ago by a German- Jewish immigrant— are worn all around the world, with Levis most prized.

High- collared “Nehru jackets” had a vogue here years ago. No protests— maybe giggles— from India or Indian- Americans. So too those blue “Mao jackets” sold at Chinese restaurant­s and worn by some Yankees as a political statement. And lots of folks wear Mexican huaraches.

Cultural appropriat­ion? I thought imitation was the sincerest form of flattery.

In this still unmelted melting pot of the USA we share and assimilate many aspects of each others’ cultures, from arts to eats. Jazz, rock ’ n’ roll and hip- hop are African-American creations absorbed by whites, Latinos and Asians. Yes, some African- American musicians have resented it, but should we now mute the music of Stan Getz, Elvis or Eminem? ( Well, maybe Eminem.) Should Rick Bayless, an Anglo, shutter his awardwinni­ng Mexican restaurant­s? Are Gentiles eating bagels appropriat­ing my culture?

In a major, complex episode, an artist’s painting of civil rights martyr Emmett Till in his coffin— based on the well- known, horrifying photo— engendered serious protests and demands for its removal from New York’s Whitney Biennial, largely because the subject did not “belong” to the white painter.

Does this mean only a member of the specific oppressed group can protest injustice artistical­ly? The late, great painter Leon Golub frequently depicted brutality against various ethnic minorities by the police or military. Should those works be taken down?

In 1967, William Styron’s Pulitzer Prize novel “The Confession­s of Nat Turner” was criticized by many black writers and intellectu­als, partly because it was a white person’s imaginativ­e attempt to enter the mind of the leader of a historic slave uprising. ( James Baldwin and Ralph Ellison, however, defended the book.)

The question of whether a novelist is entitled to depict someone of a different race, gender or ethnicity still rages. So what are we to think of the black novelist Willard Motley’s best- seller “Knock on Any Door” — later a movie with Humphrey Bogart — sympatheti­cally dramatizin­g a white delinquent as a victim of society?

How about the Irish Catholic James Joyce writing a pretty good book that enters deep into the mind of a Jew wandering through Dublin for a day? Should we Jews protest? ( Jewish groups have protested Philip Roth’s portrayal of his coreligion­ists!)

Is this all wicked cultural appropriat­ion or creative assimilati­on, like Miles Davis magnificen­tly improvisin­g on “Concierto de Aranjuez,” by Joaquin Rodrigo, a Spanish classical composer, in an arrangemen­t by Gil Evans, a white American conducting a mixed band?

Hey— I own a nice guayabera, though it’s black rather than a colorful print like most of these traditiona­l Mexican shirts. Can I wear it this summer without catching holy hell?

BLUE JEANS, THE MOST ALL- AMERICAN OF GARMENTS — INVENTED 145 YEARS AGO BY A GERMAN- JEWISH IMMIGRANT— ARE WORN ALL AROUND THEWORLD, WITH LEVIS MOST PRIZED.

 ?? KEZIAH DAUM/ TWITTER ?? Utah high school senior Keziah Daum, 18, wore a traditiona­l Chinese dress to her prom, for which she was excoriated via social media for the offense of “cultural appropriat­ion.”
KEZIAH DAUM/ TWITTER Utah high school senior Keziah Daum, 18, wore a traditiona­l Chinese dress to her prom, for which she was excoriated via social media for the offense of “cultural appropriat­ion.”

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