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100 | Elham Manea www.jrfm.eu 2016, 2/1, 91–110
concepts of rights and justice. Women’s rights have been violated with impunity on
these very grounds.
Let me explain. Culture does change. Consider the fact that between 1877 and the
mid-1960s, the Jim Crow caste system was quite acceptable in the South in the United
States. The system treated blacks as a degenerate caste and second-class citizens;
it excluded them from public transport and public facilities, from serving on juries
and from entering certain jobs and neighbourhoods. And it severely regulated social
interactions between the races. During that period it was quite normal to have sepa-
rate hospitals, prisons, schools, churches, cemeteries, and public accommodations
for blacks and whites. These laws and policies were sustained by a whole range of
religious, educational, and “scientific” discourses. A mainstream Christian interpre-
tation at the time taught that “whites were the Chosen people, blacks were cursed
to be servants, and God supported racial segregation”.29 At every educational level,
scientists (craniologists, eugenicists, phrenologists and social Darwinists) bolstered
the belief that blacks were innately inferior to whites, intellectually and culturally. The
media did their share by routinely referring to blacks as “niggers, coons, and darkies”,
and by reinforcing “anti-black stereotypes”.30 At the time both blacks and whites
were governed by cultural norms on how they should interact. For instance, a black
male could not offer his hand to a white male, as such a gesture implied social equal-
ity. Under no circumstance was a black male to offer to light the cigarette of a white
woman, an act that implied an intimacy that might be punished by lynching.31
Fifty years ago, that culture of racial discrimination was acceptable in parts of
the United States. Many white people considered the Jim Crow caste system to be,
in Taylor’s words, “who we are, where we are coming from”; as such, it was “the
background against which our tastes and desires and opinions and aspirations make
sense”.32 When others began to demand changes in these laws – and thus in this ele-
ment of the way of life in the South – white people perceived these demands as tanta-
mount to imposing an “imitation of anyone else’s life” and corrupting a “certain way
of being human that is my way”.33
I know I am being provocative here. But if we are to take Taylor’s argument about
authenticity, identity, and culture at face value, white people in the Southern states
were, and perhaps still are, born racist. That was the “way they are”. Racism and a
belief in their superiority over blacks was “inherent in the way they give meaning
to their lives” and as such we should cherish their “distinctness, not just now but
forever”. After all, “that was their culture”.34 Does this mean we should aspire to
29 Pilgrim 2014.
30 Pilgrim 2014.
31 Pilgrim 2014.
32 Taylor 1994, 30.
33 Taylor 1994, 30.
34 Taylor 1994, 30.
JRFM
Journal Religion Film Media, Band 02/01
- Titel
- JRFM
- Untertitel
- Journal Religion Film Media
- Band
- 02/01
- Autoren
- Christian Wessely
- Daria Pezzoli-Olgiati
- Herausgeber
- Uni-Graz
- Verlag
- SchĂĽren Verlag GmbH
- Ort
- Graz
- Datum
- 2016
- Sprache
- englisch
- Lizenz
- CC BY-NC 4.0
- Abmessungen
- 14.8 x 21.0 cm
- Seiten
- 132
- Kategorien
- Zeitschriften JRFM