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EPISODE 2:

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It's true that race has always been with us, right? Wrong. Ancient
peoples stigmatized "others" on the grounds of language, custom,
class, and especially religion, but they did not sort people according
to physical differences. It turns out that the concept of race
is a recent invention, only a few hundred years old, and the history
and evolution of the idea are deeply tied to the development of
the U.S.
"The Story We Tell" traces the origins of the racial idea
to the European conquest of the New World and to the American
slave system - the first ever where all the slaves shared similar
physical traits and a common ancestry. Historian James Horton
points out that the enslavement of Africans was opportunistic,
not based on beliefs about inferiority: "[Our forebears] found
what they considered an endless labor supply. People who could
be readily identified and so when they ran away they couldn't
melt into the population like Native Americans could. People who
knew how to grow tobacco, people who knew how to grow rice. They
found the ideal, from their standpoint, the ideal labor source."
Ironically, it was not slavery but freedom - the revolutionary
new idea of liberty and the natural rights of man - that led to
an ideology of white supremacy. Historian Robin D.G. Kelley points
out the conundrum that faced our founders: "The problem that they
had to figure out is how can we promote liberty, freedom, democracy
on the one hand, and a system of slavery and exploitation of people
who are non-white on the other?" Horton illuminates the story
that helped reconcile that contradiction: "And the way you do
that is to say, 'Yeah, but you know there is something different
about these people. This whole business of inalienable rights,
that's fine, but it only applies to certain people.'" It was not
a coincidence that the apostle of freedom himself, Thomas Jefferson,
also a slaveholder, was the first American public figure to articulate
a theory speculating upon the "natural" inferiority of Africans.
Similar logic rationalized the taking of American Indian lands.
When the "civilized" Cherokee were forcibly removed from their
homes in Georgia to west of the Mississippi, one in four died
along the way, in what became known as The Trail of Tears. President
Andrew Jackson defended Indian removal: it was not the greed of
white settlers that drove the policy, but the inevitable fate
of an inferior people established "in the midst of a superior
race."
By the mid-19th century, race had become the accepted, "common-sense"
wisdom of white America, explaining everything from individual
behavior to the fate of human societies. The idea found fruition
in racial science, Manifest Destiny, and our imperial adventures
abroad. In the new monthly magazines of the late 19th century
and at the remarkable indigenous people displays at the 1904 World's
Fair celebrating the centennial of Jefferson's Louisiana Purchase,
we see how American popular culture reinforced and fueled racial
explanations for American progress and power, imprinting ideas
of racial difference and white superiority deeply into our minds.
"The Story We Tell" is an eye-opening tale of how deep
social inequalities came to be rationalized as natural - deflecting
attention from the social practices and public policies that benefited
whites at the expense of others.
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