A Nation’s Undesirables
Mixed-Race Children and Whiteness in the Post-Nazi Era
Contributor(s)
Patton, Tracey Owens (editor)
Collection
Knowledge Unlatched (KU)Language
EnglishAbstract
"In a moving blend of family history and cutting-edge scholarship, Tracey Owens Patton’s A Nation’s Undesirables synthesizes work in rhetorical postmemory studies, critical adoption studies, Afrofuturism, and more to tell the story of her mother and aunt, Lore and Lilli. Two of thousands of children born to white German women and Black American men after World War II, the twins moved to the United States at age seven, where their mother renounced her parental rights and put them into the adoption system. They did not see her again for fifty-two years. Patton takes up the twins’ story and their reckoning with their mixed-race, Black German identity to disrupt standard narratives around World War II, Black experiences in Germany, and race and adoption. Combining family interviews, historical artifacts, and autoethnographic reflection, Patton composes a new narrative of women and Black German children in the postwar era. In examining the systemic racism of Germany’s efforts to move children like Lore and Lilli out of the country—and the suppression of German women’s bodily autonomy—Patton amplifies the once unacknowledged identities of these Black German children to broaden our understanding of citizenship, racism, and sexism after World War II."
Keywords
Social Science; Black Studies (Global); Language Arts & Disciplines; Rhetoric; History; Europe; GermanyDOI
https://doi.org/10.26818/9780814215616Publisher
The Ohio State University PressPublisher website
https://ohiostatepress.org/Publication date and place
2024Grantor
Imprint
The Ohio State University PressClassification
Ethnic studies
Semantics, discourse analysis, etc
European history