by Walter C. Uhler
A Review of How Race is Made: Slavery, Segregation, and the Senses, by Mark M. Smith
(University of North Carolina Press, 2006, 200 pp.)
A few years ago, in exasperation over pre-invasion polls indicating
that a large majority of Americans erroneously believed that Saddam
Hussein was involved in al Qaeda's terrorist attacks on 9/11, I was
forced to return to Walter Lippmann's classics about Public Opinion and The Phantom Public,
along with other books explaining why Americans were so highly
susceptible to political manipulation. Ultimately, that reading led to
the article, "Democracy or dominion?" written for the Bulletin of the Atomic Scientists [ Jan/Feb. 2004]
Although the general response to that article was quite positive, a
highly esteemed professor insisted that I overlooked the obvious: "Most
Americans are incapable of deep and rigorous thought." True, the
article never directly addressed that point. Nevertheless, I thought it
was implied, when I wrote about Chapter 2, titled "The Barbarians," of
Robert H. Wiebe's exceptionally insightful book, Self Rule: A Cultural History of American Democracy.
Wiebe's Chapter 2 explains the shock of mid-19th century European
visitors to America as they witnessed white Americans subdue both
Native Americans and the frontier in the course of establishing their
low-class self-rule. Alexis de Tocqueville, for example, complained
that Americans leave no trace of their past, because "no one cares for
what occurred before his time." To which Weibe added: "So it always was
with savages." [p, 48]
Other European visitors belittled Americans for ignoring "the necessity
of disciplining the mind…which lays the foundation for self-control"
[p.47], for "the extremely superficial nature of their moral
qualities," and for their astonishing "insensitivity to death" [p. 49].
Most unsettling to these Europeans, however, was "America's edge of
violence, its creation of society at the border of jungle terror." [p.
51
Although one might reasonably ask how much has changed in the
United States since these mid-nineteenth century observations were
made, Wiebe is undoubtedly correct when he concludes: "Cheap lives and
violent ways came with the origins of white culture in America, moving
through the starving times and the slaughtering of natives in the 17th
century into the paramilitary settlement of farm lands in the 18th."
[p. 53]
To most mid-nineteenth century European visitors, America's
"slavery was the ultimate violence, proof positive of democracy's
savagery." [p. 52] Now, as Professor Mark M. Smith demonstrates in his
highly original interpretation of slavery and segregation, we learn
that many southern whites not only justified the enforcement of
antebellum slavery, but especially postbellum "Jim Crow" segregation
and terrorism, by resorting to irrational racist assertions springing
from gut instincts, not rigorous thought.
The crucial factor that compelled white racists from the
mid-18th century forward to resort to their senses of smell, touch,
taste and sound was their increasing inability to distinguish Negroes
by sight. By the mid-18th century, mulattoes were proliferating - and
"passing" as white, the result of the "first significant mixing of
blacks and whites…in the late seventeenth century." [p. 19] (The South
subsequently experienced a mulatto "crisis" in the 1850s [p. 39] and
the "great age of passing" beginning around 1880 and lasting until
1925. [p. 69])
Quoting Havlock Ellis, Professor Smith asserts, "personal odors do not,
as vision does, give us information that is very largely intellectual."
[p. 2] "After all," Smith claims, "Enlightenment eyes tend to strive
for focus, balance, perspective, considered insight. Without denying
the emotional content of particular sights, a wide range of research
suggests that some of the other senses in particular historical
contexts and circumstances appeal more to the gut than to the mind."
[p.3]
(Unfortunately, the world today sees first-hand evidence of the evil
that can spew from relying on the gut, witness our ignorant President
of the United States, George W. Bush, and the evil he has unleashed in
Iraq. Who's surprised that he received his strongest support from the
South?)
Had southerners applied critical thought to what their eyes were
telling them about mulattoes, the entire regime built upon inherent and
unchanging racial characteristics would have lost its rationale. (The
worst of America's contemporary racists would do well to contemplate
how the birth of twins -- one black and one white -- in England this
year thoroughly demolishes their cherished bigotry.) And in that
collapsed ideological rubble, torn to shreds, would have been the
ludicrous claim that Negroes were inherently unfit for anything but
slavery.
Beyond undermining the South's slave-based plantation culture, the
application of honest, rigorous thought also would have deprived
low-class southern whites (who had little else going for themselves) of
their pathetic sense of racial superiority over the Negro.
But, rather than risk their race-based socio-political edifice, by the
mid-18th century white American colonists began to expound irrationally
upon the sub-human features of the Negro, especially his foul odor.
In 1744, Dr. John Mitchell - writing in the influential Philosophical Transactions
of the Royal Society -- not only argued that the black skin of Negroes
was the result of its thickness and density, which better suited them
for hard labor, "the perspirable Matter of black or tawny People is
more subtil and volatile in its Nature; and more acrid, penetrating,
and offensive, in its Effects." [p. 17]
In 1754, naturalist Mark Catesby observed that "the Indians of
Carolina and Florida," emitted "nothing of that Rankness that is so
remarkable in Negres [sic]. In 1769, a resident of Philadelphia wrote, "The Negroes…stink damnably." [p. 14].
Thomas Jefferson wrote (in his Notes on the State of Virginia,
1781) that Negroes "secrete less by the kidnies, and more by the glands
of the skin, which gives them a very strong and disagreeable odour."
[p. 16]
Even an ardent opponent of slavery, Dr. Benjamin Rush, gave a speech in
1792 to Philadelphia's American Philosophical Society, in which he
claimed that the Negro was black "because his environment, taken to
include diet, customs, and diseases, had led to a high incidence of
leprosy" Because of this leprosy, the skin "exhale[s] perpetually a
peculiar and disagreeable smell." [p. 18]
In 1799, the English surgeon, Charles White, wrote An Account of the Regular Gradation of Man,
in which he linked the thick skin of Negroes to a "duller" sense of
touch." [p. 19] Others extrapolated from this dull sense of touch to
claim that blacks lacked an "aesthetic capacity" [p. 19] and, thus,
were savages requiring brutal treatment.
Moreover, "Sensory associations helped animalize blacks," which
"probably offered whites powerful rationalizations for sexual
exploitation." [p.19]
Thus, with major exceptions for black "mammies" suckling white
babies and female house slaves placing their coarse black skin on the
food they prepared for white households, whites decided when the
touching of white skin to black skin was permissible. And by rampantly
violating their own codes, especially through sexual liaisons, whites
reinforced the arbitrary nature of their power.
Belief in the Negro's thick black skin not only justified slaveholders'
demands for hard labor but also the necessity of inflicting brutal
physical punishment. In addition, thick skin merited nothing more than
outfits made of very coarse cloth.
Thick lips, causing lack of taste, justified slaveholders in providing
the poorest of foods. "'Turkeys are too good for niggers!' and so too
was fish, according to one South Carolina 'slave driver'". [p.24]
Finally, whites also believed that they could identify blacks
by their sound. "Slow speech, accent, dialect, stuttering - all
functioned as aural markers of black slavery." [p. 34] Smooth words
quickly spoken, when combined with light skin, were most likely to fool
whites.
As Smith notes, "in truth, most antebellum northerners were not
unlike most white southerners when it came to believing, inventing, and
applying sensory stereotypes." [p. 37] But, unlike southern slave
owners, northerners were not faced with a regime-threatening mulatto
crisis. Thus, they were not compelled to act upon their racist beliefs.
Southerners even took to warping Christianity to keep the regime intact. Thus, in 1852, Josiah Priest wrote his Bible Defence of Slavery.
Priest cited Matthew 25:33 to invoke the ill-scented "goat on the left"
hand of the Lord as a symbol of "profane and impure men," before noting
how similar the Negro was to the goat in excessively disagreeable
passions, propensities and smell. [p. 42]
The crackpot Christianity of New Orleans physician, Samuel A.
Cartwright, was just as demented. According to Cartwright: Southern
slavery arose "from causes imprinted by the hand of nature on the sons
of Ham, so far back as the time when the catacombs were constructed."
[p. 44]
Bad as that was, after the Civil War, "racial sensory constructions
were reintroduced with a ferocity and frequency that slaveholding
paternalism had muted in the antebellum period." [p. 49] As Smith notes
with a touch of sarcasm - "Southern hatred for the freedmen and their
Yankee aides (themselves hardly angels when it came to race relations)
was probably as great as their professed paternal love had been for the
slaves." [p. 52] The hatred took the form of Jim Crow segregation,
which was enforced by terror and sadistic lynchings. "More than 2,500
lynchings [were] recorded in the South from 1885 to 1903." [p. 60]
Clearly, if they couldn't own and brutalize the Negro, these
formerly paternalistic Christians wanted nothing to do with him, except
under conventions they established and enforced. And thus, "Racialized
sensory constructions allowed southern whites to monitor infringements
on white physical and social space." [p.50]
Ironically, it was the case of Homer Plessy, a "black man who
was not visibly black, who had to tell whites that he was black" that
led to the 1896 Supreme Court ruling (Plessy v. Ferguson)
that established the constitutionality of "separate but equal"
segregation in America. Plessy refused to sit in the "colored" railway
car, in order to show -- in a courtroom -- just how ridiculous were the
criteria for determining race.
Unfortunately, "The Court sidestepped the central question of how race
was identified and, in so doing, allowed for the establishment of a
modern system of segregation that necessarily conceded that sight alone
was not always sufficient to establish racial identity." [p. 75]
And, so, the country had to endure more irrational racist
claims by white southerners. When the tubercle bacillus was discovered
in 1882, segregationists alleged that black maids and servants passed
it on to whites. Blacks also were impugned as carriers of venereal
disease. And, of course, all of this occurred because they were filthy.
Moreover these pathetically ignorant white southerners comforted
themselves with the thought that "black disease could surely be
smelled." [p. 65]
(The "vicious fiction" about innate smell was disproved by two studies,
one conducted in the 1930s, and the other in 1950. The 1930's study
"found not only that noses could not distinguish the race of sweat but
also that the sweat from a black person was often ranked by whites as
more pleasant than the smell of white sweat." [p.81])
Thus, to nobody's surprise, the 1954 Brown v. Board of Education of Topeka
Supreme Court ruling -- which explicitly outlawed racial segregation of
public education by repudiating the belief that separate education by
race could nevertheless yield equal education -- caused near apoplexy
among southern segregationists, due to their fear that they "now had to
see, hear, smell, touch and, God forbid, taste blackness in contexts
defined by African Americans." [p. 116].
In 1955 sociologist Arnold M. Rose lamented this predominance of the
gut over the brain when he asserted: "The fact that the great majority
of American 'Negroes' and a large minority of Southern 'whites' are of
mixed ancestry…plays little role in the thinking of the whites." [p.
137]
According to Smith, "the extent of the segregationists' hatred and the
strength of their emotion were unfathomable except to those caught in
their own sensory history…Their senses had stolen their capacity for
reasoned thinking in racial matters." [p. 139]
Yet, many white southerners must have recoiled in embarrassment
- just as most other Americans did - upon seeing "segregationists spew
their hatred with such ferocity on national television." [p. 139]
Perhaps that ugliness explains why most of them repudiated their Jim
Crow ways in the wake of the violent Civil Rights movement.
Yet, "regarding busing for school integration, fair housing,
anti-discrimination laws, and increased spending on race-targeted
programs, major national surveys conducted well into the 1990s show
significantly greater opposition among whites living in the South than
among those living elsewhere." [Vincent L. Hutchings and Nicholas A.
Valentino, "The Centrality of Race in American Politics," Annual Review of Political Science2004. 7:383-408, p. 388]
Moreover, "young white southern adults were consistently more racially
conservative than their counterparts in other regions in the late
1980s. Also, lifelong southerners seem to be more racially conservative
than immigrants to the South from other regions." [Ibid]
Jim Crow segregation had deep ties to the Democratic Party in the
South. When the national Democratic Party began to challenge
segregation in 1963, white southerners began to gravitate to the
Republican Party, which articulated - and still articulates - ideas now
called "symbolic racism."
According to an important article written by Professors Nicholas A.
Valentino and David O. Sears - "Old Times There Are Not Forgotten: Race
and the Partisan Realignment in the Contemporary South ( American Journal of Political Science
Vol. 49, No. 3, July 2005) - symbolic racism consists of four
complementary beliefs: (1) Blacks no longer suffer from racial
discrimination, (2) their continuing disadvantage is due to a lack of a
work ethic, (3) blacks make excessive demands and (4) receive too many
undeserved advantages. [p. 674]
Although symbolic racism goes far to explain southerners' opposition to
busing, fair housing, anti-discrimination laws and spending for
race-targeted programs, racial animus may be less of a factor than the
desire to maintain white racial group privilege." [see Hutchings and
Valentino, p. 392]
According to Valentino and Sears, this symbolic racism is much stronger
and pervasive in the South than elsewhere in the country. "White
Southerners are today more racially conservative than whites living
elsewhere on all conventional dimensions of racial attitudes." [p. 679]
Using impeccable statistical analyses, the authors also prove
their hypothesis that "the association between racial conservatism and
Republican partisanship has strengthened over time in the South, both
in absolute terms and relative to the rest of the country." [Ibid] In
addition, "negative black stereotypes are associated significantly with
Republican party identification and Republican vote choice in the South
but not in the North in the 1990s." [p. 683]
One finding in this impressive study took me by surprise and
contradicts what I've been told by my African-American friends:
Referring to conclusions reached in a 1997 study by James H. Kuklinski,
Michael D. Cobb and Martin Gilens ("Racial Attitudes in the 'New
South,'"Journal of Politics),
the authors assert that white Southerners exhibit a "greater tendency
to hide their true prejudices" than do Northerners. [p. 686]
Nevertheless, their research supports their suspicion that "a
cultural way of life ingrained for so long is unlikely to have been
eradicated thoroughly enough to have been shunted to the political
sidelines." [p. 685] Such suspicions might also apply to the
accompanying tendency to use the gut, rather than critical thinking, to
justify that way of life.
Although southern racism remains the huge elephant in the national
living room, a national tendency to make gut decisions when "making
race" has besmirched America's history -- whether it concerned the
making of Native Americans, Negroes, Irish, Jews, Italians, "Japs"
during World War II, "gooks" in Vietnam or "Sand Niggers" in today's
Iraq.
As historian Gary Gerstle has argued, America's civic nationalism has
been accompanied by a racial nationalism "that conceives of America in
ethnoracial terms, as a people held together by common blood and skin
color and by an inherited fitness for self-government." [Gerstle, American Crucible: Race and Nation in the Twentieth Century, p. 4]
The Constitution "endorsed the enslavement of Africans in the southern
states" and "a key 1790 law limited naturalization to 'free white
persons.' Although modified in 1870, this 1790 law remained in force
until 1952, evidence that America's yearning to remain a white republic
survived African American emancipation by almost 100 years." [Ibid]
Recently, a Philadelphia Inquirer columnist, Alfred
Lubrano, wrote an article suggesting that a full 80 percent of
Americans are biased against blacks. He quoted University of
Connecticut psychologist, John Dovidio, who asserted: "A person can be
nice 90 percent of the time, but capable of racism the other 10." Which
prompted Lubrano to ask: "If you're white and get cut off by a black
driver, for example, do awful words barge into your head?" [Philadelphia Inquirer, Dec. 02, 2006]
Yes, perhaps, for too many white Americans. But those awful words come
from the gut, not from the application of rigorous thought. After all,
as Lubrano notes: "Most white people grew up in a society in which more
black faces than white faces were associated with poverty and crime on
the TV news," especially local TV news. "They grew up hearing negative
comments about blacks from their parents; didn't see black people in
their homes; never knew a black person with power." Yet, it's worth
mentioning that shouting of an epithet in a heated moment is far
different from the racism designed to keep a system of white privilege
in place.
Nevertheless Mr. Lubrano is quite correct when he asserts: "the only
way to battle bias is to live truly integrated lives." Which is why,
when the U.S. Supreme Court rules on the constitutionality of
race-based school integration plans in Seattle and Jefferson County,
Kentucky, it should conclude that the Brown v. Board of Education
decision of 1954 was a decision to integrate the schools, rather than a
decision to prohibit the assigning of students to a school based upon
their race. Separate wasn't equal then, and will only foster racism
today.
The Court should follow the opinion of Judge Alex Kozinski, who
asserted, "Seattle's voluntary integration program could be upheld
because it did not involve a 'race stigma' or a preference for one race
over the other. 'It gives the American melting pot a stir without
benefiting or burdening any particular group." ["Cases Retread Brown
vs. Board of Education Steps," Los Angeles Times, 4 Dec. 2006]
In a word, the Supreme Court should avoid "making" race, as it once did in Plessy v. Ferguson, by succumbing to the South's - and the Republican Party's - brain-dead "symbolic racism."
Walter C. Uhler is an independent scholar and freelance writer
whose work has been published in numerous publications, including The
Nation, the Bulletin of the Atomic Scientists, the Journal of Military
History, the Moscow Times and the San Francisco Chronicle. He also is
President of the Russian-American International Studies Association
(RAISA).
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