the origins of the concept of "racism"

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ILXs favorite topic... I've been thinking, did this concept even exist prior to the 20th century? I don't mean practices of discrimination, segregation, oppression, etc. (which have obviously been going on forever), but rather the codification of it as a term to describe a set of implicitly unfair and undesirable practices or prejudices. It seems to me that this is one of THE big ideas to come out of the 20th century - identifying this strand of human behavior and attempting to confront/rectify it. But where does the concept come from - where are the first occurrences of the term "racist"? How did it develop into its current usage - at what point did the concept of being "racist" acquire its negative connotation? I suspect it has something to do with the intersection of European impirialism and fascism circa the first two World Wars and their attendant ideas about a "white man's burden" and "aryan races" and whatnot...

Shakey Mo Collier (Shakey Mo Collier), Thursday, 11 May 2006 16:22 (nineteen years ago)

I bring this up because it seems to me, given some of my reading material lately, that prior to the 20th century pretty much everyone, regardless of their own ethnicity or social stature, took it for granted that dividing humanity consisted of different "races" which could all be generalized about and/or ranked in terms of quality.

Shakey Mo Collier (Shakey Mo Collier), Thursday, 11 May 2006 16:24 (nineteen years ago)

(uh strike the "dividing" in that last sentence)

Shakey Mo Collier (Shakey Mo Collier), Thursday, 11 May 2006 16:25 (nineteen years ago)

yeah people were pretty racist back then

-+-+-+++- (ooo), Thursday, 11 May 2006 16:27 (nineteen years ago)

glad we cleared that up.

Shakey Mo Collier (Shakey Mo Collier), Thursday, 11 May 2006 16:28 (nineteen years ago)

theres plenty of other social concepts that arose in the same timeframe that are arguably much more important, your white ass just doesnt feel as guilty about them

-+-+-+++- (ooo), Thursday, 11 May 2006 16:31 (nineteen years ago)

uh, okay.

Shakey Mo Collier (Shakey Mo Collier), Thursday, 11 May 2006 16:33 (nineteen years ago)

I don't have access to the OED anymore, so I can't so much help with poking at an origin point. Maybe if you instant messaged the reference librarian ...

nabisco (nabisco), Thursday, 11 May 2006 16:33 (nineteen years ago)

Actually I'm sure Ned has OED online access.

nabisco (nabisco), Thursday, 11 May 2006 16:34 (nineteen years ago)

Webster's 11th dates the word "racism" to 1933.

jaymc (jaymc), Thursday, 11 May 2006 16:35 (nineteen years ago)

Black coworker (after giving me long history of evil things done to black people): "I know what you're going to say. That was way back then. It's not my fault. I'm not related to those racists. This is 2006, and times have changed, blah, blah, blah..."

Me: "No, what I was going to say is that from day one, there have always been white people who loved black people, and were on their side."

nicky lo-fi (nicky lo-fi), Thursday, 11 May 2006 16:41 (nineteen years ago)

like thomas jefferson, or scarlett o'hara

-+-+-+++- (ooo), Thursday, 11 May 2006 16:45 (nineteen years ago)

It's a commonly held theory that racism (the construct not the word) dates from the 16th, 17th and 18th century when European trading posts started to become empires requiring a rationale for domination. However the theme goes back much further most cultures have a period of believing in some kind of racial or ethnic superiority somewhere in their histories.

Ed (dali), Thursday, 11 May 2006 16:45 (nineteen years ago)

"the theme goes back much further most cultures have a period of believing in some kind of racial or ethnic superiority somewhere in their histories."

right - but for some reason, at some point in the 20th century the pendulum swung the other way and such beliefs became highly unfashionable (at least in certain quarters)

Shakey Mo Collier (Shakey Mo Collier), Thursday, 11 May 2006 16:49 (nineteen years ago)

Humanism? The Shock of two brutal world wars?

Ed (dali), Thursday, 11 May 2006 16:51 (nineteen years ago)

Prior to our present idea of racism was one of tribalism. it was common in antiquity, for example, to refer to the tribal virtues and faults of various peoples. Modern racism in the West was a way of justifying the immense amounts of money made in the triangle trade, one of whose legs was, of course, the African slave trade. It's very rare, for example, to find colonists, whatever their views of slavery, who didn't have what to us would be a racist attitude. By the mid-to-late 19th century when 'white' Americans and Europeans were justifying a spectacular run of imperialism abroad and at home we end up with such charming luminaries as Arthur Gobineau and Houston Stewart Chamberlain.

M. White (Miguelito), Thursday, 11 May 2006 16:52 (nineteen years ago)

Though many were racist by our standards, some LOC info on American abolitionists.

M. White (Miguelito), Thursday, 11 May 2006 16:59 (nineteen years ago)

(cf roger williams, john brown, etc.)

Shakey Mo Collier (Shakey Mo Collier), Thursday, 11 May 2006 17:02 (nineteen years ago)

http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Testimony_of_Equality

[O]n February 11, 1790 Friends petitioned the U.S. Congress for the abolition of slavery.

JW (ex machina), Thursday, 11 May 2006 17:02 (nineteen years ago)

Of course, not the founder of Brown University! Brown was founded on slave trade profits.

JW (ex machina), Thursday, 11 May 2006 17:03 (nineteen years ago)

France abolished slavery, in 1794, but it was revived by Napoleon in 1802, and wasn't banned for good until 1848. In the United Kingdom slavery was banned in 1807, but the slave trade only in 1833. The slave trade was banned in the US in 1808. All of these are largely religious/humanist acts that are precursors of modern anti-racist sentiment, though they're not informed by the later resistance to pseudo-Darwinian, pseudo-scientific racism.

M. White (Miguelito), Thursday, 11 May 2006 17:06 (nineteen years ago)

Civilization was founded on slave trade profits?

TOMBOT (TOMBOT), Thursday, 11 May 2006 17:07 (nineteen years ago)

uh I'm saddened that I even have to post this. every American should know who John Brown was (Roger Williams too, for that matter).

http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/John_Brown_%28abolitionist%29

Shakey Mo Collier (Shakey Mo Collier), Thursday, 11 May 2006 17:08 (nineteen years ago)

(Shakey, I know who you meant!)

JW (ex machina), Thursday, 11 May 2006 17:10 (nineteen years ago)

Anybody notice the recent French 'apology' for slaving thing yesterday or the day before? Right at the same time that the governments mired in scandal and right after a contentious polemic with Algeria's president (who was in France for medical treatment) about the French legacy in Algeria.

M. White (Miguelito), Thursday, 11 May 2006 17:13 (nineteen years ago)

I really only pay attention to France when they're saying hilariously bitchy things about America.

Shakey Mo Collier (Shakey Mo Collier), Thursday, 11 May 2006 17:15 (nineteen years ago)

or when Noel Godin is throwing pies at them.

Shakey Mo Collier (Shakey Mo Collier), Thursday, 11 May 2006 17:15 (nineteen years ago)

Western cities like Nantes and Bordeaux owe much of their wealth and prestige to the slave trade.

M. White (Miguelito), Thursday, 11 May 2006 17:17 (nineteen years ago)

I don't think anyone in this thread has really addressed Shakey's question yet, or bothered to even engage with it beyond a purely etymological sense. It's hard to say who first uttered the term, but I think the Harlem Renaissance and the debates between Dubois and Washington were the genesis of real debate on the themes of racism. I think that debate helped shed light on the fact that while black people had been given basic human rights (life, liberty, happiness, property), among black people those rights had caveats that didn't exist for the dominant class, and put a first-person perspective on the effect of the biases that black people were faced with in America.

And because the Harlem Renaissance was such a monumental revelation within academia as a whole, I think it was the real seed of our American attempts to engage with the issue. I would be curious to learn more about similar developments in Europe and elsewhere.

polyphonic (polyphonic), Thursday, 11 May 2006 17:42 (nineteen years ago)

good points about the Harlem Renaissance/Dubois vs. Washington - my memory of those things is that they were largely independent of the Euro-centric soul-searching following WWI-II and the various socialist movements that seemed to lead to a concept of universal humanism (tho suspect I may be wrong on the latter...?)

Shakey Mo Collier (Shakey Mo Collier), Thursday, 11 May 2006 17:54 (nineteen years ago)

I think that debate helped shed light on the fact that while black people had been given basic human rights (life, liberty, happiness, property) but not voting rights and hence access to power, and that struggle began with the reaction to the 13th and 14th Amendments. Let's not forget that this is not a black/white thing, either as Native Americans and Asians were very badly treated as well.

Regrading Frederick Douglass after the 13th Amendment.

M. White (Miguelito), Thursday, 11 May 2006 17:59 (nineteen years ago)

Also, and I don't mean to derail your thread, Shakey, I just found this interesting:

From last week's New Yorker

"GOODBYE, COLUMBUS
When America won its independence, what became of the slaves who fled for theirs?
by JILL LEPORE
Issue of 2006-05-08
Posted 2006-05-01


What with the noise, the heat, and the danger of being forced back into slavery, sometimes it’s good to get out of the city. Such, at least, was the assessment of Harry Washington, who, in July of 1783, made his way to the salty, sunbaked docks along New York’s East River and boarded the British ship L’Abondance, bound for Nova Scotia. A clerk dutifully noted his departure in the “Book of Negroes,” a handwritten ledger listing the three thousand runaway slaves and free blacks who evacuated New York with the British that summer: “Harry Washington, 43, fine fellow. Formerly the property of General Washington; left him 7 years ago.”

Born on the Gambia River around 1740, not far from where he would one day die, Harry Washington was sold into slavery sometime before 1763. Twelve years later, in November, 1775, he was grooming his master’s horses in the stables at Mount Vernon when the royal governor of Virginia, Lord Dunmore, offered freedom to any slaves who would join His Majesty’s troops in suppressing the American rebellion. That December, George Washington, commanding the Continental Army in Cambridge, received a report that Dunmore’s proclamation had stirred the passions of his own slaves. “There is not a man of them but would leave us if they believed they could make their escape,” a cousin of Washington’s wrote from Mount Vernon, adding bitterly, “Liberty is sweet.” In August of 1776, just a month after delegates to the Continental Congress determined that in the course of human events it sometimes becomes necessary for one people to dissolve the bands that have connected them with another, Harry Washington declared his own independence by running away to fight with Dunmore’s all-black British regiment, wearing a uniform embroidered with the motto “Liberty to Slaves.” Liberty may not have been as sweet as he’d hoped. For most of the war, he belonged to an unarmed company known as the Black Pioneers, who were more or less garbagemen, ordered to “Assist in Cleaning the Streets & Removing all Nuisances being thrown into the Streets.” The Black Pioneers followed British troops under the command of Henry Clinton as they moved from New York to Philadelphia to Charleston, and, after the fall of Charleston, back to New York again, which is how Harry Washington came to be in the city in 1783, and keen to leave before General Washington repossessed it, and him.

No one knows how many former slaves had fled the United States by the end of the American Revolution. Not as many as wanted to, anyway. During the war, between eighty thousand and a hundred thousand (nearly one in five) left their homes, running from slavery to the freedom promised by the British, and betting on a British victory. They lost that bet. They died in battle, they died of disease, they ended up someplace else, they ended up back where they started, and worse off. (A fifteen-year-old girl captured while heading for Dunmore’s regiment was greeted by her master with a whipping of eighty lashes, after which he poured hot embers into her wounds.) When the British evacuated, fifteen thousand blacks went with them, though not necessarily to someplace better.

From the moment that Cornwallis surrendered at Yorktown, in 1781, American allies reported seeing “herds of Negroes” fleeing through Virginia’s swamps of pine and cypress. A few made it to a warship that Washington, under the terms of the British surrender, had allowed to sail to New York. Some ran to the French, on the not unreasonable supposition that earning wages polishing shoes in Paris had to be better than planting tobacco in Virginia for nothing but floggings. “We gained a veritable harvest of domestics,” one surprised French officer wrote. Hundreds of Cornwallis’s soldiers and their families were captured by their former owners, including five of Thomas Jefferson’s slaves and two women owned by George Washington. Those who escaped raced to make it behind British lines before the slave catchers caught up with them. Pregnant women had to hurry, too, but not so fast as to bring on labor, lest their newborns miss their chance for a coveted “BB” certificate: “Born Free Behind British Lines.”

As runaways flocked to New York, or Charleston, or Savannah, cities from which the British disembarked, their owners followed them. Boston King, an escaped slave from South Carolina, saw American slave owners “seizing upon their slaves in the streets of New York, or even dragging them out of their beds.” A Hessian officer reported, “Almost five thousand persons have come into this city to take possession again of their former property.” (It was at Washington’s insistence that the names of those who boarded British ships were recorded in the “Book of Negroes,” so that owners might later file claims for compensation.) In Charleston, after the ships were full, British soldiers patrolled the wharves to keep back the black men, women, and children who were frantic to leave the country. A small number managed to duck under the redcoats’ raised bayonets, jump off the wharves, and swim out to the last longboats ferrying passengers to the British fleet, whose crowded ships included the aptly named Free Briton. Clinging to the sides of the longboats, they were not allowed on board, but neither would they let go; in the end, their fingers were chopped off.

But those who did leave America also left American history. Or, rather, they have been left out of it. Theirs is not an undocumented story (the “Book of Negroes” runs to three volumes); it’s just one that has rarely been told, for a raft of interesting, if opposing, reasons. A major one is that nineteenth-century African-American abolitionists decided that they would do better by telling the story of the many blacks who fought on the patriot side during the Revolution, and had therefore earned for their race the right to freedom and full citizenship and an end to Jim Crow. “Not a few of our fathers suffered and bled” in the cause of American independence, Peter Williams, Jr., declared in a Fourth of July oration in New York in 1830. (Williams’s own father, who had joined American troops in defiance of his Loyalist master, later managed to purchase his freedom and went on to help found the African Methodist Episcopal Zion Church.) When the Boston abolitionist William Cooper Nell published “The Colored Patriots of the American Revolution,” in 1855, Harriet Beecher Stowe supplied an introduction:

The colored race have been generally considered by their enemies, and sometimes even by their friends, as deficient in energy and courage. Their virtues have been supposed to be principally negative ones. This little collection of interesting incidents, made by a colored man, will redeem the character of the race from this misconception.


Best not to mention those who fled to the British. Having abandoned the United States, they not only were of no use in redeeming “the character of the race”; they had failed to earn the “passport” to citizenship that Nell believed patriot service conferred.

They were also too shockingly unfree to be included in grand nineteenthcentury narratives of the Revolution as a triumph for liberty. As the historian Gary Nash observes in “The Forgotten Fifth: African Americans in the Age of Revolution” (Harvard; $19.95), slavery is so entirely missing from those histories that “it would appear that the British and the Americans fought for seven years as if half a million African Americans had been magically whisked off the continent.” In 1891, the Harvard scholar John Fiske took notice of Dunmore’s proclamation in his two-volume “American Revolution,” only to dismiss it. “The relations between master and slave in Virginia were so pleasant,” Fiske wrote, that Britain’s “offer of freedom fell upon dull uninterested ears.”

It wasn’t until Benjamin Quarles’s landmark “The Negro in the American Revolution,” in 1961, that what Harry Washington might have had to say about that became clear: Liberty is sweet. Many fine scholars have followed in Quarles’s wake, but it would be fair to say that their work has yet to challenge what most Americans think about the times that tried men’s souls.

With no place in any national historical narrative, black refugees of the American Revolution have been set adrift. Perhaps, then, it is hardly surprising that they have been taken up recently not by American historians but by historians of the places they went to.

Two new histories of their travels, the most ambitious yet, have just been published, one written by an Englishman, the other by an Australian. The British historian Simon Schama’s “Rough Crossings: Britain, the Slaves, and the American Revolution” (Ecco; $29.95) follows the exiles to Nova Scotia and Sierra Leone but keeps London, and English antislavery activists, at its center; Cassandra Pybus’s “Epic Journeys of Freedom: Runaway Slaves of the American Revolution and Their Global Quest for Liberty” (Beacon; $26.95) follows them everywhere, including to the Australian penal colony of Botany Bay; she teaches at the University of Sydney.

Schama writes like no one so much as Dickens. Here is how he introduces the founder of England’s antislavery movement, leaving his brother’s house on Mincing Lane, “neither the worst nor the best address in the City of London,” in 1765:

The door opened and out stepped an angular man looking older than his thirty years. His tall but meagre frame, hollow cheeks, lantern jaw and short curled wig gave him the air of either an underpaid clerk or an unworldly cleric; the truth is that Granville Sharp was something of both.


Schama’s book is divided into two parts. The first part chronicles Sharp’s career. With close colleagues, including the abolitionist Thomas Clarkson and the former slave Olaudah Equiano, Sharp led Britain’s extraordinary campaign to put an end to what he called the “Accursed Thing”: human bondage. It took years, but they succeeded. England took a dramatic step toward abolishing slavery on its soil in 1772, in a landmark case in which a man named James Somerset won his freedom. In 1807, the British Parliament outlawed the slave trade. The following year, the U.S. Congress did the same. In other words, England banned domestic slavery decades before making it illegal for British merchants and ships’ captains to buy and sell slaves. The United States did the reverse, outlawing the overseas slave trade in 1808 but not declaring an end to slavery until Lincoln’s Emancipation Proclamation, in 1863.

Schama points out that news of the Somerset case, as much as Dunmore’s proclamation, is what led so many American slaves to flee to British lines during the American Revolution. They wrongly believed that the Somerset judgment’s nuanced and limited ruling meant that “as soon as any slave sets his foot on English ground he becomes free.” For one American refugee, the link between England and liberty was so close that he renamed himself British Freedom. Or consider “Yankee Doodle, or, The Negroes Farewell to America,” a minstrel song popular in London in the seventeen-eighties:

Now farewell my Massa my Missey adieu
More blows or more stripes will me e’er
take from you . . .
Den Hey! for old Englan’ where Liberty
reigns
Where Negroe no beaten or loaded with chains


But, more often than not, the price of British freedom was poverty. “I am Thirty Nine Years of Age & am ready & willing to serve His Britinack Majesty,” Peter Anderson told a relief commission in London. “But I am realy starvin about the Streets.” At the beginning of the war, Anderson had left behind his wife and three children in Virginia to join Dunmore’s regiment. He was wounded, captured, and sentenced to be hanged. After six months as a prisoner, he escaped and foraged in the woods until he found his way back to the British Army. All this he endured only to land in London, reduced to begging. The commissioners were not sympathetic. “Instead of being sufferers of the wars,” they concluded, black veterans had benefitted from it. Penniless they might be, but they had “gained their liberty and therefore come with a very ill-grace to ask for the bounty of government.”

Not everyone who evacuated with the British sailed to England. Like thousands of white Loyalists, black Loyalists were relocated to Britain’s northern colonies: mostly to Nova Scotia, New Brunswick, and Ontario. Some fifteen hundred settled in Birchtown, Nova Scotia, making it the largest free black community in North America. It was also a disaster. By the time Harry Washington arrived there, in August of 1783, there was nothing to eat, it was too late to plant, and the topsoil was too thin for anything much to grow. In 1789, the settlers were still starving. Boston King reported, “Many of the poor people were compelled to sell their best gowns for five pounds of flour, in order to support life. When they had parted with all their clothes, even to their blankets, several of them fell down dead in the streets, thro’ hunger. Some killed and ate their dogs and cats.”

Meanwhile, in London, Granville Sharp and his colleagues on the Committee for the Relief of the Black Poor began making plans to send England’s beleaguered blacks to Africa. This seems now, as it did to many people then, a preposterous plan, as if the slave trade could somehow be undone by this reverse voyage, settling freed slaves just a stone’s throw from British slave-trading forts. While the emigrants waited on board ships in Portsmouth Harbor, the African-born writer and former slave Quobna Ottobah Cugoano warned that they “had better swim to shore, if they can, to preserve their lives and liberties in Britain, than to hazard themselves at sea . . . and the peril of settling at Sierra Leone.” But sail they did. In May of 1787, nearly four hundred reached Sierra Leone, where they settled at a place they named Granville Town, and elected as their governor a runaway slave and Revolutionary War veteran from Philadelphia named Richard Weaver. Within five months, plagued by disease and famine, a hundred and twenty-two of the settlers were dead. And, just as Cugoano had predicted, some were kidnapped and sold into slavery all over again. In 1790, a local ruler burned Granville Town to the ground.

That was not to be the end of it. In the second part of “Rough Crossings,” Schama turns to the journey of John Clarkson (“the ‘other’ Clarkson—second born, perfectly affable, sweet-tempered Johnny”), chosen by Sharp and the elder Clarkson to head a second attempt to settle Sierra Leone, this time with the “poor blacks” who had settled in Nova Scotia. In January, 1792, nearly twelve hundred black men, women, and children found berths on fifteen ships in Halifax Harbor. Among them were British Freedom and Harry Washington. Before the convoy left the harbor, Clarkson rowed from ship to ship, handing to each family a certificate “indicating the plot of land ‘free of expence’ they were to be given ‘upon arrival in Africa.’ ”

The colony’s new capital, on the Sierra Leone peninsula, was called the Province of Freedom; it did not live up to its name. There was death: along with dozens of others, Boston King’s wife, Violet, died of “putrid fever” within weeks of arrival. There was intrigue: in 1792, Clarkson took what he thought would be a brief trip to England, but the colony’s directors, dissatisfied with his failure to turn a profit from plantation crops, never sent him back. And there was avarice: despite the promise of free land, Clarkson’s successors demanded exorbitant rents. “We wance did call it Free Town,” some weary settlers wrote to Clarkson in 1795, “but since your absence we have a reason to call it a town of slavery.”

By 1799, Sierra Leone’s settlers had grown so discontented, so revolutionary in their rejection of the colony’s tyrannical government, that they were, in the words of one London abolitionist, “as thorough Jacobins as if they had been trained and educated in Paris.” The next year, a group of rebels declared independence. They were crushed. Tried by a military tribunal, they were banished from Freetown to the other side of the Sierra Leone River. In their exile, they elected Harry Washington as their leader, just months after George Washington died at Mount Vernon, having freed his slaves in his will.

Cassandra Pybus wants to rescue Harry Washington from the “callous indifference of history,” to call attention to what he shared with the first President of the United States: “a commitment to the transforming ideals of liberty and selfdetermination.” Schama is more interested in one of Harry Washington’s fellow-rebels. “Rough Crossings” begins by imagining British Freedom “scratching a living from the stingy soil” of Nova Scotia and ends with his exile outside the Province of Freedom:

We can picture him surviving . . . on a few acres, or more likely finding a way to do business with the local chiefs. And if he did indeed cling to that name, he could only do so by not crossing the river to Freetown. For he must have understood that he had had his day. Over there, no one had much use for British freedom any more. Over there was something different. Over there was the British Empire.


But picturing British Freedom is about all that we can do; apart from his name, we know almost nothing about him. (Because Freedom renamed himself, he can’t be traced in records like the “Book of Negroes.”) “British Freedom’s name said something important: that he was no longer negotiable property,” Schama writes. Names count—they mattered to the parents who named their BB-certified daughter Patience Freeman—but sometimes names aren’t enough. Among Schama’s many enviable talents as a historian and as a stylist is his ability to turn a name into a meditation on liberty and empire. But the asymmetry, borne of the asymmetry of the evidence, is not without consequences: the black expatriates in “Rough Crossings” have names and ages and imagined motives, while the lantern-jawed architect of their freedom, Granville Sharp, is rendered in all his Dickensian detail. Sharp is focussed; the settlers are a bit of a blur.

Pybus uses a different lens. She pays scant attention to the likes of Granville Sharp. Instead, she trails the fugitives relentlessly, including the unlucky few who, convicted of petty crimes in London, were shipped thirteen thousand miles away, to Botany Bay, a place whose staggering deprivations made it worse than London, worse than Birchtown, worse than Granville Town, worse than the Province of Freedom. Here’s a hint: in 1790, the punishment for stealing food was increased from a thousand to two thousand lashes.

What Pybus offers is a collective biography, made possible through her painstaking—breathtaking—examination of tax lists, muster rolls, property deeds, court dockets, parish records, and unwieldy uncatalogued manuscripts like the papers of General Henry Clinton. It allows her to rattle off details like this: in Botany Bay in 1788, “John Randall, the black ex-soldier from Connecticut convicted of stealing a watch chain in Manchester, was married to Esther Howard, a white London oyster seller, convicted at the Old Bailey of stealing a watch.” In case it escaped your notice, that’s months of eye-straining archival research on three continents in just thirty-four words. (She later, and still more casually, throws out that Randall eventually found work as a kangaroo-hunter; that by 1792 he had received a land grant of sixty acres; and that, widowed twice, he married three times and had nine children before his death, in 1822.) Men like Randall, Pybus argues, “carried to the far corners of the globe the animating principles of the revolution that had so emphatically excluded them.”

Maybe. But, at journey’s end, it’s hard to know what to make of the travails of British Freedom or Harry Washington or John Randall. To follow them is, still, to leave American history behind. The story of the British abolition movement has been elegantly told by Adam Hochschild, in “Bury the Chains: Prophets and Rebels in the Fight to Free an Empire’s Slaves” (Houghton Mifflin; $26.95). It is also at the heart of an excellent new biography by Vincent Carretta, “Equiano the African: Biography of a Self-Made Man” (University of Georgia Press; $29.95). These, like Schama’s and Pybus’s, are rich and wonderful books. All the same, with their praise of prophets and rebels and self-made men on a global quest for liberty, some readers might conclude that English abolitionists and American runaways ought to serve as honorary Founding Fathers, as though the likes of Washington and Jefferson will no longer do. (Damn those slave-owning sons of liberty!)

In the midst of this, it’s easy to forget that many eighteenth-century Americans considered the British hypocritical about slavery. After the Somerset decision, Benjamin Franklin complained:

Pharisaical Britain! to pride thyself in setting free a single Slave that happens to land on thy coasts, while thy Merchants in all thy ports are encouraged by thy laws to continue a commerce whereby so many hundreds of thousands are dragged into a slavery that can scarce be said to end with their lives, since it is entailed on their posterity!


Moreover, it was far easier for Britain, where there were few slaves to begin with, to free its slaves than it was for the American colonies, where there was considerable support for ending the slave trade, something many patriots had come to see as having been imposed on them by a tyrannical king, to Britain’s profit and not their own. In Thomas Jefferson’s mind, promising freedom to the very people whom British slave traders had enslaved constituted George III’s last, and most unforgivable, act of treachery. In a breathless paragraph at the end of his original draft of the Declaration of Independence, Jefferson blamed the King for the slave trade (“He has waged cruel war against human nature itself, violating its most sacred rights of life and liberty in the persons of a distant people who never offended him, captivating and carrying them into slavery”); for his vetoes of the colonists’ efforts to abolish it (“Determined to keep open a market where MEN should be bought and sold, he has prostituted his negative for suppressing every legislative attempt to prohibit or to restrain this execrable commerce”); and for Dunmore’s proclamation (“He is now exciting those very people to rise in arms among us, and to purchase that liberty of which he has deprived them, by murdering the people on whom he also obtruded them”).

It was the Declaration’s last, longest, and angriest grievance. The other delegates could not abide it: they struck it out almost entirely. To some, it went too far; to others, it didn’t go far enough. And, as everyone knew, it was they, and not the British, who were by now most vulnerable to charges of hypocrisy. (As Samuel Johnson had wryly inquired in 1775, “How is it that we hear the loudest yelps for liberty among the drivers of negroes?”) Best, then, to leave slavery out altogether.

Historians have hardly known what to make of Jefferson’s rant. Nash deems it “patently false.” Schama calls it a “tour de force of disingenuousness.” But at least part of what Jefferson meant was that it was the Revolution itself that derailed the American antislavery movement. In the seventeen-sixties and early seventeen-seventies, the colonists were arguably more ardent opponents of slavery than the British were. In 1764, the patriot James Otis, Jr., declared that nothing could be said “in favor of a trade that is the most shocking violation of the law of nature, has a direct tendency to diminish the idea of the inestimable value of liberty, and makes every dealer in it a tyrant.” Not long after the Boston Massacre, in 1770, John Hancock’s uncle preached a sermon urging the provincial legislature of Massachusetts to support the abolition of slavery, warning, “When God ariseth, and when he visiteth, what shall we answer!” In April, 1775, just five days before a shot was heard round the world, Philadelphians founded the Society for the Relief of Free Negroes Unlawfully Held in Bondage.

By no means did everyone in the colonies oppose the slave trade, and even fewer could imagine emancipation. Still, if the patriots hadn’t needed to forge a union to protect their rights to life, liberty, and the pursuit of happiness, they might have come to some agreement on ending slavery. But uniting the colonies in their opposition to the King and Parliament meant, by 1776, putting slavery to one side. It meant editing the Declaration of Independence. It also meant that Harry Washington, and John Randall, and British Freedom, and thousands more, decided to leave. They did not fare well."

M. White (Miguelito), Thursday, 11 May 2006 18:01 (nineteen years ago)

huh - I'd never heard any of that.

Shakey Mo Collier (Shakey Mo Collier), Thursday, 11 May 2006 19:36 (nineteen years ago)

I knew about it generally, but didn't know about the Africa 'repatriation' or Australia parts.

If we want to talk about racism, shouldn't we talk about someone like Benjamin Banneker whose surveying and skills at calculating almanacs made some people question the premise that people of African descent were intellectually inferior to Europeans in late 18th/ealy 19th century America?

M. White (Miguelito), Thursday, 11 May 2006 20:05 (nineteen years ago)

sure, not familiar with him either...? obviously the concept of racism could only have gained traction once the opposing assumptions about "inherent" racial characteristics began to get broken down. I'm thinkin developments in science (spec. bio and genetics) must have played a role here too...

Shakey Mo Collier (Shakey Mo Collier), Thursday, 11 May 2006 20:16 (nineteen years ago)

Actually, I think Europeans were most racist when they had the greatest technological advantage over Africans, Native Americans, and Asians, the crudest social understanding of their lives and the biggest remunary interest in considering them as primitive, i.e., the 17th century. Advances in 'science' could be used to defend or attack racism. The Comte de Gobineau was a friend of Lamarck's (iIrc) and H.S. Chamberlain certainly thought he was being scientific, even if his conclusion was pre-ordained.

What's interesting about the Banneker story is that in their ignorance and un-self-reflective way, it did not occur to most white Americans that the reason that enslaved Africans generally didn't perform as well as white kids at high was 'cause they were uneducated, belittled, lived in fear and degradation, and were cut off from their history and roots. Their sense of sociology was pretty foreign to us.

M. White (Miguelito), Thursday, 11 May 2006 20:30 (nineteen years ago)

I'm thinking more along the lines of DNA conclusively proving that we're all basically the same... but there must've been stuff prior to DNA's "discovery" in '53 that pointed in that direction...?

cuz yeah obviously Europeans/Americans loved to lord their technological and scientific prowess over others as a sign of their god-given superiority (not surprisingly other cultures did the same thing when the situation was reversed - specifically thinking of the muslim world's attitudes towards Europe during the middle ages)

Shakey Mo Collier (Shakey Mo Collier), Thursday, 11 May 2006 20:38 (nineteen years ago)

Which says a lot about why they're pissed off now and if you think that China doesn't tend to think it deserves a huge place in the sun, you don't know their history very well.

M. White (Miguelito), Thursday, 11 May 2006 21:11 (nineteen years ago)

that's a funny metaphor to use for China, but point taken.

Shakey Mo Collier (Shakey Mo Collier), Thursday, 11 May 2006 21:17 (nineteen years ago)

(btw, I've been reading this: http://www.powells.com/biblio?isbn=0375758372, which is very illuminating as to the various racial assumptions made by both cultures and how they've changed/deepened over time. Lewis is the shit.)

Shakey Mo Collier (Shakey Mo Collier), Thursday, 11 May 2006 21:19 (nineteen years ago)

The Roman Empire abolished institutional "racism" in an early phase of its existence. There is nothing historically inevitable about racism, but plenty of specific historical reasons for its development by imperial European states. If the question means "hey, aren't human beings naturally prejudiced?" then: a) there's no historical reason to assume that, and b) the kinds of social demarcation we call racist are almost all products of European Christian Imperialism.

Doktor Faustus (noodle vague), Thursday, 11 May 2006 21:26 (nineteen years ago)

If we want to talk about racism, shouldn't we talk about someone like Benjamin Banneker whose surveying and skills at calculating almanacs made some people question the premise that people of African descent were intellectually inferior to Europeans in late 18th/ealy 19th century America?

The noteworthy accomplishments Banneker, Olaudah Equiano, Frederick Douglass, et al. certainly played a large part in the development of dissenting arguments against racial inferiority theories, but those theories regained quite a bit of stronghold with Herbert Spencer and William Graham Sumner in the late 19th century, and the subsequent Plessy v. Ferguson decision, and Jim Crow, and etc.

There's a pretty big difference in the way Banneker, Equiano, Douglass, Carver, etc. were described (somewhat akin to a talking dog or a horse who can count, in the most detestable circles; or a precocious child in some of the least detestable examples) and the undeniable complexity of the community of artists and thinkers who assembled in Harlem. I think that was when the larger perception really began to sway.

polyphonic (polyphonic), Thursday, 11 May 2006 21:31 (nineteen years ago)

xpost

Ahhh fuck, misread the question as per yoozh. This point tho:

at what point did the concept of being "racist" acquire its negative connotation? I suspect it has something to do with the intersection of European impirialism and fascism circa the first two World Wars and their attendant ideas about a "white man's burden" and "aryan races" and whatnot

investigate pre-WWII uses of "racism" vs "racialism"...self-professed liberals desperate to cling on to eugenic notions of racial separatism.

Doktor Faustus (noodle vague), Thursday, 11 May 2006 21:32 (nineteen years ago)

well no, that wasn't the intent of my question - I definitely don't think humans are "naturally" anything when it comes to social behavior. I'm just interested in the nuances of race as a social construct and how the concept of racism evolved into the current bugaboo that it is.

Also the Romans abolishing racism = teh rofflez. The British got their entire "white man's burden" concept wholesale from Roman delusions about spreading their divine imperial wisdom, and the Romans participated all too happily in weirdo racist generalizations about Jews, Nubians, Arabs, you name it.

Shakey Mo Collier (Shakey Mo Collier), Thursday, 11 May 2006 21:35 (nineteen years ago)

The reason I dispute that, polyphonic, is because of the contempt with which 'middle America' generally held artists and their ilk back then. Sure, there was an amazing rennaisance under way, but it was mostly treated as 'crazy bohemians' by most Americans back then.

M. White (Miguelito), Thursday, 11 May 2006 21:37 (nineteen years ago)

Well that's one way of reading it, Shakey, but Roman Citizenship was granted to every free member of the Empire round about the middle of the 2nd Century C.E. At which point there was no legal distinction between a free citizen born in Rome and one born in Britain or Egypt.

Doktor Faustus (noodle vague), Thursday, 11 May 2006 21:41 (nineteen years ago)

The reason I dispute that, polyphonic, is because of the contempt with which 'middle America' generally held artists and their ilk back then.

The proliferation of the argument for true equal rights naturally didn't extend to "middle America" until much later, as the '50s and '60s demonstrated quite well. But the question is: where did the argument really begin to develop?

polyphonic (polyphonic), Thursday, 11 May 2006 21:44 (nineteen years ago)

well yeah, I agree the Romans had an egalitarian streak that in many ways is quite admirable. But I don't think racism can be confined strictly to the arena of basic political rights, its a bit more tangled than that.

Shakey Mo Collier (Shakey Mo Collier), Thursday, 11 May 2006 21:45 (nineteen years ago)

"White Man's Burden' specifically refers to the U.S. in the Phillipines, btw, Shakey.

Rome may have been imperialist but it wasn't particularly racist after a while in the sense of skin color or origin, provided you swore fealty to the Emperor and observed the official religious rites.

M. White (Miguelito), Thursday, 11 May 2006 21:49 (nineteen years ago)

haha! wow weird. I am learnin lots on this thread.

Shakey Mo Collier (Shakey Mo Collier), Thursday, 11 May 2006 21:50 (nineteen years ago)

But the question is: where did the argument really begin to develop?

In the midst of ancient history with random miscegenation, I imagine. There have always been people little inclined to discriminate finely between types just as there have always been insecure people prone to boost themselves through group association.

M. White (Miguelito), Thursday, 11 May 2006 21:55 (nineteen years ago)

"White Man's Burden' specifically refers to the U.S. in the Phillipines, btw, Shakey.

Though, admittedly, it was written by Kipling, a subject of her Majesty, Queen Vicky.

M. White (Miguelito), Thursday, 11 May 2006 21:57 (nineteen years ago)

In the midst of ancient history with random miscegenation, I imagine. There have always been people little inclined to discriminate finely between types just as there have always been insecure people prone to boost themselves through group association.

I guess we'll have to agree to disagree. I mean, I agree that some cultures prior to industrial Europe and America confronted issues of racial equality in a relatively direct manner, but the degree to which the argument was addressed head-on in the last two centuries seems totally unlike anything I've read about in Western history.

polyphonic (polyphonic), Thursday, 11 May 2006 22:07 (nineteen years ago)

I'm not sure racism is so ancient, for the reasons you've hinted at M. Rome's an example of an early civilization in which forms of exclusion are cultural rather than racial: the outsider was non-Roman through culture rather than race. The idea of Race as an inherent trait that defines your social status seems to me to be originated in the societies that bought slaves from Africa, because those slaves were chosen on racial grounds whereas in previous slave-owning societies slavery was mainly an accident of economic fate.

Doktor Faustus (noodle vague), Thursday, 11 May 2006 22:10 (nineteen years ago)

That's a great point, and perhaps that might have something to do with the fact that the visual differences between races were far less prominent prior to 100AD. Jesus was an olive-skinned man, for instance.

polyphonic (polyphonic), Thursday, 11 May 2006 22:12 (nineteen years ago)

yeah - in Muslim countries slavery was more like it was in Rome. if you got captured in war or something, tough shit you were now a slave. The obsession with racial characteristics as regards slavery seems to be specifically British/American...? which clearly played a role in sharpening ideas about their being different (and inherently inferior and easily stereotyped) races.

Shakey Mo Collier (Shakey Mo Collier), Thursday, 11 May 2006 22:13 (nineteen years ago)

some cultures prior to industrial Europe and America confronted issues of racial equality in a relatively direct manner

Namely? Most cultures started out as tightly bound tribes or clans iencreibly prone to institutionalized racism. The arguments against knee jerk generalizations must have come from indivduals who saw them for what they were: cant. The starting point for the eventual institutionalization of anti-racism in America, say, is a matter of narrative and perspective, but, though no friend of the Church, I'd assume it came from a Church or a pulpit.

M. White (Miguelito), Thursday, 11 May 2006 22:15 (nineteen years ago)

Namely?

Oh, I just meant in Rome and to a lesser extent in Greece, and beyond that I used 'cultures' broadly, i.e. various communities here and there. You'd probably know better than I would.

polyphonic (polyphonic), Thursday, 11 May 2006 22:18 (nineteen years ago)

because those slaves were chosen on racial grounds whereas in previous slave-owning societies slavery was mainly an accident of economic fate. The Spanish started bringing over Africans because the Carribean slaves were too prone to die on them, either from disease or from a kind of wasting away.

an example of an early civilization in which forms of exclusion are cultural rather than racial

Culture and physionomy are both seriously intertwined in what we now consider racism.

M. White (Miguelito), Thursday, 11 May 2006 22:20 (nineteen years ago)

"I'd assume it came from a Church or a pulpit."

obviously - hence the discussion of abolitionists.

Shakey Mo Collier (Shakey Mo Collier), Thursday, 11 May 2006 22:21 (nineteen years ago)

YAHWEH vs. Mammon!! It's like a modern day version of Karl Rove's political calculations.

M. White (Miguelito), Thursday, 11 May 2006 22:23 (nineteen years ago)

Agreed, the ideas of culture and race have been seriously intertwined for a good length of time. The adoption of a specifically African slave trade probably generated the notion of racism at exactly the same time as it generated the idea of racial superiority, yeah?

Doktor Faustus (noodle vague), Thursday, 11 May 2006 22:24 (nineteen years ago)

sounds reasonable.

Shakey Mo Collier (Shakey Mo Collier), Thursday, 11 May 2006 22:27 (nineteen years ago)

ILXs favorite topic... I've been thinking, did this concept even exist prior to the 20th century? I don't mean practices of discrimination, segregation, oppression, etc. (which have obviously been going on forever), but rather the codification of it as a term to describe a set of implicitly unfair and undesirable practices or prejudices. It seems to me that this is one of THE big ideas to come out of the 20th century - identifying this strand of human behavior and attempting to confront/rectify it. But where does the concept come from - where are the first occurrences of the term "racist"? How did it develop into its current usage - at what point did the concept of being "racist" acquire its negative connotation? I suspect it has something to do with the intersection of European impirialism and fascism circa the first two World Wars and their attendant ideas about a "white man's burden" and "aryan races" and whatnot...

-- Shakey Mo Collier (audiobo...), May 11th, 2006 6:22 PM. (Shakey Mo Collier) (1 trackback) (later)

yeah people were pretty racist back then

-- -+-+-+++- (-...), May 11th, 2006 6:27 PM. (ooo) (later)

Remember when you just knew that if you mentioned Killng Joke AiNYC would post within 5 minutes?

Onimo (GerryNemo), Thursday, 11 May 2006 22:29 (nineteen years ago)

yeah ethan's been really illuminating on this thread hasn't he...

*rolls eyes*

Shakey Mo Collier (Shakey Mo Collier), Thursday, 11 May 2006 22:31 (nineteen years ago)

I think the fear of 'otherness' already existed but when it was coupled with both a seriously superior technology, both in terms of navigation and warfare, with a nascent capitalist impetus to capture inoffensive people in contradiction to the normal tenets of Xtianity (which had been a huge force for the abolition of out and out slavery in the later Roman Empire), the consciences of everyone involved had to find a justification, Herr Doktor.

M. White (Miguelito), Thursday, 11 May 2006 22:35 (nineteen years ago)

That sounds reasonable M. White. (Dunno how to address you less clunkily.) The gist of what I've been grasping after is that Racism as we understand it (institutional, pseudo-scientific) is a product of the Enlightenment and that as soon as those ideas were formulated their counters were formulated too.

Doktor Faustus (noodle vague), Thursday, 11 May 2006 22:43 (nineteen years ago)

Call me Michael, if you wish.

It's the Enlightenment's way of trying to justify the preternatural human tedancy toward fear of alterity/ lazy, self serving ass thinking. Obviously anti-racism can (and should) use the same tactic.

As I ointed out above, France abolished slavery, in 1794, but it was revived by Napoleon in 1802, and wasn't banned for good until 1848. I think this succinctly shows the profit motive vs. the humanist impulse quite well.

M. White (Miguelito), Thursday, 11 May 2006 23:05 (nineteen years ago)

Ancient Greeks were notorious xenophobes and racists.

sonore (sonore), Friday, 12 May 2006 00:49 (nineteen years ago)

and there was a very real racial component to Ancient Greeks' racism especially after Alexander and the Hellenes were forced to interact with other cultures and darker-skinned ppl.

sonore (sonore), Friday, 12 May 2006 00:51 (nineteen years ago)

Alexander was Macedonian, not Hellenic. I'm not saying that undermines your argument. I'm just saying.

Kenneth Anger Management (noodle vague), Friday, 12 May 2006 00:55 (nineteen years ago)

Hah...actually the answer to whether or not Alexander was a Hellene or not depends on who you ask. ...I'm just saying... Y'know, that whole spat between Macedonia (FYRM) and Greece.

sonore (sonore), Friday, 12 May 2006 01:14 (nineteen years ago)


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