Dr.
History of Racism
A. What Is Racism?
Racism, as an idea and a
practice, has evolved and continues to do so. Many of us today conceptualize racism in
terms of what it was—overt bigoted and physically violent
behavior—and hence, in the absence of such practice, see no racial
problems. Although violence and bigotry
is still very real, racism is not limited to these things.
There are three phases in the development and evolution of racism:
Phase 1. Pre-Racism: the promotion
of cultural (and later, racial) superiority and the subsequent the belief in racial superiority
emerging shortly thereafter (beginning around the 16th Century CE, continuing
today in a more subtle form)
C. The Race Construct
After this initial stage, several mechanisms came into place to create
what we today call race.
Phase 2. Race-Making: the institutionalization of racial supremacy through the creation of
discriminatory laws and practices (beginning in the 17th century CE, and
continuing into the 20th century, and in many respects still in existence)
D. Racism as Superstructure
As the construct was set in
place, racism became an idea alive in the minds of both oppressor and
oppressed—it became a superstructure that supported and
perpetuated the racialized structure of society.
Phase 3.
Institutionalized Racism: the perpetuation of
white status and superiority through the process of institutionalizing racist
ideology in practice and internalizing it in human minds (beginning immediately
following 1st stage, being strengthened in the 2nd stage, and continuing on
today, though under a veil and most often denied to exist)
·
with
the civil war came the end of legally institutionalized slavery, but shortly
after this brief period of relative equality came a backlash:
o
the
Hayes Compromise of 1876 removed federal troops from southern states
o
race
theory hit its peak at the turn of the 19th and 20th
centuries (
o
1912
Woodrow
o
reign of terror (Tulsa, OK, 1921; Rosewood,
FL, 1923, etc.) (Loewen)
o
racial
prerequisites in immigration (until 1952) (Haney Lopez)
o
racial
segregation in schools and churches replaced the programs of Reconstruction
o
racial
segregation in housing and the making of the ghettos from the beginning in 1900
‘til the peak in the 1970’s (Massey)
o
redling,
blockbusting, and steering became
practices banking and real estate (Barndt)
·
the
backlash is a testimony to the resistance of white to create an equitable
society, and this in turn testifies to the power of internalized racism
·
the
civil rights movement of 1950’s and 60’s challenged again white supremacy and
changed much of the “re-legalized” racism, but again there was a backlash (People’s
Institute):
o
Nixon’s
War on Drugs as a war on Blacks (Haldeman[1])
o
Reagan’s
presidency as counter-movement (consider Supreme Court vacancies and
appointees)
o
changing
racial demographics in the prisons since the 60’s and the last clause of the 13th
amendment
o
scaling
back of welfare, Affirmative Action, and other social programs (Barndt)
in many (but not all) ways, due
to the backlash, the inequalities are worse than in the 70’s
·
these inequities are reflected in stats. in
infant mortality rates, life expectancy, % of black vs. white populations in
college vs. prison, % of populations in
poverty, black cents on white dollars earned, % of students in gifted programs
in the schools, etc.
The
preceding is based on our participation in the People’s Institute “Undoing
Racism” Workshops and readings from the following works:
Barndt, Joseph.
Dismantling
Racism: The Continuing Challenge to White
Finkleman, Paul.
Ed. Slavery and
the Law.
Ignatiev, Noel, and John Garvey. Race Traitor.
Haney Lopez, Ian F.. White By Law: The Legal Construction of Race.
Higgenbotham, A. Leon. In the Matter of Color.
Loewen, James. Lies My Teacher Told Me: Everything Your
American History Textbook Got Wrong.
Massey,
Douglas. and Nancy Denton, American Apartheid.
Memmi,
Albert. The Colonizer and the Colonized.
Montagu, Ashley. Man’s
Most Dangerous Myth: The Fallacy of Race, 6th
ed.
Richarson,
Theresa, “Moral Imperatives for the Millenium: The Historical Construction of
Race and Its Implications for Childhood and Schooling in the Twentieth
Century,” Studies in Philosophy and
Education, Vol. 19, No. 4 July 2000.
Zinn,
Howard. A People’s History of the United States.
[1] Haldeman’s diary from 1969 states, “Nixon emphasized that you have
to face the fact that the whole problem is really the blacks. The key is to devise a system that recognizes
this while not appearing to.” (quoted in The Nation,