A Liberal Dose, May 13, 2021
"What Is Critical Race Theory, and Why Are Some People Scared of It?"
Troy D. Smith
Tennessee is one of several red states whose legislatures have
passed laws banning critical race theory- something most Americans had never
heard of until Trump condemned it in the final days of his presidency, calling
it “unpatriotic.” Trump also attacked the New York Times’ “1619 Project” which
began in 2019. That ongoing series of articles about the legacy of slavery gets
its name from the fact that the first African slaves arrived in the English
colonies (specifically, Virginia) in the year 1619. Which seems like a pretty
reasonable date with which to begin a series of articles about slavery in
America. Following Trump’s lead, a lot of conservatives are conflating the New
York Times series, the academic thematic approach of critical race theory, and
anything else that takes a frank and honest look at the history of slavery in
this country instead of glossing over it like it never happened, and banning it
from public school history classes. I’ve read a lot of quotes from conservative
politicians and pundits about “CRT”, but I have yet to read anything said or
written by anyone who actually knows anything about it. In fact, editorials
about it tend to begin with words like “I’m not an expert, and I don’t actually
know what this is, but it’s bad.” Why is
it bad? Because, they say, it is unpatriotic; it denies the rule of law and
says that all of American history has been different racial groups vying for
power; because it claims 1619 is the founding of America instead of 1776.
Spoiler alert- none of those accurately describe critical race theory.
I do have some background that qualifies me to discuss the
topic, I think. I have a Ph.D in history, specifically race and ethnicity and
the American South. I will start out by saying that, like a lot of stuff from
the previous administration, this is a lot of hot air about nothing. K-12
public schools are not teaching critical race theory; critical race theory is
an offshoot of academic legal studies and is also now used as a theoretical
approach in political science, education, anthropology, and some other fields.
It is not really used by many academic historians, actually –academic historians
who specialize in race tend to use whiteness theory, which is very similar but
different in that it looks at culture rather than law. And in that it equally
freaks out conservatives who are familiar with it. The 1619 Project uses
elements of both.
Critical race theory holds that the American colonies, and
later the United States, used the legal system to make racism official in order
to support slavery. Because it was such an intrinsic part of the law, it got
baked into the system and elements of it are still there, resulting in systemic
racism. Let me pause to give you a dose of actual (not imaginary) history: the
English colonies, and all thirteen states at the beginning of the Revolution,
had laws that legalized slavery and other laws that limited the civil rights
even of free black people. Slavery ended with the Civil War, but existed in
everything except name in the South during Reconstruction (see “black codes”).
That was followed by Jim Crow segregation laws, which existed until the
mid-1960s. Before that, black men were lynched or executed on the flimsiest, if
any, evidence. Today, factual studies prove that black men are more likely to
be imprisoned, and for longer sentences, than white men convicted of the same
types of crimes. These are facts. Historical facts.
Whiteness theory is based on the works of W.E.B. DuBois and
others, including James Baldwin. This approach says that English colonists in
the Americas established a new identity for themselves, apart from being
British. This “American” identity was also, de facto, a “white” identity. The
idea of being “white” was relatively new –it started in the early 1600s,
started becoming a common idea in the late 1600s, and was used universally in
the English colonies by 1700. In other words, after they started using African
slaves, colonists started pointing out that they themselves were not black. The
black slaves were an “other” against which to define themselves, as were the
American Indians. I’ve barely seen the 1619 Project touch on Indians, by the
way, which is why I’m not a huge fan of it- it’s a good place to start, but it
is mostly written by journalists instead of historians and lacks the necessary
nuance, depth, and context.
I invite you to go to Sparta Live or my blog (tnwordsmith.blogspot.com)
and take a second look at my Feb. 25 column (“History Is the Key to Everything”)
and the one from the following week, March 4 (“Understanding the Many Types of
Privilege”). Both of them contain elements of both critical race theory and
whiteness theory. Did they seem unpatriotic to you? Did I seem to be trying to
stoke up hatred between races? Or was I trying to foster more cooperation? That’s
a big part of the problem with this (mostly meaningless) legislation- rather
than narrowly defining things, proponents of it have quoted the most
revolutionary statements they could find and conflated every way of talking
about race or slavery that goes beyond what a 1930s textbook would say, or that
is frank and honest instead of euphemistic and “positive”, into a lump of
unpatriotic, racially divisive vitriol when that’s not what it is. The result
is going to be that teachers will be afraid to have real discussions about race
in America, and students will not be allowed to even think about it. And
nothing will ever change for the better.
I’ve written before, in those first couple of columns, that
when you have a gaping wound it’s not going to get better if you just pretend
it’s not there. It will keep getting worse. Now I’m going to use a different analogy.
Let’s say you have a cake pan. It’s not just any old cake pan,
it’s in a special, complex shape that produces cakes people marvel at. But it
also has a big dent in it. No matter how fancy or impressive the overall cakes
are, every single cake that comes from that pan is going to have that big dent.
Now let’s say you and your family get together and say “you know, I am sick to
death of cakes with dents in them. So from now on, we are not going to look at
the dents and will pretend they are not there. THAT’LL fix the problem.” Except
it won’t. The only way to fix that problem is to carefully pound that dent out.
To change the structure.
The structure of this country is, in my opinion, very
impressive. The idea of what this country should be is as beautiful and sacred
to me as it ever was. But it has never been perfect. Our job is to slowly pound
away at the dents in it “in order to form a more perfect union.” Pretending the
problems aren’t there will never solve them.
Finally -how about you let the trained teachers decide what
to teach and how to teach it instead of making it political?
--Troy D.
Smith, a White County native, is a novelist and a history professor at
Tennessee Tech. His words do not necessarily represent TTU.
A complete list of "A Liberal Dose" columns can be found HERE
A list of historical essays that have appeared on this blog can be found HERE
Troy D.Smith's official author's website: www.troyduanesmith.com
Troy: One of the best articles I have ever read explaining these two concepts. I would hope you would try to get this published in every local paper sill publishing in the region, particularly Crossville, so thatl people understand how these things are used to present the "fact" of our history rather than some made up narrative that pretends the Native American Genocide didn't happen and that slavery and Jim Crowe and lynching weren't really that bad. I doubt that you will change many minds who only listen to one outlet, Fox, and then reaffirm everything they hear at the local coffee shop. Keep up the good work!
ReplyDeleteBut it needs to be done. Dr. Randall Norris, Ph.D.
ReplyDelete