Kaitlan Ott
Professor Lewis-McCoy
BLST 10100
3rd October 20116
The Haves and Have Nots
Race is the consequence of economic situations.
Attitude about race has evolved over the years to become the dividing element
it is today.
In
1609, English gentlemen established the colony of Virginia. Being an English gentleman the individual was
not accustomed to labor and held a higher social position. The colony of Virginia was dying. Gentlemen were
unaware of the type and amount of work to make the colony successful. The solution to the problem was producing a
group for manual labor.
The
first Africans arrived in Virginia about 1619. The work force of early America
did not discriminate. Color was not the
issue to separate. Rather the dividing
factor was money and class. Africans
along with white laborers were lumped together, slave and indentured servant. An
indentured servant was a contracted worker for a specified time, usually five
to seven years. At the end of the
contract, the servant could receive things ranging from land to money. Slaves
and indentured servants worked side by side, socialized together, sometimes married. Africans and whites even fought on the same
side against enemies. Bacon’s Rebellion
showed the English ruling class that a merging of the two separate groups would
not be in the best interest of the owners’ of plantations. Especially in the South, where there were few
legal limits on slaves. Initially “children
of slaves did not inherit the bondage of their parents. The early days of
slavery, a slave could earn enough money to buy his contract, own land and to
marry.” The attitude of the owner was
the same for the African and the European indentured servant. “Contracted
servants were treated as chattel.
Employers made decisions for their workers… [the] useless weight [upon] the welfare of the community.” Gains made by the African slaves were similar
to white indentured servant. Some
African slaves acquired freedom, others testified in court against white people
and Africans owned slaves. Color did not separate individuals who worked
from sun up to sun down doing the same jobs for the same oppressive master.(Anderson,
Patrick D. (2012) Supporting Caste: The Origins of Racism Colonial
Virginia,Volume 2 )
The
change in the situation and the idea of race came later in America. The idea of the ruling class was to divide
and conquer. As Willie Lynch stated,
“take these differences and make them bigger…use fear, distrust and envy for
control purposes”. In order to keep the
upper hand, more restrictions against the African became law. New ideas took place in the minds of the indentured
workers of being better. The African raised the social status of the white
indentured servant. The seedsof division
were set and race as a negative idea was born.
It is evident
that the idea of race as a negative factor developed more out of economic
necessity than anything else. Race is a
concept that camouflages real problems that needs addressing.
Your name is at the top of the page and you have and interesting title that goes very well, supporting your argument. You have outside information however a work cited is missing. There is one working image that supports the beginning of the blog, when you compare this to modern day.
ReplyDeleteThere are no in text links.
I feel that this was a very good blog, there are some technical improvements that are needed. There are a lot of good supporting details and you are on the right track.
I think this is an great start. There are some issues in regards to grammar, and sentence structure. You're missing a work cited portion, and your first image is not appearing on the page. Also, I don't think that we're allowed to cite the willie lynch letter since it's been proven false, however, in UTS there are a few "master narratives" that would go to good use here. You're also missing the two in-text links to supporting articles or online resources. You're also missing a personal "reflection on why the idea of race persists and its relevance to contemporary social relations." and you didn't "consider who has benefited and who presently benefits from dividing people into racial groups."
ReplyDeleteAgain the structure is there, but you're missing some requirements. Try not to summarize too much and that should give you more space to reflect. Good Start!
This is a good introduction of looking at how racism came to be from an economical viewpoint. Although you provide a linear theme to your piece you can work in even smoother transactions between the shifts in viewpoints. You provided a working image, but you lack in text citations, a work cited page and links.
ReplyDeleteWell structured post, just work on putting ideas and sentences smoothly together as well as your personal voice to portray your message.