Popular Culture Review Vol. 17, No. 1, Winter 2006 | Page 9

Construction of a Post-Racial Identity in Popular Film Media: Revolution and Resistance In summer 2002, action star Vin Diesel, a blazing hot Hollywood property and the protagonist in the blockbuster XXX, graced the covers of two popular African-American magazines, among other mass market periodicals. However, each of these two covers had its own distinct message. Jet magazine presented Vin as one of three African-American action heroes to grace the screen that spring and summer, along with The Rock and Wesley Snipes, while Savoy had this to offer: a portrait of Diesel, arms crossed, a defiant look on his face, with the following headline: “Vin Diesel Ain’t So Tough (except when you ask about race . . . ) ” Diesel, whose real name is Mark Vincent, is widely known through interviews in all forms of entertainment media to have actively constructed this public self—a self which is truly post-racial; that is, a self which does not see itself through the filter of racial identity and which regards itself as a representative of one race—the human race. This article will examine Diesel’s attempt to structure this multi-layered identity, but more significantly will explore the reasons popular reporters, regardless of race, seek to exoticize, compartmentalize, or otherwise negate the star’s attempt to present himself as a person truly beyond racial boundaries, and why, almost without exception, they seek to reconstruct his identity as that of an African-American male. A brief acknowledgement of the assumptions made by most Americans about identity is necessary if one is to understand why Diesel’s stance is so unusual and why reporters find it so difficult to accept at face value. The most basic assumptions, perhaps, are that race is a fact, not a social or anthropological construct, and that it provides an objectively based means of identification as well as dividing people into discrete groups; that race is an important identifier through which people come to know certain truths about a person’s history, personality and values; finally, that many of these personal facts can be deduced from a basic visual assessment of the human in question. Other assumptions grow out of these. For example, most believe that each person belongs to at least one specific race, while after that, some believe a biracial identity is a valid one, while others adhere to the “one-drop” rule and therefore believe there is no such thing as being truly biracial. Some people assume race and ethnicity to be interchangeable in terms of identity; for example, one may identify as ItalianAmerican or as African-American as easily as white or black. Still others believe that any identity which encompasses all identifiable races and ethnicities—an identity of which Tiger Woods “Cablinasian” is an excellent example—is both valid and forward thinking; their assumption is that a person should give due credit and respect to the accomplishments of all his or her