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"How Jim Crow worked"

7 Comments -

1 – 7 of 7
Blogger Unknown said...

Are we sure the NAACP is a viable source?

September 12, 2012 at 9:40 PM

Anonymous Anonymous said...

and why should we be a priori skeptical about the NAACP?

September 13, 2012 at 5:06 AM

Blogger EC said...

The NAACP has an extraordinarily honorable record. Philip Black's comment seems designed to illustrate a sentence from the post: "Most white Americans have a very limited understanding of the real social setting in the South of the Civil Rights movement in the 1950s and 60s"

September 13, 2012 at 10:40 AM

Anonymous Frankly Curious said...

This is an excellent article. I'm not sure how the hatred works exactly, but it is built on an economic base that rewards the white upper class. As has been discussed much elsewhere, slavery was a beloved tradition because it was profitable, not because people just naturally hate African Americans. In fact, slavery became explicitly racist in this country as a way of mollifying the poor Europeans.

I bring this up because I think it is important to remember that there are powerful interests who encourage race hatred for their economic gain. Too often, we dismiss clear signs of racism (e.g. prison populations) as if they are just the market at work.

September 14, 2012 at 12:39 AM

Anonymous Anonymous said...

"at a relatively recent time in the history of the United States these organizations competed in the full light of day, without embarrassment, and with a rhetoric that encouraged violent enforcement of the racial status quo"

This is what I struggle to impart to undergraduates in teaching about civil rights - to give them a sense of how close they are to the virulent hatreds of that time. If this is understood then the students may grasp that the persistent effects of this cannot be easily dismissed as having been cured by the passage of time.

The NAACP study may help in that regard to show the linkages/history of hate groups. I'll investigate the hyperlink but approach the report with some caution - the "guilt-by-association" brush is equally dismissed by those on the left when the right makes connections between Obama-Ayers-Wright, etc.

September 14, 2012 at 12:47 PM

Blogger p9 said...

I wonder if it would be fair to call southern US society in the 1950s 'decent'. Given the hatred directed towards communists, gay people, beatniks, and the non-religious, it isn't so surprising that black people were also attacked. And in the case of African Americans, there were particular problems - including their poverty (which made them an easy and convenient target) but also the fact that they were seen as the cause of southern poverty generally. The south lost a war over the issue of black freedom, and the south was still poorer, and much more insular, than the north. Presumably this produced a grievance still burning in the hearts of a vocal minority capable of spurring the white majority to violence, even despite the increase in prosperity brought about by the post-war economy.

Anyway, a fascinating post. Not something I'd consider deeply before, hence the fragmentary and not-particularly-helpful ideas on the subject.

September 14, 2012 at 1:06 PM

Anonymous Chris said...

Some have suggested that the history of racism in the United States should be framed within a larger dimension of economic analysis. I'm not sure if I buy that argument or not, and when I read this post, it reminds me of the importance of focusing on racism as a phenomenon unto itself that is worth studying and denouncing because of the moral ugliness of racism. What perplexes me most about the world in which we live is that since the Jim Crow era, there has been a lot of progress on the one hand, but on the other hand the insidiousness of racism seems even more complex now. That has been explained by some social scientists as being related to the shift in racism from one kind to another, and I am not sure if this is the case or not. But what I do know is that we need posts like this one to remind us of the ugliness of racism and to make us think deeply about the history of our nation; it really wasn't that long ago that our nation was engaged in overt racism of the sort that is depicted in the photograph with this blog post. So how far have we actually come in the intervening decades? It would be great to think that we've really come a long way, but I'm not sure if we have or not. One example of this is the fact that Obama was elected twice, but in each case, we had prominent white people in this country whose responses to Obama's election ranged from distaste to overt prejudice. So how exactly do we square the election of Obama with the ugliness his election produced within our nation? The Tea Party, for example, seemed to me to have a covertly, if not overtly, racist project contained within their ostensible "economic concerns." And they gained so much of our popular and elite attention that Paul Ryan came close to being the vice president of the U.S. -- though I don't think Romney really had all that much of a chance to win, to be honest.

February 23, 2013 at 3:09 AM

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