Results 1 to 1 of 1

Thread: "RACE" - an invention to prevent the unification of the working poor

  1. Link to Post #1
    Canada Avalon Member 161803398's Avatar
    Join Date
    2nd April 2011
    Posts
    1,573
    Thanks
    5,966
    Thanked 5,073 times in 1,312 posts

    Default "RACE" - an invention to prevent the unification of the working poor

    Interesting Article.

    http://www.understandingrace.org/res...se/smedley.pdf

    Although there were more Irish slaves in the Caribbean Isles than Africans, those peoples captured in wars with the English, knew nothing about tropical agriculture and were seen as “savages,” (they had a “dangerous nature”) (see Smedley 2007). They often ran away to join their co-religionists, the catholic Spanish, and were considered a “rebellious lot.” Historian Leonard Liggio, quoted from one letter sent to traders by a planter, “Don’t send us any more Irish; send us some Africans, for the Africans are civilized and the Irish are not” (1976, 8).

    In contrast to Indians, Africans also had natural immunities to Old World diseases.European colonists recognized that Africans lived longer and were able
    to produce more than Europeans who had a high mortality rate. Moreover,
    Africans were in a strange land with no powerful allies and, unlike the Indians,
    could not escape to familiar territories. They were the most vulnerable of all the
    peoples of the Americas.

    Sources of English servants began to decline in the latter part of the 17th
    century, as jobs became available at home. The slave trade to Africa increased
    as internal warfare in Africa made more and more people available for
    enslavement. Leaders of the colonies, all large planters, had two objectives: to
    impose effective social controls over the population and provide themselves withcheap and easily controlled workers. They readily perceived that they could use the differing physical characteristics of the population to divide them and
    demarcate some for permanent slavery. Historian Anthony Parent (2003) argues
    that a powerful planter class, acting to further its own economic interests,
    deliberately brought a new form of servitude, racial slavery to Virginia over the
    period of 1690-1723. In this period, hundreds of laws were passed restricting the
    rights of Africans and their descendents. By 1723, even free Negroes were
    prohibited from voting.

    Colonial leaders were also doing something else; they were laying the basis for the invention of race and racial identities. They began to homogenize all Europeans, regardless of ethnicity, status, or social class, into a new category.

    The first time the term “White,” rather than “Christian” or their ethnic names (English, Irish, Scots, Portuguese, German, Spanish, Swede) appeared in the
    public record was seen in a law passed in 1691 that prohibited the marriage of
    Europeans with Negroes, Indians, and mulattoes (Smedley 2007, 118). A clearly
    separated category of Negroes as slaves allowed newly freed European servants
    opportunities to realize their ambitions and to identify common interests with the
    wealthy and powerful. Laws were passed offering material advantages and social
    privileges to poor whites. In this way, colony leaders consciously contrived a
    social control mechanism to prevent the unification of the working poor (Allen
    1997). Physical features became markers of racial (social) status, as Virginia’s
    governor William Gooch asserted, the assembly sought to “fix a perpetual Brand
    upon Free Negroes and Mulattos” (Allen 1997, 242).
    Last edited by 161803398; 7th October 2013 at 19:41.

  2. The Following 2 Users Say Thank You to 161803398 For This Post:

    mosquito (8th October 2013), Snookie (7th October 2013)

Tags for this Thread

Posting Permissions

  • You may not post new threads
  • You may not post replies
  • You may not post attachments
  • You may not edit your posts