An actual test, along with the so-called ruler test in common use in the the early 1900s among upper class Black
American societies and families to determine if a Black person was sufficiently white to gain admittance or acceptance. If your
skin was darker than a brown paper bag, you did not merit inclusion. Thousands of Black institutions including the nation's most eminent Black fraternity -- Phi Alpha Phi, Howard Univiersity, and numerous church and civic groups all practiced this discriminiation. The practice has 19th Century antecedants with the Blue Blood
Society and has not totally died out.
Zora
Neal Hurston was the first
well known writer to
air this strange practice in a public. The practice is now nearly universally condemned (at least in public) as being an example of "colorism". Particularly cogent modern day critiques can be found in Kathy
Russell's "The Color Complex", Tony Morrion's "The Bluest Eye" (an Ophrey Book Club choice) and Marita Golden's "Don't Play in the
Sun." The best known send-up of the pactice, however, is Spike Lee's scathing and hilarious 1988 movie, "School Daze."
"Though the brown paper bag test is antiquated and frowned upon as a shameful moment in African-American
history, the ideals behind the practice still lingers in the African-
American community" -- Rivea
Ruff, BlackCollegeView.Com