These days
it’s getting harder to tell whether history is repeating itself
or if human beings are just becoming more cliché. This was underscored
last week when it came to light that Cary Christian Academy, a
private school in North Carolina, was using the deceptively titled
pamphlet “Southern Slavery, As It Was” in their curriculum. Among
the more notable claims presented by authors Doug Wilson and Stephen
Wilkins were neglected virtues like: “Many Southern blacks supported
the South because of long established bonds of affection and trust
that had been forged over generations with their white masters
and friends." Or this gem: “There has never been a multi-racial
society which has existed with such mutual intimacy and harmony
in the history of the world."
Listen close and you can almost hear the banjoes strumming in
the background. Officials at the school defended the 43-page tract,
arguing that they want to present students with “both sides” of
the Civil War story and that students also read speeches by Abraham
Lincoln. Ironically enough, the “both sides” approach does not
include the perspectives of the actual black people who lived
through slavery. A random selection from John Blassingame’s Slave
Testimony yields this first-person dissenting opinion:
“[The mistress] took her in the morning, before sunrise, into
a room and had all the doors shut. She tied her hands and then
took her frock over her head, and gathered it up in her left hand,
and with her right commenced to beating her naked body with bunches
of willow twigs. She would beat her until her arm was tired and
then thrash her on the floor, and stamp on her with her foot and
kick her and choke her to stop her screams. She continued the
torture until ten o’clock. The poor child never recovered. A white
swelling came from the bruises on her legs of which she died in
two or three years.”
Any few pages in your college-worn copy of The
Narrative of the Life of Frederick Douglass would put
the lie to Wilson and Wilkins claim that “Slave life was to them
a life of plenty, of simple pleasures, of food, clothes, and good
medical care." And one wonders where Harriet Tubman, bludgeoned
so badly as a child that she suffered from bouts of narcolepsy
for the rest of her life, fits into this backdrop of happy plantation
scenery. And far from supporting the South out of their “bonds
of affection,” nearly all black Confederates, as James McPherson
points out in The
Negro’s Civil War, were conscript laborers who constantly
sought means to escape across Union lines. To put it simply, this
was a case of bondage not bonds. It is pathetic that five
years into the 21st century, the societal learning curve is so
obtuse that we must still make statements like: American slavery
was a violent, oppressive institution responsible for the brutal
subjugation and dehumanization of millions of people over the
course of three centuries. Wilson and Wilkins claims that
slave life was characterized by “good medical care” is particularly
bizarre given the fact that enslaved black people were frequently
used as subjects of 19th century medical experimentation. The
historian Katherine Bankole, in fact, pointed out in her book
Slavery and Medicine that given the high mortality
rates for the most minor surgeries during the era, doctors in
antebellum Louisiana “perfected” their Caesarian-section technique
on black women before applying it to white ones.
This is not about accurate history, but about providing the South
with a human rights alibi, 139 years past slavery. It is about
a vast capacity for willful self-delusion, the need to provide
self-absolution for the sins of the so-deemed Peculiar Institution.
Thus you see the kind of historical hairsplitting of “Southern
Slavery, As It Was”: Slavery was wrong…but not as bad you might
think.
And sadly enough, it’s not only in the far precincts of the Christian
right that we hear these kinds of weak rationales. The Southern
Alibi tradition rests upon the now–outmoded arguments of historian
Ulrich B. Phillips’ American Negro Slavery. First published
in 1918, the book glazed the old arguments that slavery had been
a benign and beneficial institution to the enslaved with a new
scholarly sheen. Phillips’ perspective had a striking longevity,
finding expression even in the dissenting works that appeared
in the 1950s and 1960s, all the way down to Robert Fogel and Stanley
Engerman’s Time on the Cross which appeared in 1974 arguing
that poor treatment of blacks would have made slavery unprofitable
as an economic institution. Back in my graduate school days, my
friend and fellow historian Khalil Muhammad and I were amazed
to find that we – and a single white student – were the sole voices
in a 15-person colloquium who were willing to argue that slavery
was an unqualified moral wrong.
All these defenses – whether presented at academic conferences
or passed out to adolescents in private academies of the far-right,
are invested in viewing slavery as a labor system operated by
rational, managerial white folk – the plantation equivalents of
Jack Welch or Lee Iacocca. But in order for these theories to
work, they also have to overlook the concomitant cruelties of
sexual exploitation of enslaved black women, which was common
enough to be a defining characteristic of the institution. Again,
even a commonplace text like Harriet Jacobs’ Incidents
in the Life of a Slave Girl or Deborah
White’s Aren’t I a Woman would illustrate the fact
that rape was an intricate part of enslavement in this country.
Nor can these depictions of slavery-lite explain away the
dissolution of families for profit and the inhuman breeding of
blacks to produce additional chattel for the slave owners.
It would be easy to dismiss these disputes as the arid exercises
of the History Forensics Society were the implications for our
everyday lives not so serious. Truth told, Wilkins and Wilson
are only inches away from the “happy darky” illustrations of black
life and if this is “Southern Slavery, As It Was” then they would
be hard-pressed to explain the literal hundred of slave revolts,
attempted revolts, poisonings and fires that defined the South
between the Revolutionary and Civil Wars. In airbrushing the brutality
of slavery, we make it possible to ignore the tremendous power
that race had – and continues to have – in shaping this society.
To cut to the quick, until we are willing to grapple with slavery
as it was, we will remain incapable of dealing with America as
it is.
William Jelani Cobb is an assistant professor of history
at Spelman College and editor of The
Essential Harold Cruse. He can be reached at [email protected].
Visit his website at
www.jelanicobb.com.