We bring news that matters to your inbox, to help you stay informed and entertained.
Terms of Use and Privacy Policy Agreement
WELCOME TO THE FAMILY! Please check your email for confirmation from us.
AFRO-LATINX
On the latest episode of theGrio’s “Writing Black” podcast, Natasha Alford discusses her striking debut memoir, “American Negra.”
Trained journalists have traditionally been instructed never to be part of the stories they are reporting. However, in a country where identity has always been scrutinized and often weaponized, it requires extreme cognitive dissonance for a journalist who sits at an intersection of identities — Black, Latinx, female and grappling with chronic illness — to remain detached and disaffected. One might even consider it an intricate act of self-denial.
“I think I picked journalism because I was hiding a bit; I wanted to immerse myself in other people’s stories,” admits theGrio’s Natasha Alford on this week’s episode of the “Writing Black” podcast. “I wanted to be present, but not necessarily put myself out there. And journalism is a great way to do that because people see you asking the questions, and they see your byline, but they don’t necessarily know you.”
With her debut memoir, “American Negra” (HarperCollins), Alford immerses readers in a new story — her own. While many may know the Harvard and Northwestern School of Journalism-educated Alford as a political analyst for CNN and a senior correspondent here at theGrio, where she is also vice president of digital content, her route to becoming an acclaimed journalist included stops in finance, education and several hardscrabble local newsrooms before finally finding her niche in Black media at theGrio.
“[Black media has] literally been on the front lines of the Civil Rights Movement,” Alford explains. “It was African-American journalists who had to disguise themselves as preachers; they couldn’t be seen as journalists who were documenting the truth. … And in bringing that truth to the world, it put pressure on American society to say ‘we are not living up to the ideals that we say we believe in.’”
However, the black-and-white worldview that often defines American politics also prevents many of us from recognizing the myriad nuances of Black identity. For Alford, born to a Puerto Rican mother and an African-American father, unraveling and reconciling her two ethnicities has been a lifelong journey — one that, in many ways, reflects America’s conflicted sense of identity.
Maiysha Kai
Michael Harriot
Natasha S. Alford
Gerren Keith Gaynor
Associated Press
Giana Levy
Associated Press
Miles Marshall Lewis
I’m a Black woman, but I am multi-ethnic,” Alford explains. “It’s just a unique experience, and those two groups of people, African-Americans and Puerto Ricans, I mean, we’re in proximity in ways that are just pretty undeniable in the United States. We often grow up in the same neighborhoods, in the same cities, a lot of that is systemic by design, on purpose.
“And so I felt it was worthy to tell this story, not just from a personal sense,” she later added. “This book — historically, this is history that we need to know. And so if you read this book, I promise you, you will not just get my story, but you will learn a lot about America that maybe you didn’t know.”
Most importantly, through Alford’s very American story, many of us will see ourselves. Learn more about “American Negra” and its incredible author, Natasha Alford, on this week’s episode of “Writing Black,” available now on theGrio’s Black Podcast Network.
Maiysha Kai is theGrio’s lifestyle editor, covering all things Black and beautiful. Her work is informed by two decades of experience in fashion and entertainment, great books, and the brilliance of Black culture. She is also the editor-author of Body: Words of Change series and the host of ‘Writing Black‘ on theGrio Black Podcast Network.
Never miss a beat: Get our daily stories straight to your inbox with theGrio’s newsletter.
STREAM FREE
MOVIES, LIFESTYLE
AND NEWS CONTENT
ON OUR NEW APP