We hope that you are enjoying a happy and peaceful holiday season! And we can’t wait to see you next year!
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We hope that you are enjoying a happy and peaceful holiday season! And we can’t wait to see you next year!
by admin
We are seeking writers, bloggers, performers, filmmakers, comedians, spoken word artists, community leaders and storytellers of every stripe for the 2017 Mixed Remixed Festival. The Festival is the largest gathering of mixed-race and multiracial families and people in the United States. The 2016 Festival attracted close to 1000 people for two days worth of programming.
We are excited to learn about your work. Please read the FAQ and then use the appropriate submission forms (links at bottom of that page) to share your work for consideration for inclusion in the 2017 Mixed Remixed Festival.
Please note that we have provided pdfs of the application so that you can see what information you need handy to complete your submission. However, you can only submit your work on-line via the links above. No pdf submissions will be considered. Thank you.
SUBMISSIONS DUE 1/23/17!
Accepted presenters and performers will receive notice by mid-March 2017. If you have questions about submissions, please email info(at)mixedremixed.org.
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We’re taking a look back at the year and wanted to highlight some of the big stories about biracial and mixed race people and experience that made the headlines this year. Here are our top 10-ish in no particular order. What did we miss?
If you haven’t seen the film yet, you simply must. We were so excited that Focus Features signed on as a sponsor this year as they worked to reach the audience that this film would mean the most to. When we finally saw the film in a private advanced screening we were not disappointed. The performances of Ruth Negga (a mixed chick!) and Joel Edgarton are quietly stunning. Director Jeff Nichols has done a wonderful job in portraying the people behind the case of Loving v. Virginia. I’ll say it again: If you haven’t seen the film yet, go see it NOW–and if you have go see it AGAIN! We want to make sure that Hollywood knows that when they make stories about our experience and our lives we will support them!
There’s no telling how long this couple will continue to be a couple, but they are now and I think it’s pretty darn cool. We might have a mixed chick as British royalty soon according to this report. Stay tuned.
The Rock was named People’s Sexiest Man Alive this year and who are we to disagree! He’s had an amazing year professionally as well with his hit comedy with Kevin Hart and then his star turn in the Disney animated film Moana –you’re welcome! I can’t wait to see what he does next.
Yup, we put the Festival on the list because it was the very biggest and best it’s ever been. We received write-ups by NPR, NBC News and the Los Angeles Times. We set attendance records (close to 1000 people this year) and we had a line-up that was unparalleled–not to mention the most amazing live event show to date where we honored Taye Diggs and Shane Evans for their book Mixed Me! We’re working on how we can follow up all of the amazing-ness already. Again, stay tuned.
I think Kamala Harris is the first mixed chick ever elected to the Senate (but please fact check me if you can). She will represent California as the first black female senator and the first Indian-American senator from our state. We hope you can do the important work the country needs, Sen. Harris!
Okay, you may not have heard of this, but it was a really important conference. It was a two-day conference at the University of Copenhagen that really was illuminating. You would be surprised about how many connections there are between Denmark and African Americans: black American jazz artists that emigrated there, Nella Larsen, painter William H. Johnson, and even Booker T. Washington had ties to the country. The fact that they are talking about racial and cultural connectedness in Denmark that has for so long been a homogeneous population is real progress!
What can we say but BRAVO! Yes, we miss the duo on their show, but we’re so glad that they received the recognition that they so deserved. They are both busy with lots of new projects. We continue to be their biggest fans.
I wouldn’t exactly categorize this as good news, but there it is. Robert Reece in a study found that black people who simply said that they had multiracial identity were perceived as more attractive. According to Reece: “Not only were people who identified as multiracial rated as more attractive on average, but even the multiracial people with the darkest skin tones were rated as more attractive than the monoracial black people with lighter skin tones. In essence, this combination of results means that simply identifying as multiracial may make a black person appear more attractive to others, regardless of how he or she actually looks.” I’m not sure what the takeaway should be with this information. What do you think?
I wasn’t surprised to read about the study that found that mixed-race women are more likely to identify themselves as mixed race than men. According to Stanford professor Laura Davenport, who did the study: “It would seem that, for biracial women, looking racially ambiguous is tied to racial stereotypes surrounding femininity and beauty.” This was another important study that is helping us understand how racial and gender identities work together–something we will need to understand better as we become an increasingly mixed-race and multiracial country.
What can I say about Hamilton that hasn’t already been said? It’s an amazing genius achievement in every way and has had a profound impact on American culture with everyone from teens who have memorized the soundtrack and now also the mixtape songs. Congrats to Lin Manuel Miranda and the whole multicultural cast on all of the success and thank you for the great work you do!
Okay, so what did I forget? Do tell! And happy new year!
Join us for the largest gathering of multiracial and mixed-race families and people in June 2017 for the 4th Annual Mixed Remixed Festival.
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We’re excited to read Nella Larsen’s Passing for our next on-line book club pick! Nella Larsen was a black/Danish writer of the Harlem Renaissance who was writing about issues of the Mixed experience way before her time. I have read the book at least a dozen times as has Jamie Moore. So please don’t miss this discussion that we’re planning for Feb. 5 at 4pm Pacific!
You can get a copy of the book here OR really anywhere (including used bookstores). You can also find it as an e-book. Make sure you join us for the on-going discussion over on Goodreads if you can’t join us on 2/5. And remember you can also email us questions or post them on Goodreads if you’d like to ask a question or make a comment and you’re not able to join us live.
Here is my synopsis of Passing in my NPR commentary on the book:
“Passing is set at the height of the Jazz Age — when Harlem was in vogue. It’s the story of two light-skinned black women whose comfortable lives unravel when they are reacquainted in a whites-only restaurant: Irene, the wife of a prominent African-American doctor and the mother of two boys; and her childhood friend Clare, who is passing as white.
Clare longs to be among black folks again. And at the risk of her racially intolerant husband discovering her real identity, Clare secretly joins Irene and her husband at the best clubs and parties where the Harlem literati and intelligentsia meet. Larsen’s slim book reads like a literary page-turner. Will Clare’s secret be exposed? Will she return to Harlem? Will the women’s friendship survive Clare’s renewed interest in her African-American roots?”
We choose books that we think will speak to you and deal with mixed-race and multiracial families and people. Each month we host a call-in podcast so that we can discuss the book together and if we get more interest we will start an on-line Twitter chat. Can’t make those events? Well then you can keep the conversation going in our new Goodreads Book Club all month long. Join the group now.
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We love this toy! It truly empowers children to explore a world of possibilities and build all kinds of modern families that looks like their own. Order NOW directly from the toy maker or from one of the fine retailers listed here.
Sound of Silence, Katrina Goldsaito
We were so lucky to have Katrina present at the Festival this year! Her book has since earned rave reviews everywhere. Get a copy of this great children’s book now.
The Sun is Also a Star, Nicola Yoon
This is Yoon’s follow-up to her New York Times bestseller Everything Everything and it doesn’t disappoint. If you are a fan of Eleanor and Park by Rainbow Rowell, you’re really going to love this. It’s a YA novel but it also has definite cross-over appeal.
First of all we love Mixed Chicks hair products! And we really love these sassy new Mixed Chicks dolls! It’s so hard to find mixed-race and multiracial dolls, but Mixed Chicks has found a way to celebrate all of the diversity of mixed-chick-ness! We think you’ll love these too.
Well, let’s just say, why wouldn’t you want to have your very own The Rock doll to keep close!
These t-shirts are the ultimate in cute and answer that question you know you or your kids always hear: What are you? Put an end to the questions and support the Festival by buying a t-shirt for someone you love.
We are huge Ziggy Marley fans and now are huge fans of the Ziggy Marley and Family Cookbook. You are going to love the variety of recipes that will fit you multi-culti life.
Do you have a budding cook in your house? Do you just want to learn to up your game? Well, if you live in the Los Angeles area this is the place you want to go. The chefs in residence teach a variety of classes on how to make fresh pasta, ice-cream from scratch, Indian food, spice blending, and the most delicious bread in the world. You can get a gift certificate for your loved one. I know that they would love it!
I heart Pink Martini, the ultimate band with a multi-culti vibe. The musicians are as diverse as the music. You won’t go wrong by gifting this CD, newly released by the band or any of their other CDs either.
Maya is one of the most talented singers you may not know about it. But you defintely should. She sang at the Festival this year and had the standing-room only crowd enthralled. She has just released a new song Unleash Me that you should check out here. But also go check out some of her other work. Her voice is always beautiful and she always has an inspiring message in her songs.
Fiction
Loving Day, Mat Johnson
Mat Johnson’s excellent book about a mixed-race man who must come to terms with his own racial identity when he learns that he has a daughter he never knew about. In a hilarious send-up on race and color and class, Johnson tackles the question of what would happen if there really were a utopia for mixed-race folks and families.
Non-Fiction
Same Family Different Colors, Lori Tharps
Lori Tharps‘ latest non-fiction book Same Family Different Colors is an excellent read and is bound to spark much-needed conversations. She tackles the difficult subject of colorism within families and society as whole. Her research and interviews are solid and entertaining.
You can’t go wrong if you give this as a gift! And if you place your order by Dec. 15 we’ll be able to ship it so that it can arrive by Dec. 24. Quantities are limited!
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Want to know more about the moderators behind the Mixed Remixed On-Line Book Club? Today, meet Jamie Moore who is the Festival’s Workshop and Literary Director. And don’t forget to join us over on Goodreads as we get ready for our next book club pick set for a discussion next month.-Heidi Durrow
What do you hope that people will get out of the Mixed Remixed Festival On-Line Book Club?
I hope that participating in the Mixed Remixed Festival Online Book Club that people will have the opportunity to extend the discussion about literature of the mixed experience and it’s role in shaping the way we think about ourselves and our community. I hope we can reach out and include those who haven’t been able to join us in person in this dialogue and build community with each other!
Why do you think it’s necessary?
I think this is necessary because I can think of any other group or conference that is having this conversation. I believe our focus and our strength is in personal story, and by making the space to talk specifically about literature with mixed characters or stories, then we create the demand. We support and build an appreciation and distinction of the mixed experience that is multifaceted, individuals and unique.
What sparked your love of books and reading?
I was a shy kid growing up, and outside of my close friends, didn’t make a huge effort to be social. Yet, I still craved adventure and story. My mother made a huge effort to put books in my hands as soon as I could read, and then I was obsessed. As I got older, I looked to books for information and for validation of my experiences and feelings. I had a lot of conflict growing up mixed, and stories made me feel like my own journey was valuable and worth talking about.
Growing up mixed, did you find books or stories that reflected your story?
I didn’t find books that reflected my mixed experience until late high school. I read a lot of books that had characters of color, specifically young black girls. (Thanks again to my mom!) I read the Amazing Grace books and others that made me wish I was darker; that I could fit within these characters’ worlds. Perhaps the first mixed-heritage character I remember is Sal from Sharon Creech’s Walk Two Moons, which I read over and over again. In high school, James McBride’s The Color of Water was required reading, and it changed my life. I related to the anxiety he felt around identity, and the descriptions of his family. This book made me believe there were others like it out there. In college, I started my blog Mixed Reader to find those books, and build that canon for myself.
Who are your favorite authors? Or can you name some of your favorite books with mixed characters or interracial families?
My favorite authors are those who talk about intersectional and interracial experiences, in fiction and beyond. My current favorites include James Baldwin, James McBride, Heidi Durrow, Danzy Senna, Mat Johnson, Jamie Ford, Toni Morrison, Zadie Smith, Ross Gay, and Roxane Gay.
If someone has never been part of an on-line book club before, what should they expect?
If this is someone’s first time in an online book club, they should expect a similar community as an in person book club, with the ability to communicate with a larger group! The difference I feel, is that the communication and participation has to be a lot more intentional. We have so many distractions online, and in order to build this community and feel connected to one another, we need everyone to participate. Join the group discussion on Goodreads, send us questions, comments and suggestions there or on the festival twitter and Facebook pages. I was so excited to see the discussion about Loving Day, and the conversation was both analytical and personal; so reflective of our community as a whole!
How did the first on-line discussion go?
I am so energized and proud about the first discussion. I feel like in both the podcast and online discussion there was a lot of honest conversation about the different aspects of Loving Day and how we can connect it to larger issues/topics of the mixed experience. I’m excited for our next discussion!
Jamie Moore is an English Professor in California. She is the author of the novella Our Small Faces and received her MFA in Fiction from Antioch University Los Angeles. She is the Literary and Workshops Director for the Mixed Remixed Festival. Her work was recently featured in the September 2016 issue of Drunk Monkeys.
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Our inaugural book club discussion of Mat Johnson’s Loving Day was a big hit! Well, we’re excited to keep it going with our November read: Gayle Brandeis‘ The Book of Dead Birds which won the PEN/Bellwether Prize.
Join us for our on-line chat and call-in discussion on 11/10 at 6pm EASTERN/3pm PACIFIC. And guess what? We will have the author Gayle Brandeis on the line with us to answer your questions as well. You don’t want to miss this. Get a copy of The Book of Dead Birds now! And share your thoughts with our Goodreads Book Club Group in advance of our call next month!
The Book of Dead Birds is an intimate portrait of a young woman at a defining moment in her life, who stands at the intersection of two cultures and races.
Here is the book synopsis:
“Ava Sing Lo has been accidentally killing her mother’s birds since she was a little girl. Now in her twenties, Ava leaves her native San Diego for the Salton Sea, where she volunteers to help environmental activists save thousands of birds poisoned by agricultural runoff.
Helen, her mother, has been haunted by her past for decades. As a young girl in Korea, Helen was drawn into prostitution on a segregated American army base. Several brutal years passed before a young white American soldier married her and brought her to California. When she gave birth to a black baby, her new husband quickly abandoned her, and she was left to fend for herself and her daughter in a foreign country.
With great beauty and lyricism, The Book of Dead Birds captures a young woman’s struggle to come to terms with her mother’s terrible past while she searches for her own place in the world.”
Here is praise for The Book of Dead Birds:
The Book of Dead Birds has an edgy beauty that enhances perfectly the seriousness of its contents.”
“A moving and perceptive novel.”
We choose books that we think will speak to you and deal with mixed-race and multiracial families and people. Each month we host a call-in podcast so that we can discuss the book together and if we get more interest we will start an on-line Twitter chat. Can’t make those events? Well then you can keep the conversation going in our new Goodreads Book Club all month long. Join the group now!
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We are very proud of the “I Am a Story” t-shirt that we debuted at the 2016 Festival earlier this year! We have crew-neck, v-neck and kid sizes for you to enjoy. You can order on-line now! Support the Festival you love and get a great t-shirt for just $25 USD including shipping. (PLEASE NOTE: We do not ship outside of the United States. Overseas orders will be cancelled.)
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Hey there! I’m Meghan, a 22-year-old Detroit area native and one of the newest guest bloggers to the Mixed Remixed community. I’m a young biracial woman mixed with African American and Caucasian (German and Irish)—however, I don’t know much about my African American family and/or roots. In fact, I was raised exclusively by my white mother and in an entirely white family.
I wanted to take a unique approach to this concept of feeling disconnected from one side of your biracial ethnicity and delve not only into my internal conflicts and concerns – but also into the experiences of my mother and how she managed raising a biracial child (me) in a solely white environment. Through an interview between my mother and I, one can ultimately see how our relationship shaped the views on my biracial makeup.
Enjoy!
As I faced my reflection in the mirror, I studied my caramel complexion and deep chestnut eyes carefully…“Am I adopted?” my eight-year-old self wondered.
At the time, my thoughts didn’t seem irrational. The children at school would tell me I couldn’t be more than one race, and the boxes on the standardized testing didn’t defy that concept. “I had to be adopted,” I confirmed to myself with a slight nod.
I didn’t resemble any of my extended family members—which I definitely found unsettling. However, I was particularly put-off by the lack of resemblance I had to my mom. Being an only child in a single parent family, my mom and I were naturally closer than many children are to their mothers. My mom was all I had and I felt bewildered that we looked nothing alike. She had piercing hazel eyes that illuminated against the light and honey blonde hair that maintained an effortless shine. I carried none of those features.
Still staring at myself intently, I scratched my chocolate curls, confused. At the tender age of eight, I most certainly didn’t believe that even having parents of separate race was feasible.
My father wasn’t brought into conversation very often and in general; my interaction with other races and ethnicities were limited.
Finally, I stepped off the stool that gave me height to the mirror and tucked attempted to tuck quietly below the sink. Instead, its legs scraped and screamed against the cold tile floor—similar to the screaming confusion I heard in my head. “Who am I? And when was I adopted?”
Fast-forward 14 years and of course, I’m no longer eight. Instead, I’m a 22-year-old woman who has self-actualized and developed a growing understanding toward her biracial background thanks to the encouragement of my mom.
Throughout the years, I was curious as to how she managed to raise me and if she endured struggles along the way. So, being inquisitive in nature, I decided to sit down and ask her what had been on my mind throughout majority of my life. Here’s what she had to say:
During pregnancy/once you found out you were pregnant, had you ever thought what it would be like to raise a biracial child? Did you initially think there would be any type of struggle in terms of racial identification?
Initially, no. I didn’t think there would be any type of struggle. My main responsibility was raising you and making sure I provided for you. Thinking back, it may have been oblivious for me to think I wouldn’t run into struggles in helping you to identify with your African American side. I also should have been more aware to the potential issues of raising you in a primarily white community where there weren’t many biracial or black children at the time.
Living in a predominantly white community, what would you say some of the hardships were being a white, single parent raising a biracial child?
There were definitely several. Especially once you got to be school aged. A lot of the time, I felt like people would look at me and then look at you and try to figure out what was going on and how we could possibly be related. Regardless, though, I wanted you to know that just because you may have looked different from a lot of the other kids you were in school with – you were beautiful and special. You still are! I really tried to encourage you to love your hair, love your darker skin and recognized that being you is perfectly wonderful. Another issue/hardship I remember was when you were in six. There was an incident when you were in first grade where one of your friends told you, you couldn’t play with them that day because you were black. I spoke with the principal later that day and even again later that week to really enforce teaching racial tolerance at the elementary school. I think back in 2000/2001 racial tolerance was still a very new concept.
What was your reactions to me asking if I was adopted?
It made me sad that you thought you weren’t related to me. At the same time, I could understand where you were coming from. I really wanted to try and find ways for you to embrace your black side. I tried to use words of encouragement and have you watch TV shows with mainly black characters! I also got you a black dolls. But it was still hard being that you were never really surrounded by other African Americans at school, in our family or in the community at large.
Did you ever find yourself to be the subject of any scrutiny while raising me?
Oh my gosh, yes! One of the most notable things I can remember was about your hair. I would be walking down the street with you or in a grocery and African American and/or mixed women would approach me about your hair—saying they could do it for free of charge or at an extremely discounted price if I needed. A lot of the time I would say it was fine but thank you for offering. But in my head I was just like “really?!” I guess I felt inadequate and even insulted that they felt I didn’t know what I was doing when it came to your hair. I initially tried to brush it off but eventually the more I was asked if I knew what I was doing [with your hair], the more I got aggravated.
Were you ever asked if I was your child? If so, how often and how did that make you feel?
Sometimes, yeah. If we’d be in a store together people would sometimes ask if we were together or if I was your daughter. When you were growing up I got it more from the young kids, though. They had trouble understanding why I was light and you were darker.
Overall, what are your thoughts about raising a biracial child and how do you reflect back upon that time?
I’m proud. I’m proud of the woman you’ve become and glad you’ve ultimately come to understand both sides of your race. I wanted you to be well adjusted and very receptive to both sides of your multiracial makeup. It may have come with some unknown territory at the beginning of it all, but I couldn’t be happier.
—Hey there! I’m Meghan, a 22-year-old Detroit native mixed with black and white. I’m a storyteller at heart and have a passion for all things related to multiracial culture, reading, writing, crime thrillers and current events! Feel free to check out my blog, Biracial Beauty and follow me on Instagram @meghandooleyy
Join us for the largest gathering of multiracial and mixed-race families and people in June 2017 for the 4th Annual Mixed Remixed Festival.
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You kept telling us that you love the Mixed Remixed Festival but you wanted MORE! And we heard you! That’s why we have started the Mixed Remixed Festival podcast that debuts this week!
Catch the wonderful conversation that Festival Founder Heidi Durrow and Festival Literary & Workshop Director Jamie Moore had about the inaugural book club pick, Loving Day by Mat Johnson. We talk about the characters and issues that Johnson’s excellent story about a mixed-race man confronts when he learns about a daughter he didn’t know as she grew up and tries to help her with her racial identification. You can listen to the episode here or download it from itunes. Be on the lookout for the announcement of the next book club pick!
Yes, we have a monthly call-in and chat discussion, but we’re also on Goodreads and we’ll keep the discussions going there all year-long and always updated. Join our Goodreads group and stay up to date!
We’re also working on sharing the audio from past festival with you so that if you missed it you can listen in. And if you were there, you can re-live your great festival moments. Stay tuned!
Join us for the largest gathering of multiracial and mixed-race families and people in June 2017 for the 4th Annual Mixed Remixed Festival.
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