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For those interested in an alternative history
of American slavery, the first installment of PBS’s new four-hour series, “Slavery and
the Making of America” (February 9 and 16) began on a promising
note. The first American bond-laborers, we are shown in vivid color
and told by narrator Morgan Freeman, were a rather mixed group:
English, Scottish, Irish, and African. Rarely do U.S. history texts
start with this crucial fact in telling the story of America’s
so-called “Peculiar Institution.” In the main, U.S. slavery is
presented as either an embarrassing aberration or a painful yet
necessary stage in the nation’s triumphant march toward democracy
and equality for all. In both conceptions, American slavery is
always racialized, creating the false impression that Anglo-American
slave-owners imposed a system of chattel slavery on Africans and
African Americans because of their phenotype (or skin tone), not
their labor power.
For students of the history of colonial Virginia,
the PBS documentary’s
unorthodox beginning was exciting for another reason. For next
would be one of the most remarkable moments in all of American
history: Bacon’s Rebellion of 1676, the largest and most consequential
slave revolt in the history of the continent. At first a small
opposition movement within the Anglo-American ruling class, over
profit-making opportunities in Virginia, the revolt became hurriedly
a mass rebellion of bond-laborers, their sights set on the chief
garrison and magazine at West Point.
Nathaniel Bacon was a member of the colony
council and a militant opponent of Virginia land policy. He had
prepared the revolt a
few years earlier by organizing an armed mutiny of angry taxpayers
at Lawnes Creek Parish, and, in November of 1676, proclaimed freedom
to all bond-laborers, in anticipation they would join his cause
against the big tobacco bourgeoisie. He was right. Thousands of
bond-laborers – six thousand European Americans and two thousand
African Americans – took up arms against the numerically tiny Anglo-American
slave-owning planter class. Seizing the day, dramatically, they
drove Governor Berkeley back to England, hat in hand, and shut
down all tobacco production for fourteen straight months.
The slave rebellion introduced a near terminal crisis in the young
British imperial system, and, for the Anglo-American slave owners
and planters, the frightening prospect of losing forever the entire
Chesapeake, home to some of the richest tidewater land on the planet,
which they had been exploiting massively and ceaselessly for the
previous sixty years, through a system of bond-labor servitude
known as chattel slavery.
But the American bond-laborers – English, Irish, Scottish, and
African – had had enough. Throughout the seventeenth century, the
death toll in the Virginia colony had been around 80 percent, due
to the nightmarishly harsh conditions of labor and the vicious
punishments inflicted by magistrates on resistant tobacco workers.
The bond-laborers were not going back.
Most significant about Bacon’s Rebellion is
the fact that the
bond-labor rebels took up arms together without the slightest regard
for each other’s complexion. A month into the successful rebel
takeover of the Virginia colony, the British crown sent one Thomas
Grantham, a Navy captain, to bribe the rebel leaders. The rebel
leaders weren’t having it, and, according to Grantham himself in
the official report he penned weeks later, recommended “cutting
me in peeces.” Grantham described the rebel leaders as “foure hundred
English and Negroes in Armes.” This is no small point, as the historical
record of Virginia verifies.
The British would eventually crush Bacon’s
Rebellion through a relentless bombing campaign of the Chesapeake.
Historian Theodore
Allen argues that Grantham’s report is one of the most important
documents in the whole archive of colonial Virginia. In his two
volume history of U.S. racial slavery and oppression, The
Invention of the White Race (Verso, 1994 and 1997), Allen
argues convincingly that Grantham’s specific description of the
rebel leaders indicates the American chattel bond-laborers did
not accept any social partition of themselves into “white” and “black” – that,
in fact, the “white identity” did not yet exist. The bond-laborers
worked together, ate together, slept together, escaped together,
and fought together. (See Allen’s second volume for a complete
account of the rebellion, including systematic forays into the
colonial record to substantiate his original thesis.) According
to Allen, the invention of “whites” would come in the immediate
aftermath of Bacon’s Rebellion, in the beginning of the eighteenth
century, during which time the plantation bourgeoisie faced the
greatest crisis of its life: how to avoid another rebellion of
bond-laborers? For there could be no tobacco monoculture without
bond-labor. To put it differently, how do you run a social control
system in a civil society based on chattel-bond slavery?
When I ask this question to students in my
early American literature course, the answer comes easily: divide
the bond-laborers in two
by letting one half go free and the other half – keep them in bondage
and have the “free” half patrol them. This common sense has escaped
most U.S. historians, but not Allen. “The solution,” he writes, “was
to establish a new birthright not only for Anglos but for every
European-American, the ‘white’ identity that ‘set them at a distance,’ to
use Sir Francis’s phrase [Francis Bacon], from the laboring-class
African-Americans, and enlisted them as active, or at least passive,
supporters of lifetime bondage of African Americans” (vol. 2, p.
248). From this point forward, the pattern was set: “the appeal
to ‘white race’ solidarity would remain the country’s most general
form of class-collaborationism” (Allen, vol. 2, p. 253).
The deeper you go into this line of thinking,
the clearer things become: the quick overthrow of Reconstruction
and restoration of
white supremacy; a brutal century of lynch law; the endurance of
Jim Crow; the “white backlash” against the civil rights agenda;
the resegregation of public schools; the incarceration of a generation
of African American young men; racial profiling; redlining; the
assault on black women through the systematic de-funding of public
education and healthcare; the re-election of Bush; a U.S. class
struggle in which the capitalist class wins every time.
Allen puts it precisely in his discussion of the revision of the
Virginia code of 1705:
“The exclusion of free African Americans from
the intermediate stratum was a corollary of the establishment
of the ‘white’ identity as a mark of social status. If the mere
presumption of liberty was to serve as a mark of social status
for masses of European-Americans without real prospects of upward
social mobility, and yet induce them to abandon their opposition
to the plantocracy and enlist them actively, or at least passively,
in keeping down the Negro bond-laborers with whom they had made
common cause in the course of Bacon’s Rebellion, the presumption
of liberty had to be denied to free African Americans” (vol.
2, p. 249).
This is one of the main theses of the African
American tradition, beginning with David Walker’s Appeal,
down to Dr. DuBois’s Black
Reconstruction, the second chapter of which is titled “The
White Worker”; the first is “The Black Worker” and the third
is “The Planter.” The thesis continues in Margaret Walker’s masterpiece Jubilee,
where a white plantation driver named “Grimes” has his own chapter
(“Grimes: ‘Cotton is king!’”), complex interior monologues, and
persists like a deadly plague until the end of her epic novel.
A year before the publication of Black Reconstruction,
Langston Hughes published his own masterpiece, The Ways of
White Folks, which argues the same thing: that the poor whites
are not only politically bamboozled (race conscious over class
conscious) and psychologically deluded in alarming ways (constant
fear of, and intense lust for, “The Blacks!”), which is problematic
enough, but they constitute the majority of the American working
class and are heavily armed.
It’s a miracle we’re still alive as a species: this is the logical
corollary of the main thesis, which can be found in Octavia Butler’s
popular, multi-award-winning fiction, and in Toni Morrison’s
great monograph Playing in the Dark: Whiteness and the Literary
Imagination. In the 1950s, Hughes had put it sharply, in
his lugubrious, sexy blues mode, when he opened one of his Chicago
Defender columns with the title “Hold Tight – They’re Crazy
White!” He argues in the piece that white workers need “mass
psychoanalysis” (see Christopher DeSantis’s invaluable collection
of Hughes’s essays for his “Crazy White” column, in Langston
Hughes and the Chicago Defender).
The important not-white American thinkers
(John Brown, Twain, Melville, Thoreau, Sinclair Lewis, Gore
Vidal, Clint Eastwood),
as well as many European intellectuals – essentially people who
are able to observe objectively the white government, free of
what DuBois called in Black Reconstruction “the Blindspot” (read:
the “white” blindspot) – have been baffled that more people don’t
appreciate the people responsible for the Miracle. DuBois
calls them into existence in The Souls of Black Folk: “the
tired climbers,” African American workers: “the sole oasis of
simple faith and reverence in a dusty desert of dollars and smartness” (Souls,
ch. 1). Moreover, if this “dyspeptic blundering” of the whites
doesn’t cease soon, the self-extinction of humanity is near at
hand. DuBois’s formulation in Black Reconstruction is
arguably the most important thing ever said about the American
class struggle:
”The race element was emphasized in order that
property-holders could get the support of the majority of white
laborers and make it more possible to exploit Negro labor. But
the race philosophy came as a new and terrible thing to make
labor unity or labor class-consciousness impossible. So long
as the Southern white laborers could be induced to prefer poverty
to equality with the Negro, just so long was a labor movement
in the South made impossible.” (680)
It’s obvious by now that PBS’s “groundbreaking” documentary
on U.S. slavery forgot to mention Bacon’s Rebellion. Sadly, as
the first hour dragged to a lugubrious close, it became apparent
that the omission of Bacon’s Rebellion was strategic, since to
acknowledge it at all would destroy the premise of the series:
that the enslavement of African Americans was a result of natural
racism.
So how does the documentary, assuming as
it does that Bacon’s
Rebellion never happened, attempt to explain the fact that the
first bond-laborers were both European American and African American
and yet by the beginning of the eighteenth century all the bond-laborers
were African American and none was European American?
It’s quite a work of smoke and mirrors but
the producer, director, and writer of the series, Dante
James, pulls it off smoothly. He simply disappears the poor
and propertyless European Americans through a staple of American
pop culture: a staged courtroom scene in which a terrible injustice
is carried out with impunity. The injustice was against John
Punch, an African American bond-laborer who, along with two fellow
bond-laborers, both of whom were European American, had escaped,
in 1640, the plantation. They’re caught and hauled back to face
sentencing. The judge gave Punch lifetime bond-servitude but
to the two European Americans he imposed just three additional
years on their bondage. For James, this is the “turning point” of
racial slavery in America: it marks the beginning of the ordeal
of racial oppression. This is the last time in James’s first
installment that the European American bond-laborers are to be
seen.
Yet what the Punch case showed was that the big tobacco planters
were trying to see if a system of white skin privileges could
work in the Virginia colony. Thirty-five years later the Punch
case was totally nullified by the unified action of eight thousand
bond-laborers, who proved to the slave-owning tobacco planters
that such a distinction among workers held no significance with
them. They would have to try much harder to divide the first
American working class, to make race consciousness supercede
class consciousness, if they were to continue reaping huge profits
off chattel slavery. On this historic task the Anglo-American
bourgeoisie began to work, right down to the present.
James said recently in an interview that,
in his view, “slavery
could be seen as a festering wound on America which needs to
be opened up and cleansed before it can begin to heal. And I
am hopeful that looking at slavery from the point of view of
the enslaved will make a contribution to the beginning of the
healing.”
It’s an unchallengeable assertion yet it sounds a bit too familiar,
like John Kerry’s concession speech. Indeed, the politics of
the PBS series can be summed up in this connection: just as Kerry
blew the election by ignoring the persistence of white racism
and its integral relation to American working-class powerlessness,
in the face of massive ruling class enrichment, so did James
squander his own opportunity to “heal” America’s “festering wound” by
omitting from history the real turning point in colonial America,
when poor European Americans and poor African Americans were
of equal social status and fought precisely that way.
So what is America's real “Peculiar Institution”? For James,
in conformity with U.S. historiography and “white” common sense,
it’s racial slavery: chattel slavery imposed exclusively on African
Americans. Yet what’s so peculiar about capitalists in pursuit
of present profit? Under this logic, sweatshop labor is peculiar
too, as is making workers pay for their own raises. Moreover,
was it also “peculiar” that the English imposed slavery on the
Catholic Irish in Ireland?
Rather, isn’t the peculiarity of U.S. history
and society that the masses of European American bond-laborers
were not kept
in a condition of lifetime bond-servitude? Why not? Why would
a capitalist let a worker up from a condition of servitude if
it didn’t serve his particular class interest to do so? What
was this particular class interest all about?
In James’s version of American slavery, these illuminating questions
never arise because, for him and PBS, racial slavery and white
racism are part of nature – a sorrowful destiny that cannot be
changed. For if it wasn’t for specific class reasons that the
slave-owning tobacco planters let poor European Americans out
of slavery – i.e. to divide and demoralize a rebellious multi-ethnic
working class by producing from within it an oppressing social
control group, the “white race” – then it must be that they did
it because they “naturally” hated blacks and “naturally” liked
whites. The rest is history, because there’s no other conclusion
to draw.
James’s PBS series is, in this way, another
sign of the times: the return of gloomy biological and religious
arguments to explain
vitally important political, social and historical questions.
Worse, the regression into fatalistic interpretations of history
produces a weary structure of feeling that narcotizes Americans,
in such a way that they give up all hope of changing anything.
If racism is natural, how could we do anything about it?
Jonathan Scott is an assistant professor of English, at the
City University of New York, Borough of Manhattan Community
College. He can be reached at [email protected].
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