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The radical heart: The politics of love in the struggle for African-American equality, 1833--2000.

机译:激进的内心:为争取非裔美国人平等而奋斗的爱情政治,1833--2000年。

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摘要

Writing the history of sexuality in the United States is a notoriously slippery task. For years, scholars ignored the history of American sexuality, abiding by the assumption that sex belongs in the bedroom, the private realm, and thus has no bearing on the high politics and economics that used to dominate American historiography. Interracial sexuality occupied a particular historical silence in a nation whose Supreme Court would not strike down all laws against interracial marriage until 1967. In his 1995 presidential address to the Organization of American Historians, Gary Nash declared that of race-mixing and mixed-race people in America to be a "hidden history.";Since the late 1990s, however, dozens of monographs and anthologies have appeared exploring sexuality in colonial and early America. Despite the best intentions of colonial authorities to establish order and social hierarchy in the New World, both environment and human nature militated against the observance of ironclad sexual regulations and racial boundaries. Reinforcing this new American sexual history has been a sophisticated historiography on legislation against interracial marriage. These works recognize the public nature of marriage as a means of ordering society, defining citizenship, and even constructing racial and gender difference. While the physical act of race mixing has occurred throughout American history, the settings in which this mixing acquired meaning -- positive and negative -- have necessarily been linked to imperatives of social control and the maintenance of that control. Yet scholars of interracial marriage assert that antimiscegenation laws were not historical absolutes but contingent, contested, shifting measures across time and space subject to debate and contravention.;The twin revelations that interracial sex was both privately common and publicly important do not yet tell us how the civil and political associations that operated as intermediaries between individuals and the state dealt with it. And in the case of associations that sought emancipation and civil rights for African-Americans, we still lack a thorough understanding of how they grappled with the strong prejudice against interracial marriage and mixed-race people as they agitated for black inclusion in society and the polity on equal terms.;This study contributes to that understanding by taking a broad view of both the African-American civil rights struggle and the paradoxical history of interracial marriage in the United States between 1833 and 2000. It divides that one hundred sixty-seven-year span into five periods of struggle (with occasional overlap) and focuses on those organizations that were in the vanguard of protest at the time: the American Anti-Slavery Society (1833-1870), the African Methodist Episcopal Church (1865-1910), the National Association for the Advancement of Colored People (1909-1967), the Student Nonviolent Coordinating Committee (1960-1972), and the Multiracial Movement (1975-2000). Each of the civil rights organizations under study here possessed a historically-informed understanding of the role antimiscegenation laws played in establishing and maintaining racial hierarchy. This historical awareness created an internal logic, or "organic intellect," that shaped the attitudes these organizations adopted to interracial sex, marriage, and love as potential protest targets or as long-term means of ending prejudice.;Part of this study recounts these organization's unexpected engagement with interracial intimacy despite its long history of criminalization. Far from a non-issue or a liability better left ignored, criticism of the sexual enforcement of racial boundaries permeates the sources these activists left behind. As much as they were influenced by external hostility, however, attitudes toward interracial love were also shaped by their internal organic intellect. This organic intellect acknowledged that restrictions on cross-racial intimacy served the ends of white supremacy. It also knew that interracial sex was as old as America, and neither it nor the presence of generations of ambiguously-complected mulattoes had eradicated that prejudice. This historical pragmatism acted with a sense of group loyalty that complicated any advocacy of wholesale interracial marriage, because to do so suggested a racial self-loathing and hankering after whiteness that ran counter to the freedom struggle itself.;For all its apparent power, antimiscegenation laws never convinced activist African-Americans and their white allies that the color line was impermeable or that black and white could not love each other. Even so, the black freedom struggle could also never be convinced that love -- or at least sex -- would fix everything.;This study uncovers the unexpected ways in which racism and white supremacy have infiltrated not only American sexual mores but our very notion of family and our definition of love. Both the permissive and prohibitive impulses that have shaped the contradictory history of interracial sexuality in America reveal complicated truths about our ancestors and ourselves.
机译:在美国写性史是一项臭名昭著的工作。多年来,学者一直忽略美国性行为的历史,一直坚持认为性属于卧室,即私人领域,因此与过去支配美国史学的高级政治和经济学无关。在一个国家中,种族间的性行为在历史上一直保持沉默,直到1967年,最高法院才会废除所有反对种族间婚姻的法律。加里·纳什(Gary Nash)在其1995年对美国历史学家组织的总统致辞中宣布,种族混血和混合种族的人自1990年代末以来,然而,数十部专着和选集开始出现在美国殖民地和早期探索性问题。尽管殖民当局在建立新世界的秩序和社会等级制度方面表现出了最大的意愿,但环境和人性都违反了严格的性法规和种族界限。加强这种新的美国性史的是关于反对异族婚姻的立法的复杂史学。这些作品认识到婚姻的公共性是社会秩序,确定公民身份,甚至建立种族和性别差异的一种手段。尽管种族混合的实际行为在整个美国历史上都曾发生过,但这种混合所获得的意义(正面和负面)的设置必然与社会控制和维持这种控制的必要性有关。然而,异族通婚的学者断言,反种族歧视法不是历史上的绝对法,而是偶然的,有争议的,跨时空变化的措施,容易引起辩论和违反;双胞胎证据表明,异族性在私人和公共上都是很重要的,但还没有告诉我们如何在个人和国家之间充当中介的民间和政治协会对此进行了处理。就寻求非裔美国人解放和公民权利的协会而言,我们仍然缺乏对他们如何应对种族间婚姻和混血人的强烈偏见的透彻了解,因为他们为社会中的黑人包容和政治动荡而鼓动本研究通过对非裔美国人的民权斗争和1833年至2000年间美国的异族通婚的悖论历史进行了广泛的考察,从而为这种理解做出了贡献。该研究将一百六十七个年分为五个斗争时期(偶尔有重叠),重点关注当时处于抗议先锋的组织:美国反奴隶制协会(1833-1870),非洲卫理公会主教教堂(1865-1910) ,全国有色人种促进协会(1909-1967),学生非暴力协调委员会(1960-1972)和多种族运动(1975-2000)。在此研究的每个民权组织都对反种族歧视法在建立和维护种族等级制度中的作用具有历史了解。这种历史意识创造了一种内部逻辑,即“有机智慧”,它塑造了这些组织对异族性,婚姻和爱情采取的态度,将其作为潜在的抗议目标或作为长期的消除偏见的手段。长期以来被定为犯罪组织,但该组织仍未与种族间的亲密接触。这些激进主义者留下来的根源不只是对非发行问题或责任不容忽视的批评,对种族边界的性实施的批评。然而,尽管他们受到外部敌对的影响,对异族恋爱的态度也受到其内部有机智慧的影响。这种有组织的智慧承认,对跨种族亲密关系的限制服务于白人至上的目的。它也知道种族间的性行为与美国一样古老,而且它的存在和世代相抵的混血儿都没有消除这种偏见。这种历史上的实用主义表现出对群体的忠诚感,这使任何批判异族通婚的主张变得复杂,因为这样做表明种族自欺欺人和渴望白人后与自由斗争本身背道而驰。法律从来没有说服激进主义者非裔美国人及其白人同盟,种族分界线是不可渗透的,或者说黑白无法彼此相爱。尽管如此,黑人自由斗争也永远不能说服爱情-或至少是性爱-能够解决一切问题。;这项研究揭示了种族主义和白人至上主义不仅渗透到美国的性观念中,而且渗透到我们家庭观念中的意想不到的方式还有我们对爱的定义塑造了美国异族性矛盾历史的宽容和禁忌冲动都揭示了关于我们祖先和我们自己的复杂事实。

著录项

  • 作者

    Gamber, Francesca.;

  • 作者单位

    Southern Illinois University at Carbondale.;

  • 授予单位 Southern Illinois University at Carbondale.;
  • 学科 African American Studies.;History Black.;History United States.
  • 学位 Ph.D.
  • 年度 2010
  • 页码 579 p.
  • 总页数 579
  • 原文格式 PDF
  • 正文语种 eng
  • 中图分类
  • 关键词

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