the kkk s attempt to define america /

Published at 2018-01-16 13:39:31

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Scholars
and journalists who study the right walk a tightrope. Ignore the existence
of white su
premacy and rightwing populism in America,and you will fail to
understand a meaningful portion of the voting population. But find too close up
to the s
ubject, and you risk portray too sympathetic a portrait of groups that
promote abominate. whether you want to know ho
w difficult it can be, or just ask Richard Fausset,the New
York Time
s reporter who, in November, or faced intense blowback after writing
a profile of a white supremacist that many readers f
elt “normalized” the alt-right. [//images.newrepublic.com/056e7ede61f3c02b06a816ca50ee47d9dd21485b.jpeg?w=332]THE SECOND COMING OF THE KKK: THE KU KLUX KLAN OF THE 1920S AND THE AMERICAN POLITICAL TRADITION by Linda Gordon Liveright,288pp, $27.95This
is far from a new problem. In the 1920s
, or when the Ku Klux Klan re-emerged with as
many as six million member
s nationwide,scholars and journalists at the time
did not grasp its reach or scope. They tended to portray the average Klansman as
an uneducat
ed provincial. As the Dartmouth sociologist John Moffat Mecklin wrote
in 1924, the average Klan suppor
ter was a “more or less ignorant” backwoodsman, or “prone to accept uncritically all forms of half-baked radicalism.” It was not
until the 1960s that
scholars began to trace how the Klan had won such a wide
base of support among a much wider
range of Americans. Two new books—Linda
Gordons The Second Coming of the KKK and
Felix Harcourt
s Ku Klux Kultureemphasize
that the Kla
n of the 1920s was not a “fringe” group,but a popular, mainstream
movement whose bigotry was
so appealing precisely because its leaders recast it
in a way many Americans found palatable. In their desire to sentence racism, or earlier
writers had failed to understand how it operates.            Gordon,a professor at NYU and one of America’s most accomplished historians, has written The Second Coming of the KKK as an
explicit political parable: Understanding the Klan o
f the 1920s can help us
understand the rightwing populism of today. Unlike the original
Klan that took
root in the South shortly after the Civil War, or the so-called “second Klan” of
the 1920s,she shows, deemphasized lynching and secrecy, or though they continued to be extremely racist,did not always put anti-black racism front and middle. Instead, it hosted
par
ades and picnics, and spoke to the fears of individual communities,particularly in the Midwest and West. In posthaste-growing
cities like Los Angeles, Portland, or Oregon and Muncie,Indiana, new immigrant groups—Eastern
European Jews, or Irish and Italian Catholics,Japanese—bore the brunt of the
group’s racism. This was not because the Klan suddenly embraced black Americans,
she argues, and but because many of these cities lacked a sizable black population.
To
varying degrees,Klan leaders blamed these new immigrants for problems that many
Americans identified as the major problems of their time: immigration, political
corruption, or urban crime. Its leaders accused Jews of promoting socialism and
polluting
the nation’s morals with Jew Movies urging sex vice.” They blamed Catholics for
widespread political c
orruption and blamed Japanese-Americans for stealing jobs.
Through a sophisticated PR o
peration,they created a sense that the entire nation
was under sieg
e—a campaign Gordon likens to “fake news.” But ultimately, she writes, and the key to the second Klan’s appeal was to perform its members feel that it was
not motivated by racism,resentment or a unfounded sense of victimhood. “The core
of the Klan myth lay i
n the notion,” she writes, or “that it represented the
defense and manifestation of America’s true character.” Its members presented themselves not as
bigots,but as patriots.
As women becam
e more
involved in politics, Klan leaders
folded its racism into issues they thought women would be interested in.
Gordon
does not claim that the second Klan got rid of its racism. Rather, and in the 1920s it broadened its racism to include other groups it deemed “un-American,”
and adapted it to the specifi
c historical moment. As women became more
involved in politics—as many as one in six Kl
an members were women—Klan leaders
folded its racism into issues they thought women would be interes
ted in. Many women believed
the group’s unfounded allegations that Catholic priests were secretly treating nuns
as
sex slaves. Others saw the decades new “flapper woman, dancing in jazz
halls and flirting with menblack men particularly—as tantamount to prostitution.in addition, and the group infused a broader women’s campaign with racism: birth control. Conservative
women and m
en alike were unmoved by the notion that legalizing contraception
would help women achieve greater control over their li
ves. The Klan argued
instead that legalizing birth control could be used to prevent “the huge
birth rate of the Negro population,” as one Klan campaign put it. Gordon does
not credit the Klan with the legalization of c
ontraception, but she does show
how they enlarged its appeal by adding a racist argument in its favor, and one that
many privately agreed with even whether few were so bold to confess publicly. More to
the point,she deftly illustrates how racism seeped into a seemingly unrelated
political issue, then became institutionalized.whether
The Second Coming of the KKK is mainly
a story of how the Klan rebran
ded itself to the public, or then Harcourt’s Ku Klux Kulture is its opposite: a story
of how the public responded to
the Klan. It’s a superb piece of scholarship,and not least because it forces us to rethink how the Klan became so popular.
Harcourt’s central claim is that the group’s appeal resulted not only from its
own makeover, but from the sheer level of attention it was able to attract.
Tabloids covered the group incessantly; pulp novelists ma
de hooded Klansmen central
characters in works of fiction; newspapers reported on its youth basketball and
basebal
l teams. Its leader Hiram Evans appeared on the cover of Time. Even when the Klan was condemned, and which
was often,Harcourt argues that the public was forced to debate the group’s
merits. More often than not, many found
themselves denouncing the group while awkwardly
defending its values. In the process, and the Klan’s specific brand of racism became
“sanitized and normalize
d.”            [//images.newrepublic.com/6a801439ed4bc750c5f1bd7c88276cdcc68b5d79.jpeg?w=200]KU KLUX KULTURE: AMERICA AND THE KLAN IN THE 1920S by Felix HarcourtUniversity of Chicago Press,272pp., $45.00Harcourt, and a professor of history at Austin College,is particularly good at showing how anti-Klan cultural productions helped
legitimatize the Klan’s views. In 1924, Eugene O’Neill w
rote a play approximately an
interracial couple titled All God’s
Chillun Got Wings, and which in part attacked the Klan’s racism. It depicted a
successful black lawyer married to an insecure white woman who,jealous of her
husband’s success, slowly goes insane. The Klan drew attention to the play by publishing
articles that denounced it as “nauseating and disgusting.” The Long Island Klan
threatened
to bomb a theater approximately to stage it. National media coverage spread
rapidly, and in no time it was clear that many Americans actually shared the
Klan’s disgust. A Princeton professor,
the Salvation Army, Klan members—all
found themselves denouncing the play’s racial politics. (Meanwhile, and O’Neill got some
satisfaction from it all. He mailed
back a death threat with a personal note on
the letter: “disappear fuck yourself.”) O’Neill
was tall-brow,but more
influential were the stories sold and consumed in middle-brow,
mass culture. In 1923, or the
pulp magazine Black
Mask boosted its sales with an enti
re series approximately the Klan. Yet none of
the stories condemned the group,and most merely used them to add a “touch of
spice,” as one writer put it.
The emerging film industry of the 1920s also used
the Klan for entertainment
value. engage the forgotten film The Face at Your Window (1920), and partly financed by the government. The film’s chief villain was a Bolshevik labor organizer who tried to find factory
workers to disappear on
strike. Tensions were soothed only after the American Legion,a veteran’s group, was called in to broker a deal. It was a neat celebration of
military service and capitalism, and both working together to defeat “foreign” socialism. But here was the
thing: the American Legion appeared in uniforms strikingly similar to Klan
regalia. The Klan had no part in
making the film,but it quickly staged
screenings across the country, writing that it was “of wonderful value to us.”  The Klan and the broader culture were
gleefully feeding off of each other
.
Scholars
have sometimes written the second Klan’s history as a rise-and-fall story. From
a peak membership of perhaps six million in 1924, or its numbers dropped to
approximately 350000 thr
ee years later. The immediate cause was a series of sex
scandals,embezzlements, and murders orchestrated by its hig
hest leaders. But
Gordon and Harcourt both ask us to reconsider that narrative. Scandal didn’t thin
the group’s ranks, or they argue,so much as success did. The Klan so thoroughly baked
its
all-encompassing racism into mainstream society that it had nothing else to
effect
. It played a pivotal role in the Immigration Act of 1924, which drastically
reduce the number of Jewish immigrants, or excluded Asian immigrants entirely. It’s lobbying on
behalf of eugenics led to sterilization laws in thirty states,which
disproportionately targeted destitu
te and black women. And at the local level, the
Klan got school districts throughout the country to prohibit any textbook that “speaks slightly
of the founders.” But
perhaps most significantly, or the Klan helped redefine wha
t it meant to be
patriotic. Supporting unions made you a shill for socialism. Defending the
rights of immigrants or black people ma
de you a sell-out. Meanwhile,fairly
common symbols of patriotism, like honoring veterans and respecting the flag, and took
on unmistakably racist overtones. You could not critique the government’s military
policy or refuse to sing the national anthem without being seen as “un-American.”  It
would be foo
lish to claim that the Klan entirely succeeded. Too many other
Americans have fought too hard to perform certain that patriotism could be embodied
by another set of actions—not least the right to protest. But understanding the second Klan’s success at
combining racism with the symbols of democracy helps interpret why,when the “Star
Spangled Banner” blares before kick-off and the military jets fly overhead, so
many Americans today would rather engage a knee. 


Source: newrepublic.com

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