Preview

Racial Purity

Good Essays
Open Document
Open Document
636 Words
Grammar
Grammar
Plagiarism
Plagiarism
Writing
Writing
Score
Score
Racial Purity
From the historical readings of this week, one thing which has stood out the most is the concept of racial purity and consideration of black bodies as a threat to it. This fear of racial purity was evident in the miscegenation laws which prohibited interracial marriages. It also involved framing men as rapists. The enforcement of miscegenation laws and protection of white racial purity was justified by violence which involved lynching of black men. In her work, Ida B. Wells points out the very paradox of the miscegenation laws as she argues, “they leave the white man free to seduce all the colored girls he can, but it is death to the colored man who yields to the force and advances of a similar attraction in white women” (p.54). For this very …show more content…
It is crucial to note the double standards of patriarchy in which the burden of protecting racial purity falls upon white men by controlling white women’s bodies and sexualities. Whereas throughout the history, from slavery to segregation, white men have continued to exploit black women using their sexuality. Ronald Takaki notes this early subjugation of black women during slavery as aside from being exploited for labor, “their bodies were regarded as property to be used to satisfy the erotic pleasures of their masters” (p.112). This sexual exploitation of black women was also used as a tool to increase the slave labor force, resulting in increasing population of biracial children. However, this was not considered a threat to racial purity. This system of patriarchy creates a notion in which white femininity is associated it with purity, while black femininity is characterized as impure. Thus, allowing white men to continue to sexually exploit black women’s bodies without any consequences while simultaneously controlling white women’s bodies and …show more content…
Ida B. Well once against notes the racist framing of black masculinity where narratives of rape were claimed as, “It was not a sudden yielding to a fit of passion, but the consummation of a devilish purpose which has been seeking and waiting for the opportunity” (pg.62). This narrative not only legitimized white fear but further instigated violence in order to punish black men who dared to prey on defenseless white women. Such accounts of violence were evident in the lynching as narrated by James Baldwin, “Then the crowd rushed forward, tearing at the body with their hands, with knives, with rocks, with stones, howling and cursing” (p.1760). Richard Yarborough further notes how the threat of white male violence further made black men complicit in the continued sexual exploitation of black women at the hands of white men, “I walked ahead of the girl, ashamed to face her” (p.13). This system of racism creates a notion in which violence of white, hegemonic masculinity is justified to subjugate black masculinity as black men are stereotyped to be savages and rapists. It furthermore disempowers black men within their own community as they are unable to protect their own

You May Also Find These Documents Helpful

  • Good Essays

    Since Mr. Curry is an African American male, he can personally identify with the main audience. In doing such, he appeals to nomos. Mr. Curry employs emotionally charged language to bring focus to the maleficent actions continuously occurring across the nation. However, Mr. Curry is also an editor, so he is cognizant on the ways to emotionally motivate people and/or call them to action. The writer uses his background to his advantage by citing multiple occasions where the lynching has taken place and the style in which he organizes his writing. The writer begins by defining lynching and introducing some background information on who it affects and how long it has taken place. He then moves into a more emotional state by citing the terrible things the African Americans are forced to endure on a daily basis. The author once again accentuates his point by providing a plethora of dates with examples of lynching. However, the author also applies these dates and intense diction to call attention to the evil that racist people are condoning and even playing a part in the lynching. Mr. Curry strategically crafts this essay to display the monstrosity that is the racist population, and to hopefully bring about an end to this terrorism. Not only is this a call to action, this is a call to end evil…

    • 571 Words
    • 3 Pages
    Good Essays
  • Satisfactory Essays

    In this modern take on Jim Crow, Michelle Alexander presents the evolutionary roots of racism in the United States. She argues that racism is no longer based solely on race, but has transformed to more covert and legal forms through the criminalization of African Americans in the criminal justice system. As soon as a person of color is classified as a felon, it is legal for establishments to discriminate against them virtually as much as it was at the height of the Jim Crow era.…

    • 99 Words
    • 1 Page
    Satisfactory Essays
  • Good Essays

    Once the Civil War had ended, many rejoiced and thought that African Americans would be free to live out normal lives, but then came the increase of lynching. After the war, the Southern economy was in ruins, and lynching had allowed white southerners to express their hatred and discontent towards the situation and African Americans were the vulnerable targets for their pent-up anger (Notes). In Southern Horrors, Feimster introduces Rebecca Felton, who was a wealthy slave owner, and Ida B. Wells, a slave born women, and how each woman viewed this idea of lynching drastically diverse from each other due to their upbringings.…

    • 1090 Words
    • 5 Pages
    Good Essays
  • Better Essays

    Control of reproductive decisions of black women is a highly prevalent a form of racial oppression in America. Due to this form of control, the meaning of reproductive liberty in America has been significantly altered. These issues are addressed in Dorothy Roberts’ Killing the Black Body. The novel demonstrates the way in which black women were consistently devalued as a tool for reproductive means, which in itself was a form of racial oppression. The novel also provides the reader with insight as to how experiences of black women since times of slavery have drastically changed the present day connotation of reproductive freedom.…

    • 1265 Words
    • 6 Pages
    Better Essays
  • Good Essays

    Cited: Wells, Ida B. Southern horrors and other writings : the anti-lynching campaign of Ida B. Wells, 1892-1900. Edited and with an introduction by Jacqueline Jones Royster. Boston : Bedford Books, 1997.…

    • 456 Words
    • 2 Pages
    Good Essays
  • Good Essays

    martin luther king

    • 755 Words
    • 4 Pages

    Chronological and Topical Scope: 1880’s and 1892 during the lynching’s in Memphis. Ida B. Wells-Barnett discusses the injustice of her friend’s killings.…

    • 755 Words
    • 4 Pages
    Good Essays
  • Good Essays

    Throughout the twentieth century, African Americans fought to obtained equality. During this battle, many African Americans expressed their concerns about racism and plans to uplift their race. Ida B. Wells, Booker T. Washington, and W.E.B. DuBois were three speakers that caught many people attention. In an excerpt from Southern Horrors, Wells strongly states how feeling about lynching. She believed that lynching gave the “white man” the opportunity to kill the “black man” any time he feels the need. “Over the course of two years, 728 African Americans were lynched” (Wells). A wrongfully accused black man was lynch because the white men thought he raped a white woman. “The girl herself maintained that her assailant was a white man”, stated Wells. Wells believed that her people should demand that the lynch laws be condemned. If they (the white men) did not stop with the unnecessary lynching, her people should withdraw their labor. She stated, “If labor is withdrawn, capital will not remain.” This idea will make the whites cease their behavior if they want to make money. The plans of ceasing labor in order to get what you want was essential for black racial uplift. Washington had a different approach. He believed that African Americans should become friends with the people that surrounded…

    • 545 Words
    • 3 Pages
    Good Essays
  • Powerful Essays

    Abraham Lincoln’s Emancipation Proclamation, and the passing of the Thirteenth Amendment of the United States Constitution were historical milestones in which the ever controversial topic of racial equality was first challenged. In theory, these two movements laid the groundwork for a racially equal United States of America. A country in which every member, regardless of skin color, or race were to be treated equally under the eyes of the law and to one day be treated as equals within all realms of society. As historic and powerful as these movements were, they did little to quell racism and unfair treatment of African Americans in the United States. Following these two movements and the ending of the civil war, African Americans continued to be harshly mistreated by members of white America, as numerous members of the African American race were threatened, falsely accused of crimes, beaten, raped and killed as a result of Jim Crow laws and the Southern tradition of lynching, or hanging African Americans. Mat Johnson’s graphic Novel, Incognegro, chronicling the trials and tribulations of Zane, an African American journalist who pretends to be white to expose the brutal reality of segregation against African Americans in the South, is a graphic manifestation of both the historical accuracy and cultural reality of segregation and brutal mistreatment of African Americans within the Jim Crow South. Johnson’s vivd dramatizations of African Americans being brutally murdered by lynching, African Americans, “passing,” as whites, and African Americans being unfairly tried under the eyes of the law, sheds historically accurate light on an important, yet swept under the rug tradition of a time when racial segregation against African Americans served as a cultural identity that came to define cultural…

    • 1823 Words
    • 8 Pages
    Powerful Essays
  • Good Essays

    When thinking about the complexities of colored and poor women`s identity and Truth`s argument, many questions arise. Can those who did not actually do the work of “men” effectively use that argument to demand for equal rights? In African American Women`s History and the Metalanguage of Race, Evelyn Brooks Higginbotham writes on how race was used to justify the rubric of woman. She writes “Black women failed to receive as a pretense of protection, so widely accepted was the belief that the spread of the disease was inevitable because black women were promiscuous by nature.” In this excerpt, Higginbotham writes about the belief that certain sexually transmitted diseases were spreading among the black community because black women were promiscuous.…

    • 432 Words
    • 2 Pages
    Good Essays
  • Good Essays

    Jennifer Wriggins analyzes the significance how race, ethnicity, and class influence a woman's vulnerability to rape, the meaning and impact of the rape, and the response of family, of community, and of social institutions. Her article, "Rape, Racism, and the Law," specifically focuses on the history of rape in the United States between the rapes of White women by Black men. As a feminist, she specifically focuses on two very damaging consequences of this selective blindness: the denials that Black women are raped; and all women are subject to pervasive and harmful sexual coercion of all kinds. Thorough this powerful essay, she examine the legal system's treatment of rape and how racism plays a major part in denying the rights of African Americans, as well as, deny the veracity of women's sexual subordination by creating a social meaning of rape which implies that the only type of sexual abuse is "illegal rape" and the only form of illegal rape is Black offender/White victim.…

    • 727 Words
    • 3 Pages
    Good Essays
  • Better Essays

    With race relations, going into the twentieth century should seem to be a breeze. With the Great Migration occurring, everyone should finally live together in a “separate but equal” society everyone wanted in the 1800s. However, that did not occur because of race relations. What began with the Great Migration ended with African Americans attempting to gain their “double victory” over fascism overseas and racism on their territory. In fact, the race relations between African Americans and White citizens grew worse overtime only because of segregation and racism.…

    • 2054 Words
    • 9 Pages
    Better Essays
  • Good Essays

    While Hark dramatically complicates the male body as a signifying field, Robyn Wiegman transforms the feminist paradigm of the "specular colonization" (176) of the female body from an issue of gender to one of race, in which the black male becomes constructed as feminine, suggesting "not simply an aversion to racial difference but a profound attempt to negate masculine sameness, a sameness so terrifying to the cultural position of the white masculine that only castration can provide the necessary disavowal" (179). To Wiegman this "terrain of masculine differences in the context of masculine sameness" requires nothing less than a "rethinking of feminism's commitment to patriarchal organization" (179). Understanding how "masculine sameness provides the very terms that construct and defend hierarchies of oppression and exploitation among men" helps explain, Wiegman says, the negotiation of the black male position between "feminization (buffoonish Uncle Tom) and hypermasculinization (well-endowed rapist)" (180).…

    • 501 Words
    • 3 Pages
    Good Essays
  • Good Essays

    The perception of blacks’ males as being dangerous began when the slave came to America on 1619. Due to the situation of being treated as property, to be freely bought and sold, and that the owner was free to split up a couple or family at any time simply by selling some of his/her slaves. African slaves started to behave in a hostile manner. Because of their behavior the Caucasians immediately started to classify the slaves as being dangerous, and they need to be tame as if they were wild animals. This lead the slave masters to start putting chain and walking around with their rifles when they would be in the fields with them. As it was stated in ‘The Brut Caricature”, it portrays black men as innately savage, animalistic, destructive, and criminal; deserving punishment, and maybe death.…

    • 1610 Words
    • 7 Pages
    Good Essays
  • Powerful Essays

    Interracial Relationships

    • 1590 Words
    • 7 Pages

    Racial Purity and Interracial Sex in the Law of Colonial and Antebellum Virginia, 77 Geo. L. J. 1967 (1989).…

    • 1590 Words
    • 7 Pages
    Powerful Essays
  • Powerful Essays

    Before delving into the extended metaphor that Amiri Baraka drew out, it helps to have a firm understanding of the institutionalized violence at work against the Black race. Since colonialization of the Americas and the introduction of slavery, violence against blacks has…

    • 1530 Words
    • 7 Pages
    Powerful Essays