|
|
|
Book Review
Martha Hodes, White Women, Black Men: Illicit Sex in the Nineteenth-Century
South, New Haven: Yale University Press, 1997. Pp. 363. $32.50, cloth;
$16.95, paper (ISBN 0-300-06970-7; 0-300-07750-5).
|
In the summer of 1681, well-to-do white neighbors
of Major William Boarman gathered at his Maryland plantation for
the wedding of his servant "Irish Nell" Butler and the slave known
only as Charles. Although Lord Baltimore, Nell's former master,
had urged her not to make slaves of her children by pursuing this
union, the ceremony was performed by a local Catholic priest and
attended by well-wishers, and Nell and Charles became accepted in
the community as "man and wife" (20). Two hundred years later, Peter
Stamps, a married black man in his forties in Georgia's upper piedmont,
was lynched for his relationship with his employer's daughter, Ida
Abercrombie, a thirteen-year-old girl who confessed to her mother
that she was carrying his child. Although her parents did not bring
rape charges, perhaps because they realized that the relationship
was consensual, a mob of hundreds hanged Stamps "from a bridge railing
in the center of town" (180). |
1
|
|
These two stories frame Martha
Hodes's fascinating study of sexual relationships between white
women and black men in the South, bringing into relief her central
argument that such relationships were once tolerated by white Southerners
and only in the late nineteenth century did they become the target
of virulent, violent community reprisals. The primary sources for
the many stories she tells are legal records, both trial testimony
from colonial and antebellum courts, and appellate reports. For
the post-Civil War period, she draws extensively on the records
of the American Freedmen's Inquiry Commission, as well as newspapers,
anti-lynching pamphlets, and other published sources. Hodes makes
excellent use of these legal sources to illuminate the social history
of the communities she studies as well as cultural constructions
of race; she is not, however, particularly concerned with them as
legal sources and does not explore the intersections of race, sexuality,
and culture with law. Legal historians will find much that is relevant
and interesting about this study, but may wish that she had paid
more attention to the legal aspects of her sources and the implications
of her findings for legal history. |
2
|
|
The book is organized
into two sections, the first on the antebellum South and the second
on the post-Civil War South. Within the first section, each of four
chapters ("Marriage," "Bastardy," "Adultery," "Color") revolves
around the story of one relationship told in detail, supplemented
with evidence from other, similar stories. Hodes makes no claims
about change over time in the antebellum period, in part because
her sources are too spotty before 1830, but rather suggests that
both the colonial and antebellum periods, through at least 1850,
were marked by "toleration" of sex between white women and black
men. She carefully and helpfully distinguishes toleration,
"a measure of forbearance for that which is not approved," from
tolerance, which "implies a liberal spirit toward those of
a different mind" (3). It is in the 1850s that Hodes sees the beginning
of white hysteria over these relationships; yet even in the cases
she retells from the 1850s, she finds relative community acceptance
when compared with the post-Civil War years. Overall, her stories
are fascinating, her distinctions careful, and her argument persuasive.
However, like many cultural histories, this study is subject to
the critique that the evidence does not support such a strong statement
of her argument. Although she highlights stories of toleration from
the antebellum period, she acknowledges that there were also examples
of antebellum lynchings; likewise, even by her own reckoning, there
were postwar cases of black men's acquittal for rape and cases in
which marginal couples survived without reprisal. This reviewer
did not come away convinced that the contrast between the antebellum
and postbellum was so, well, black and white. |
3
|
|
The most problematic aspect
of her argument is Hodes's characterization of the antebellum South.
She is careful to say that whites did not approve of interracial
sex, that relationships between black men and white women were always
transgressive, but nevertheless, she argues that they did not incite
the kind of alarm that would be roused after slavery's end. Here
she directly challenges a number of antebellum historians, including
myself, who have found conflict, anxiety, and alarm over interracial
sex, especially as the Civil War approached. (See, for example,
Winthrop Jordan, White Over Black: American Attitudes toward
the Negro, 1580-1812 [1968]; Peter Bardaglio, "Rape and the
Law in the Old South: 'Calculated to Excite Indignation in Every
Heart,'" Journal of Southern History 60 [November 1994]:
749-72; and Ariela J. Gross, "Litigating Whiteness: Trials of Racial
Determination in the Nineteenth-Century South," Yale Law Journal
108 [1998]: 109-80.) Furthermore, what she interprets as a change
in attitudes from early to late nineteenth century could be attributed
to the change in legal regime. That is, white alarm about interracial
sex was handled through one coercive, violent regime, slavery, in
one period, and another coercive, violent regime, lynching, in another.
More attention to law would illuminate this better. |
4
|
|
Hodes deals
most directly with the law in her chapter on "Color." She explores
two inheritance cases, Bryan v. Walton and Franklin v.
Hugly, in which Georgia courts sought to determine the racial
identity of the offspring of an apparently interracial union. She
uses both of these cases to point out the extreme, but apparently
peaceful, disagreement among the neighbor-witnesses who testified
in court about the racial identity of the individuals at issue and
the absence of expressed horror or violent reaction in either case
to an alleged illicit relationship between a white woman and a black
man. She does not discuss, however, the significance or the consequences
of these cases being adjudicated. |
5
|
|
The book is strongest in its
reinterpretation of Reconstruction politics and the lynching era
by showing the "sexualization" of politicsthe connections
between the "rape myth" and gendered aspects of lynching and the
political landscape of the post-Civil War South. Hodes's rendering
of the prehistory of lynching reminds us of the contingency of the
historical moment and puts the flesh-and-blood people back into
a subject that has been heavily sociologized. |
6
|
|
White Women,
Black Men is an important, insightful, and beautifully written
contribution to the literatures on Reconstruction and the lynching
era, the historical construction of racial categories, and the history
of sexuality. It is an excellent example of a social and cultural
history that uses legal sources but is in no way a legal history. |
7
|
|
|
Ariela Gross
|
|
University of Southern California
|
|
Content in the History Cooperative database is intended for
personal, noncommercial use only. You may not reproduce,
publish, distribute, transmit, participate in the transfer or
sale of, modify, create derivative works from, display, or in any
way exploit the History Cooperative database in whole or in part
without the written permission of the copyright holder.
|