Popular Culture Review Vol. 17, No. 2, Summer 2006 | Page 52

48 Popular Culture Review director Preminger; Carroll restores sexual prowess to Poitier’s staid cinematic persona. Whoopi Goldberg’s Book unabashedly exposes the personal areas Dandridge and Carroll refuse to discuss. As an autobiographer, Goldberg casts the most delicate "private parts’' into the public sphere with reckless abandon. The comedienne’s aggressive exhibition of the penis and vagina places sex and the myriad performances of it front and center for her audience. Goldberg announces on the inside flap of the dust jacket that she intends to skirt "ladylike” discretion: "I tell you, in my own inimitable way, how uproarious and provocative this book is, how out there, and cutting edge, and whatever else I can think to throw into the mix.” This reckless abandonment is Goldberg’s signal of her intention to perpetuate the renegade image she instituted at the onset of her film career. Edwards asserts, “[Goldberg]. . . who is by turns both sexless and sensual. . . retains the skewed worldview of the comic, with a loopy disdain for convention and a wry ‘screw you' attitude when it comes to considering what others may think" (58). Book's dust jacket presents the comedienne with an unconventional look that fails to match what Bogle refers to as the Hollywood standard of beauty; yet the text showcases a sensual and thoughtful Goldberg. In a visual culture that traditionally adores and reveres the looks of White womanhood and, subsequently, of those Black actresses and entertainers who possess White features (i.e., Halle Berry, Jada Pinkett-Smith, former Miss America Vanessa Williams, and song-stylist Alicia Keyes, to name a few), Goldberg is a virtual iconoclast. Book allows Goldberg's nisus to construct her own version of Hollywoodism and to interject an identity that flies in the face