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A brief look at black/white race relations in the U.S. Brea Barthel 11/13/13
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A brief look at black/white race relations in the U.S. Brea Barthel 11/13/13.

Dec 25, 2015

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Page 1: A brief look at black/white race relations in the U.S. Brea Barthel 11/13/13.

A brief look at black/white race relations in the U.S.

Brea Barthel11/13/13

Page 2: A brief look at black/white race relations in the U.S. Brea Barthel 11/13/13.

First, a word on words

•“African-American” current preferred term

•“Black” usually okay•“People of color” okay; includes all non-

whites•“Colored” considered racist•“Negro” no longer acceptable; don’t say it•The N-word (“nigger”) highly offensive;

people get fired for using it

Page 3: A brief look at black/white race relations in the U.S. Brea Barthel 11/13/13.

(But some older terms live on)

•HBCU: “historically black colleges and universities”

•NAACP: “National Association for the Advancement of Colored People”

•UNCF: “United Negro College Fund”

Page 4: A brief look at black/white race relations in the U.S. Brea Barthel 11/13/13.

Race relations in 2013

To quote Charles Dickens,

“It was the best of times, it was the worst of times”

Page 5: A brief look at black/white race relations in the U.S. Brea Barthel 11/13/13.

The best of times

•Mixed-race president & African-American wife

•Mayor-elect of NYC & African-American wife

Source: abcnews.go.com Source: touchfm.org

Page 6: A brief look at black/white race relations in the U.S. Brea Barthel 11/13/13.

“post-racial America”? Not!

Page 7: A brief look at black/white race relations in the U.S. Brea Barthel 11/13/13.

The worst of times?• “Birther movement” claims Obama is a Kenyan

• Number of hate groups (neo-Nazi, Ku Klux Klan, other white supremacists) & membership increased after Obama elected (Southern Poverty Law Center)

• Income inequality “defining issue of our times”(Obama, http://www.cnn.com/2013/10/29/opinion/sutter-explainer-income-inequality/)

• Changes in voter registration laws hurt blacks

Page 8: A brief look at black/white race relations in the U.S. Brea Barthel 11/13/13.

Pre-1860s: Slavery• People legally defined as property

• U.S. Constitution: a slave counted as three-fifths of a person for national census (population affects each state’s number of members of Congress)

• Legal in New York until 1827

• Legal in the south until 1865

• “Abolitionists” fought to end slavery

• “Underground Railroad”: individuals & groups helped people escape slavery, even though that was illegal

Page 9: A brief look at black/white race relations in the U.S. Brea Barthel 11/13/13.

1861-1865: Civil War• Bloodiest war in U.S. history (750,000+ deaths)

• States in the South “seceded” from (left) the U.S. to create the Confederate States of America

• North (“Union” or “Yankees”; blue uniforms) vs. South (“Confederates” or “rebels”; gray uniforms)

• War has different names:in border states, “War between the states”in Southern states “War of Northern Aggression”

Page 10: A brief look at black/white race relations in the U.S. Brea Barthel 11/13/13.

1865: 13th amendment

"Neither slavery nor involuntary servitude, except as

a punishment for crime whereof the party shall have

been duly convicted, shall exist within the United

States, or any place subject to their jurisdiction."

(“their”? “United States” was considered plural, emphasizing states; soon after considered singular, emphasizing united.)

Source: http://www.loc.gov/rr/program/bib/ourdocs/13thamendment.html

Page 11: A brief look at black/white race relations in the U.S. Brea Barthel 11/13/13.

1860’s – 1960’s: segregation

•“Jim Crow” laws separated blacks & whites•Different schools, other legal restrictions•Violators punished severely•Blacks lynched (hung)

for minor or made-up reasons; lynchings often became public events

•“Strange Fruit”: songdrew attention to issue

Source: satiricalpolitical.com

Page 12: A brief look at black/white race relations in the U.S. Brea Barthel 11/13/13.

1960s: Civil Rights movement

•National movement for legal changes•Some major figures:

▫Martin Luther King, Jr.▫Malcolm X▫Thurgood Marshall▫Rosa Parks▫Fannie Lou Hamer

http://www.ibtimes.com/i-have-dream-speech-full-transcript-video-read-dr-martin-luther-king-jrs-1963-speech-its-50th

Rosa Parks, with MartinLuther King in background

Page 13: A brief look at black/white race relations in the U.S. Brea Barthel 11/13/13.

1960s: Legal changes

•Voting rights acts•Equal Rights act•“Affirmative Action” for jobs & schools•Quota systems tried, then dropped

Backlash from whites•Claims of “reverse discrimination” •Challenges to voting rights act

Page 14: A brief look at black/white race relations in the U.S. Brea Barthel 11/13/13.

Current issues & events

•Racial profiling: police targeting blacks for “stop & frisk”

•Racial differences in frequency of arrest, decision of guilt, length/type of sentences, decision of death penalty

•Trayvon Martin: killed by “vigilante” in Florida in 2012

•Obama: “If I had a son, he would look like Trayvon Martin.”

Page 15: A brief look at black/white race relations in the U.S. Brea Barthel 11/13/13.

Issue: Mass incarceration

13th amendment: "Neither slavery nor involuntary servitude, except as a punishment for crime whereof the party shall have been duly convicted, shall exist within the United States, or any place subject to their jurisdiction."

• High % of blacks in prison

• Forced labor• Mistreatment

Page 16: A brief look at black/white race relations in the U.S. Brea Barthel 11/13/13.

Poverty

Most poor people are not black, and most black people are not poorBUT •higher poverty rates

Blacks = 25.8% / Whites 11.6%Source: http://www.census.gov/prod/2013pubs/acsbr11-17.pdf

•Lower rates of home ownership•Much lower average total family wealth

Page 17: A brief look at black/white race relations in the U.S. Brea Barthel 11/13/13.

History affects today’s relations•Strong geographic separation in housing:

▫“White Flight” to suburbs in 1950s-1980s

▫“the chocolate [black] city and its vanilla suburbs”

•Rise of street gangs in “inner cities”

•Suspiciousness & tension on both sides

Page 18: A brief look at black/white race relations in the U.S. Brea Barthel 11/13/13.

Best times? No. Worst times? No.•Many organizations work to reduce racial

tension

•More acceptance of diversity in workplaces

•Improvement in media representation: blacks shown in positions of power more often