Title: The Rhetoric of Protection
1The Rhetoric of Protection
The power of ladyhood as a value construct
regulated womens behavior and restricted
interaction with the world under system of
southern chivalry Lynching engendered fear of
sexual assault and prevented voluntary
interracial sex - served as a weapon of racial
and sexual terror. White men lynch the offending
Afro-American, not because he is a despoiler of
virtue, but because he succumbs to the smiles of
white women. (Wells, 1892) When Southern white
women get ready to stop lynching, it will be
stopped and not before. (Ames, 1938)
- A dramatization of cultural themes Here was the
quintessential Woman as Victim polluted, ruined
for life the object of fantasy and secret
contempt. (p.335)
To Kill A Mockingbird (1963)
2Hellhounds From Without Sanctuary(Litwack)
- Between 1882 and 1968, an estimated 4,742 blacks
were killed by lynch mobs (p.12) - Whiteshad come to think of black women and men
as inherently and permanently inferior, as less
than human, as little more than animals (p.13) - After Emancipation and during Reconstruction,
violence characterized by sadism and
exhibitionism - Lynchers demonstrated racial and community
solidarity complacent, matter-of-fact - At he
hands of unknown parties - The Negro as beast became a fundamental part of
the white Souths racial imagery (similar to
Sambo). Dual nature docile and amiable when
enslaved, savage when free (p.23) - Of 3,000 black lynchings between 1889-1918, only
19 accused of rape - Lynching as an expression of Southern fear of
Negro progress than of Negro crime (p. 29) - For African Americans - pragmatic resignation and
survival
3The Historical Connections Between Rape and
Lynching(Jaqueline Dowd Hall, 1983)
- In the 19th century South, slave owners meted out
plantation justice undisturbed by any rule of
law. Sexual exploitation of black women
institutionalized under slavery - Lynching as an instrument of coercion creating
a climate of fear - The protection of white womanhood and the image
of the black rapist as a monstrous beast
(p.334) pervasive fixtures of racist ideologies - The myth of the black rapist Factual info -
less than 25 of lynching victims accused of rape - The emotional circuit between interracial rape
and lynching undermines factual refutation
http//www.pbs.org/wnet/jimcrow/tools_riot.html
4Ida B. Wells July 16, 1862 - March 25, 1931
- In 1884 she was asked by the conductor of the
Chesapeake Ohio Railroad Company to give up her
seat on the train to a white man Wells refused
and was forcefully removed from the train. She
sued. - Editor and co-owner of a Memphis black newspaper
called "The Free Speech and Headlight. Wells
used her paper to attack the evils of lynching - Formed the Women's Era Club, the first civic
organization for African-American women. - Wells was one of the founding members of the
National Association for the Advancement of
Colored People (NAACP).
http//www.webster.edu/woolflm/idabwells.html
The real purpose of these savage demonstrations
(lynching) is to teach the Negro that in the
South he has no rights that the law will
enforce. Ida Bell Wells-Barnett - born Holy
Springs, Mississippi http//www.inform.umd.edu/Pi
ctures/WomensStudies/PictureGallery/wells.html
5Jessie Daniel Ames 1883-1972
- In 1914, out of financial necessity, Ames went to
work at the Georgetown Telephone Company, owned
by her mother, also a widow. Both emerged as
competent, tough-minded competitors in a
male-dominated business community. - In 1930 Ames founded the Association of Southern
Women for the Prevention of Lynching (ASWPL). - She challenged the notion that white women needed
protection from African-American men. She pointed
out that alleged rapes of white women by
African-American men, the supposed rationale for
a lynching, seldom occurred and that the true
motive for lynching was rooted in racial hatred.
http//www.southwestern.edu/academic/fst/fst-jda_b
io.html
Jessie Daniel Ames Texas suffragist and
civil-rights activist 1883-1972 http//www.pbs.org
/wnet/jimcrow/stories_people_ames.html
6Why the Photographic Display of LynchingWithout
Sanctuary ?A necessarily painful and ugly
story
- Intent to depict the extent and quality of the
violence unleashed on black men and women in the
name of enforcing black deference and
subordination (white supremacy) - Easier to choose path of collective amnesia or
dismiss as depraved need to remember - Need to understand how normal men and women could
live with, participate and defend such atrocities
7The Lynching of Thomas Shipp and Abram Smith,
1930, Marion, Indiana
8The Lynching of Thomas Shipp and Abram Smith,
1930, Marion, Indiana
9James Cameron and The Black Holocaust Museum
- Milwaukee museum teaches about atrocities of
racism - The first time you hear the name of a museum
dedicated to educating future generations about
the atrocities of racism committed against
African Americans, you might think it sounds odd.
But America's Black Holocaust Museum in Milwaukee
was founded by a survivor of a mob lynching who
wants visitors to learn from the past and
understand how racism begins and grows. - James Cameron was falsely arrested, along with
two of his friends, when he was 16 years old in
1930 for the murder of a white man in Indiana. He
and his friends were beaten and the other two
were hanged by an angry mob. Cameron miraculously
lived through the beating and served four years
in a state prison. - In later years, Cameron became a leader of local
National Association for the Advancement of
Colored People chapters and civil rights
activities in Indiana and Wisconsin, and wrote a
book about his experience, A Time of Terror. - In 1988 he founded America's Black Holocaust
Museum to provide visitors with an opportunity to
rethink their assumptions about race and racism.
Cameron's collection included photographs, books
and exhibits that document lynch mobs and racism
in America. - Milwaukee, Wisconsin
http//www.blackholocaustmuseum.org/about.html
10Class Discussion
- Can museum visitors learn from the past and
understand how racism begins and grows? - Is it possible to understand how normal men and
women could live with, participate and defend
lynching through photo display? - How would you choose to depict racism? What aims
would you have in mind?