The Historian Behind Slavery Apologists Like Kanye West

xoxodede

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The Historian Behind Slavery Apologists Like Kanye West

By Blain Roberts and Ethan J. Kytle

Dr. Roberts and Dr. Kytle are the authors of “Denmark Vesey’s Garden: Slavery and Memory in the Cradle of the Confederacy.”

May 3, 2018
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An 1863 photograph that became known as “The Scourged Back”’ shows the whipping scars on Gordon, a former slave in Louisiana who escaped to Union lines.Credit McPherson & Oliver, collection of the Illinois State Historical Library

A video of the rapper Kanye West discussing slavery is a sad reminder of America’s historical amnesia about the brutal realities of that institution. “When you hear about slavery for 400 years,” he said in the clip, which was widely circulated on Twitter, “that sounds like a choice.”

Mr. West seemed to suggest that enslaved African-Americans were so content that they did not actively resist their bondage, and, as a result, they bear some responsibility for centuries of persecution.

He’s not alone in his thinking. In 2016, the former Fox News host Bill O’Reilly asserted that slaves were “well fed and had decent lodgings.” Last September, the Alabama senatorial candidate Roy Moore deemed the antebellum era the last great period in American history. “I think it was great at the time when families were united,” he declared. “Even though we had slavery, they cared for one another.”

Modern scholarship has debunked such whitewashing, accurately depicting slavery as an inhumane institution rooted in greed and the violent subjugation of millions of African-Americans.

Yet countless Americans have not learned these lessons. They cling, instead, to a romanticized interpretation of slavery, one indebted to a book published 100 years ago.

In the spring of 1918, the historian Ulrich Bonnell Phillips published his seminal study, “American Negro Slavery,” which framed the institution as a benevolent labor agreement between indulgent masters and happy slaves. No other book, no monument, no movie — save, perhaps, for “Gone With the Wind,” itself beholden to Phillips’s work — has been more influential in shaping how many Americans have viewed slavery.

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An enslaved man tied to a whipping post, circa 1865.

Born in 1877 into a Georgia family with planter roots, Phillips developed an abiding sympathy for the Old South. He studied history at the University of Georgia and then as a graduate student at Columbia University under the tutelage of William A. Dunning, a scholar with a pro-Southern bent.

After earning his doctorate in 1902, Phillips set out to correct the slanted picture of the Southern past that he believed prevailed at the time. “The history of the United States has been written by Boston and largely been written wrong,” he lamented. “It must be written anew before it reaches its final form of truth, and for that work, the South must do its part.”

Phillips certainly did his. During his 30-year career, he published nine books and close to 60 articles, earning a series of prestigious professorships that culminated in a “very flossy job,” as he put it, at Yale University. This 1930 appointment reflected his stature as the country’s leading historian of slavery and the South, as well as the influence of his most important book, “American Negro Slavery.”

He was a prodigious, albeit selective researcher. Phillips found evidence in plantation records and Southern travelogues that bolstered the book’s benign interpretation of slavery, while downplaying evidence that did not. In his hands, plantations became idyllic sites where white families had modeled the habits of civilized life for their childlike black charges. “The plantations,” Phillips wrote, “were the best schools yet invented for the mass training of that sort of inert and backward people which the bulk of the American negroes represented.”

According to Phillips, slaveholders provided the enslaved with comfortable living quarters and plentiful rations and eschewed physical discipline. They rarely sold slaves, especially if it meant breaking up families. Slave owners’ rule “was benevolent in intent” and “beneficial in effect.”

Phillips’s use of the passive voice — “in March the corn fields were commonly planted” — further distanced the reader from slaves’ coerced labor. Enslaved African-Americans, in turn, displayed gratitude and loyalty to their masters. Phillips concluded that, while slavery may have been economically inefficient, “the relations on both sides were felt to be based on pleasurable responsibility.”

“American Negro Slavery” won widespread acclaim in the North and the South. Reviewers praised Phillips for his thorough research, charming style and lack of bias. In the words of the historian John David Smith, an expert on Phillips, the book served as “the definitive account of the peculiar institution” from World War I into the 1950s.

The book set the tone for the treatment of slavery in classrooms and textbooks across the country. “There was much to be said for slavery as a transition status between barbarism and civilization,” maintained a 1930 best seller, echoing Phillips almost verbatim. “The majority of slaves were … apparently happy.”

From the beginning, however, Phillips had his critics, who insisted on telling a more truthful, unvarnished history of slavery. W.E.B. Du Bois wrote a scathing review of “American Negro Slavery,” observing, “It is a defense of American slavery, a defense of an institution which was at best a mistake and at worst a crime.” Drawing on interviews with ex-slaves, sources Phillips rejected, the historian Frederic Bancroft published a 1931 book that exploded Phillips’s misrepresentations of the domestic slave trade.

Phillips’s critics grew more vocal in the 1950s and 1960s, as a new generation of scholars challenged his benign reading of slavery and the racism that stained almost every page of “American Negro Slavery.”

Yet while Phillips’s most egregious claims fell out of favor, the legacy of “American Negro Slavery” has proved tenacious.

According to a new Southern Poverty Law Center report on how slavery is taught in public schools, current pedagogy continues to focus on slavery from the perspective of whites, not the enslaved, while failing to connect the institution to the white supremacist beliefs that supported it. Textbooks often ignore slaveholders’ desire to make money and too easily slip into grammatical constructions — Africans “were brought” to America — that absolve enslavers of their actions.

Last year, a Charlotte, N.C., teacher asked her middle-school students to list “four reasons why Africans made good slaves.” An eighth-grade teacher in San Antonio recently sent students home with a work sheet titled “The Life of Slaves: A Balanced View.” It prompted students to list the “positive” aspects of slavery along with the “negative.”

We must confront mischaracterizations of the nature of slavery, whether nurtured in the classroom or broadcast on Twitter. After all, historical accuracy on this topic is not just about getting the past right; it is also about understanding the challenges of the present.

The persistence of racial inequality in America — from police brutality and school segregation to mass incarceration and wealth disparities — reflects, to some degree, the persistence of the Phillipsian take on slavery. If the institution were little more than a finishing school for African-Americans, then why acknowledge or address its pernicious legacies today?

Opinion | The Historian Behind Slavery Apologists Like Kanye West
 
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xoxodede

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More on The Dunning School:



Historian Eric Foner, a leading specialist, said:

The traditional or Dunning School of Reconstruction was not just an interpretation of history. It was part of the edifice of the Jim Crow System. It was an explanation for and justification of taking the right to vote away from black people on the grounds that they completely abused it during Reconstruction. It was a justification for the white South resisting outside efforts in changing race relations because of the worry of having another Reconstruction.

All of the alleged horrors of Reconstruction helped to freeze the minds of the white South in resistance to any change whatsoever. And it was only after the Civil Rights revolution swept away the racist underpinnings of that old view—i.e., that black people are incapable of taking part in American democracy—that you could get a new view of Reconstruction widely accepted. For a long time it was an intellectual straitjacket for much of the white South, and historians have a lot to answer for in helping to propagate a racist system in this country.[2]


Dunning School

The school was named after Columbia University professor William Archibald Dunning (1857–1922), whose writings and those of his PhD students comprised the main elements of the school. He supported the idea that the South had been hurt by Reconstruction and that American values had been trampled by the use of the U.S. Army to control state politics. He contended that freedmen had proved incapable of self-government and thus had made segregation necessary. Dunning believed that allowing blacksto vote and hold office had been "a serious error".[3] As a professor, he taught generations of scholars, many of whom expanded his views of the evils of Reconstruction. The Dunning School and similar historians dominated the version of Reconstruction-era history in textbooks into the 1960s. Their generalized adoption of deprecatory terms such as scalawags for southern white Republicans and carpetbaggers for northerners who worked and settled in the South, have persisted in historical works.

Explaining the success of the Dunning School, historian Peter Novick noted the two forces, the need to reconcile the North and the South after the Civil War and the increase in racism as Social Darwinism appeared to back the concept with science, that contributed to a "racist historiographical consensus" around the turn of the 20th century on the "criminal outrages" of Reconstruction.[4] Novick provided examples of the style of the Dunning School approach when he wrote:

James Ford Rhodes, citing [Louis] Agassiz, said that "what the whole country has only learned through years of costly and bitter experience was known to this leader of scientific thought before we ventured on the policy of trying to make negroes [sic] intelligent by legislative acts." John W. Burgess wrote that "a black skin means membership in a race of men which has never of itself succeeded in subjecting passion to reason." For William A. Dunning, blacks "had no pride of race and no aspiration or ideals save to be like whites." Ellis Paxson Oberholtzer quoted approvingly the southern observation that Yankees didn't understand the subject because they "had never seen a ****** except Fred Douglass." Blacks were "as credulous as children, which in intellect they in many ways resembled."[5]

Even James Wilford Garner's Reconstruction in Mississippi, regarded by W. E. B. Du Bois as the fairest work of the Dunning school, depicted Reconstruction as "unwise" and black politicians as liabilities to Southern administrations.[6]

In the 1940s Howard K. Beale began to define a different approach. Beale's analysis combined an assumption of "racial egalitarianism and an insistence on the centrality of class". He claimed that some of the more progressive southern historians continued to propose "that their race must bar Negroes from social and economic equality." Beale indicated other southern historians' making more positive contributions were "southern liberals" such as C. Vann Woodward and Francis Simkins.[7]

Dunning School - Wikipedia
 

Henri Christophe

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current pedagogy continues to focus on slavery from the perspective of whites, not the enslaved, while failing to connect the institution to the white supremacist beliefs that supported it


So basically, depending on white folks to educate your children, is a bad idea? :ohhh:



No way :ohhh:




Who knew:ohhh:
 

xoxodede

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So basically, depending on white folks to educate your children, is a bad idea? :ohhh:



No way :ohhh:




Who knew:ohhh:

True. But, sadly - the majority of Black Americans do not know much on/about our ancestors enslavement -- nor do they have the desire to. It really takes time and lots of research to truly learn more about the institution -- or the experiences and stories of those who had to endure it.
 

get these nets

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True. But, sadly - the majority of Black Americans do not know much on/about our ancestors enslavement -- nor do they have the desire to. It really takes time and lots of research to truly learn more about the institution -- or the experiences and stories of those who had to endure it.
Kanye's parents are both well educated.....he mentioned his dad being an ex Panther... he rapped about his family participating in the "civil rights sit -ins",and he's OVER 40 years old..

He's just a buffoon.........don't give him the benefit of the doubt that he doesn't know better.
 

AlainLocke

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So basically, depending on white folks to educate your children, is a bad idea? :ohhh:



No way :ohhh:




Who knew:ohhh:

The government isn't White people...

We need to pay attention to what is being taught in schools and occupy school boards and textbook companies and hold the US Department of Education accountable.

The government isn't White people, it isn't ran by White people...

There are entire districts are ran by Black people..
 

DakotaRed

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True. But, sadly - the majority of Black Americans do not know much on/about our ancestors enslavement -- nor do they have the desire to. It really takes time and lots of research to truly learn more about the institution -- or the experiences and stories of those who had to endure it.
I dont think thats the only reason though.

Learning about slavery is emotionally and physically draining.


I know for me I have to space out how much information I take in when I read stories/books involving chattel slavery, because all it does is make me angry and I end up buggin out when I read too many of the stories.

So I can personally can understand why some people don't want to learn about it. They should but I can understand why alot don't.
 

Sukairain

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shyt like this is why minorities have got to get more involved in academia, especially in humanities subjects. If we're not there to question and critique these false narratives and write our own works, then they go unquestioned and become accepted narratives, which in turn is used to justify the historical oppression of colonialism and slavery.

The odds are stacked against us however because academia is a low percentage career path, especially so in humanities. Only something like one job exists for every 40 PhD graduates. Cacs can accept those odds because generally they're wealthier and if that career doesn't work out after the doctorate they still have options.
 
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Kanye's parents are both well educated.....he mentioned his dad being an ex Panther... he rapped about his family participating in the "civil rights sit -ins",and he's OVER 40 years old..

He's just a buffoon.........don't give him the benefit of the doubt that he doesn't know better.
I don't think he's a buffoon. I'm sure him like many others can not fathom slavery. It literally makes no sense. Most will say black people were warriors and strong. But somehow they had their will killed and were willing to be subsurvient to their captures. Now if that's so it's easy to see how there kids would grow into the roles as time progressed. Then it comes to well how did these kids who knew nothing but slavery want something more? It's too much unknown for most of us.

If you can point me in the direction of good material to answer these questions it would be appreciated.
 

ATownD19

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Kanye's parents are both well educated.....he mentioned his dad being an ex Panther... he rapped about his family participating in the "civil rights sit -ins",and he's OVER 40 years old..

He's just a buffoon.........don't give him the benefit of the doubt that he doesn't know better.


c00ning like that is a deliberate choice. I view it as a sign of submission.
 

xoxodede

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I dont think thats the only reason though.

Learning about slavery is emotionally and physically draining.


I know for me I have to space out how much information I take in when I read stories/books involving chattel slavery, because all it does is make me angry and I end up buggin out when I read too many of the stories.

So I can personally can understand why some people don't want to learn about it. They should but I can understand why alot don't.

I definitely agree. I have felt that all through out my genealogy research. Doing that made me re-educate myself on slavery and reconstruction.

It’s depressing and it’s really taxing spiritually and emotionally.
 
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It really takes time and lots of research to truly learn more about the institution -- or the experiences and stories of those who had to endure it.

It takes time and lots of research to understand the fundamental evil of slavery and its impact on the race of black men and women in America? :mjlol:
 

xoxodede

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It takes time and lots of research to understand the fundamental evil of slavery and its impact on the race of black men and women in America? :mjlol:

No. It takes time to learn about the different elements of enslavement. Most people just think of picking cotton.

- The types of crops (Cotton, Indigo, Sugar, Tobacco)

- The locations of plantation and farms (i.e. South, Deep South, Border States) and why running away wasn’t a possibly for many due to location.

- Plantation, Small/Mid-Size Farm, Urban Slavery

- The process from capture to middle passage to slave block, to being sold, to held in bondage.

- The types of punishment - physical, spiritually and mentally (flogging, starvation, amputation, selling kin, types of punishment tools, rape)

- Rape, violation and breeding.

- Abuse of children.

- Daily Resistance, Maroons in the South, and of course revolts/uprising. Plus, the types of consequences for doing so.

- Medical testing and abuse of elderly.

I can go on...

I can list resources and books that go more into depth.
 
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xoxodede

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I don't think he's a buffoon. I'm sure him like many others can not fathom slavery. It literally makes no sense. Most will say black people were warriors and strong. But somehow they had their will killed and were willing to be subsurvient to their captures. Now if that's so it's easy to see how there kids would grow into the roles as time progressed. Then it comes to well how did these kids who knew nothing but slavery want something more? It's too much unknown for most of us.

If you can point me in the direction of good material to answer these questions it would be appreciated.

Subservient? Not really. They were terrorized and lived under threats, violence, family being sold and killed daily. By not only their enslaver but the whole county, state and South. Again, it was an institution- a well run one - that was on code at all times.

The resources are available - it just takes effort and desire to learn about their stories and how the system worked.
 
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