When it comes to how deeply embedded racism is in American society, Black and White people have sharply different views.
For instance, 70 percent of White people believe that individual discrimination is a bigger problem than discrimination built into the nation’s laws and institutions. Only 48 percent of Black people believe that is true.
Many Black and White people also fail to see eye to eye regarding the use of blackface, which dominated the news cycle during the early part of 2019 because of a series of scandals that involve the highest elected leaders in Virginia, where I teach.
The donning of blackface happens throughout the country, particularly on college campuses. Recent polls indicate that 42 percent of White American adults either think blackface is acceptable or are uncertain as to whether it is.
One of the most recent blackface scandals has involved Virginia Gov. Ralph Northam, whose yearbook page from medical school features someone in blackface standing alongside another person dressed in a Ku Klux Klan robe. Northam has denied being either person. The more Northam has tried to defend his past actions, the clearer it has become to me how little he appears to know about fundamental aspects of American history, such as slavery. For instance, Northam referred to Virginia’s earliest slaves as “indentured servants.” His ignorance has led to greater scrutiny of how he managed to ascend to the highest leadership position in a racially diverse state with such a profound history of racism and White supremacy.
Ignorance is pervasive
The reality is that Gov. Northam is not alone. Most Americans are largely uninformed of our nation’s history of White supremacy and racial terror.
As a scholar who researches racial discrimination, I believe much of this ignorance is because of negligence in our education system. For example, a recent study found that only 8 percent of high school seniors knew that slavery was the central cause of the Civil War. Schools have ample opportunities to include much more about White supremacy, racial discrimination, and racial violence into school curricula. Here are three things that I believe should be incorporated into all social studies curricula today:
1. The Civil War was fought over slavery and one of its offshoots – the convict-lease system – did not end until the 1940s
The Civil War was fought over the South’s desire to maintain the institution of slavery to continue to profit from it. It is impossible to separate the Confederacy from a pro-slavery agenda, and curriculums across the nation must be clear about this fact.
After the end of the Civil War, Southern White people sought to keep slavery through other means. After a brief post-Civil War period known as Reconstruction, White Southerners created new laws that gave them legal authority to arrest Black people over the most minor offenses, such as not being able to prove they had a job.
While imprisoned under these laws, Black people were then leased to corporations and farms where they were forced to work without pay under extremely harsh conditions. This “convict leasing” was, as many have argued, slavery by another name, and it persisted until the 1940s.
2. The Jim Crow era was violent
While students may be taught about segregation and laws preventing Black people from voting, they often are not taught about the extreme violence White people enacted upon Black people throughout the Jim Crow era, which took place from 1877 through the 1950s. Mob violence and lynchings were frequent occurrences – and not just in the South – throughout the Jim Crow era.
Racial terror was used as a means for White people to maintain power and prevent Black people from gaining equality. Notably, many White people – not just White supremacist groups such as the Ku Klux Klan – engaged in this violence. Moreover, the torture and murder of Black people was not associated with any consequences.
During this same time, White society created negative stereotypes about Black people as a way to dehumanize them and justify the violence White people enacted upon them. These negative stereotypes included that blacks were ignorant, lazy, cowardly, criminal, and hypersexual.
Blackface minstrelsy refers to White people darkening their skin and dressing in tattered clothing to perform the negative stereotypes as part of entertainment. This imagery and entertainment served to solidify negative stereotypes about Black people in society. Many of these negative stereotypes persist today.
3. Racial inequality was preserved through housing discrimination and segregation
During the early 1900s, a number of policies were put into place in our country’s most important institutions to further segregate and oppress Black people. For example, in the 1930s, the federal government, banks and the real estate industry worked together to prevent Black people from becoming homeowners and to create racially segregated neighborhoods.
This process, known as redlining, served to concentrate White people in middle-class suburbs and Black people in impoverished urban centers. Racial segregation in housing has consequences for everything from education to employment. Moreover, because public school funding relies so heavily on local taxes, housing segregation affects the quality of schools.
All of this means that even after the removal of discriminatory housing policies and school segregation laws in the 1950s and 1960s, the consequences of this intentional segregation in housing persist in the form of highly segregated and unequal schools. All students should learn this history to ensure that they do not wrongly conclude that current racial disparities are based on individual shortcomings – or worse, Black inferiority – as opposed to systematic oppression.
Americans live in a starkly unequal society where health and economic outcomes are largely influenced by race. We cannot begin to meaningfully address this inequality as a society if we do not properly understand its origins. The White supremacists responsible for sanitizing our history lessons understood this. Their intent was clearly to keep the country ignorant of its racist past to stymie racial equality. To change the tide, we must incorporate a more accurate depiction of our country’s racist history in our K-12 curricula.
This article was originally published by The Conversation. It has been edited for YES! Magazine.
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