A Commentary on the Passing Scene by
Robert Paul Wolff
rwolff@afroam.umass.edu
Tuesday, August 6, 2019
EVEN A STOPPED CLOCK IS RIGHT TWICE A DAY
I am not a big fan of Paul Krugman, as readers of this blog know, but sometimes what he says is true, and honesty compels me to acknowledge it. This is an example.
> But for some reason this bait-and-switch started getting less effective in the 2000s. Maybe it was the reality of America’s growing racial diversity; maybe it was the fact that American society as a whole was becoming less racist, leaving the hard-core racists feeling isolated and frustrated. And the election of our first black president really kicked hatred into overdrive.
> The result is that there are more and more angry white people out there willing to commit mayhem — and able to do so because those same Republicans have blocked any effective control over sales of assault weapons.
I got excited by the title over the possibility that Paul Krugman might hint at a materialist analysis of terrorism, but I guess not. I read the manifesto of the recent killer and he mentions that one of the reasons that immigration makes him so angry is because native born Americans get repeatedly shafted from both both "above and below" so to speak (politicians don't care, immigrants take jobs) so he thought the best thing to do is start shooting immigrants.
I shall use the death of Toni Morrison to change the subject and link to a wonderful interview, I thought, that appeared in The Paris Review in 1993, Here's a quote:
"In not using black characters, but using the aesthetic of blacks as anarchy, as sexual license, as deviance. In his last book, The Garden of Eden, Hemingway’s heroine is getting blacker and blacker. The woman who is going mad tells her husband, I want to be your little African queen. The novel gets its charge that way: Her white white hair and her black, black skin . . . almost like a Man Ray photograph. Mark Twain talked about racial ideology in the most powerful, eloquent, and instructive way I have ever read."
In "Making America White Again," published in the New Yorker on November 21, 2016, Toni Morrison wrote:
"To keep alive the perception of white superiority, these white Americans tuck their heads under cone-shaped hats and American flags and deny themselves the dignity of face-to-face confrontation, training their guns on the unarmed, the innocent, the scared, on subjects who are running away, exposing their unthreatening backs to bullets. Surely, shooting a fleeing man in the back hurts the presumption of white strength? The sad plight of grown white men, crouching beneath their (better) selves, to slaughter the innocent during traffic stops, to push black women’s faces into the dirt, to handcuff black children. Only the frightened would do that. Right?
"These sacrifices, made by supposedly tough white men, who are prepared to abandon their humanity out of fear of black men and women, suggest the true horror of lost status."
Although this passage addresses the violence, rooted in white paranoia, that is being perpetrated on Black bodies, it nonetheless seems particularly relevant this week.
> But for some reason this bait-and-switch started getting less effective in the 2000s. Maybe it was the reality of America’s growing racial diversity; maybe it was the fact that American society as a whole was becoming less racist, leaving the hard-core racists feeling isolated and frustrated. And the election of our first black president really kicked hatred into overdrive.
ReplyDelete> The result is that there are more and more angry white people out there willing to commit mayhem — and able to do so because those same Republicans have blocked any effective control over sales of assault weapons.
I got excited by the title over the possibility that Paul Krugman might hint at a materialist analysis of terrorism, but I guess not. I read the manifesto of the recent killer and he mentions that one of the reasons that immigration makes him so angry is because native born Americans get repeatedly shafted from both both "above and below" so to speak (politicians don't care, immigrants take jobs) so he thought the best thing to do is start shooting immigrants.
I shall use the death of Toni Morrison to change the subject and link to a wonderful interview, I thought, that appeared in The Paris Review in 1993, Here's a quote:
ReplyDelete"In not using black characters, but using the aesthetic of blacks as anarchy, as sexual license, as deviance. In his last book, The Garden of Eden, Hemingway’s heroine is getting blacker and blacker. The woman who is going mad tells her husband, I want to be your little African queen. The novel gets its charge that way: Her white white hair and her black, black skin . . . almost like a Man Ray photograph. Mark Twain talked about racial ideology in the most powerful, eloquent, and instructive way I have ever read."
Sorry...here's the link:
ReplyDeletehttps://www.theparisreview.org/interviews/1888/toni-morrison-the-art-of-fiction-no-134-toni-morrison
In "Making America White Again," published in the New Yorker on November 21, 2016, Toni Morrison wrote:
ReplyDelete"To keep alive the perception of white superiority, these white Americans tuck their heads under cone-shaped hats and American flags and deny themselves the dignity of face-to-face confrontation, training their guns on the unarmed, the innocent, the scared, on subjects who are running away, exposing their unthreatening backs to bullets. Surely, shooting a fleeing man in the back hurts the presumption of white strength? The sad plight of grown white men, crouching beneath their (better) selves, to slaughter the innocent during traffic stops, to push black women’s faces into the dirt, to handcuff black children. Only the frightened would do that. Right?
"These sacrifices, made by supposedly tough white men, who are prepared to abandon their humanity out of fear of black men and women, suggest the true horror of lost status."
Although this passage addresses the violence, rooted in white paranoia, that is being perpetrated on Black bodies, it nonetheless seems particularly relevant this week.