From The Marxist Archives -In Honor Of The 75th Anniversary Of The Founding Of The Leon Trotsky-Led Fourth International
Workers Vanguard No. 942
|
11 September 2009
|
|
TROTSKY
|
LENIN
|
Slavery and the Origin of the Race Ideology
(Quote of the Week)
Veteran American Trotskyist Richard Fraser developed the
materialist approach to the black question in the 1950s in a series of articles
and lectures for internal discussion in the then-revolutionary Socialist Workers
Party. The ideology of race is a socially derived category used to justify the
system of black chattel slavery in the American South, and black oppression
continued as a bedrock of American capitalism even after the Civil War smashed
the slavocracy. Fraser advanced the program of revolutionary integrationism: a
proletarian-centered struggle against every manifestation of racial oppression
based on the understanding that the complete integration and equality of black
people can be realized only in an egalitarian socialist society. This means not
liberal nostrums of reform, but proletarian socialist revolution to overthrow
the capitalist system and eliminate the basis of racial and class oppression.
The excerpts below are from an unpublished manuscript in the collection of the
Prometheus Research Library that Fraser was working on at the time of his death
in 1988.
Race is a social relationship between people recognizably different
in skin color. Recognizability is a necessary element of the relation, but the
social aspects of prejudice, exploitation and segregation are the things race is
really about. Race has no legitimacy as a biological division of mankind.
Race relations today are a residue of relations between white
masters and black slaves. The fact that slaves were black and masters were white
was an accident of history. Light skinned Europeans enslaved dark skinned
Africans. Europeans had learned about gunpowder from the Chinese and had guns.
The Africans didn’t. Skin color was a fact of life that differed between these
people. That difference had an ancient and interesting origin, but did not have
anything to do with the ability of Europeans to enslave Africans....
The basic change in race ideology that took place at the end of the
eighteenth century was to transform the slave who was socially inferior by
virtue of enslavement, and was incidentally black, into a person who was
inferior because he was black and hence only fitted for slavery….
Why, after three hundred years of slavery did a race theory finally
appear? Several things came together. The French Revolution did not just declare
that people had personal rights by nature, but that reason ought to hold sway
over blind faith. The Age of Reason had been born, and a scientific, and
secular, rationale was needed to justify the enslavement of people.
Furthermore, opposition to slavery was beginning to occur. Slave
revolts began to give slave masters cause for concern, not to speak of the
nascent abolitionist movement. The hypocrisy of the U.S. Constitution which was
based on the ideal of human liberty, but recognized the legitimacy of slavery,
could be counteracted by the contention that slaves were not quite human, but
some sort of inferior race. This was the social basis for the appearance of race
ideology as a scientific discipline.
—Richard Fraser, The Struggle Against Slavery in the United
States
*************
No comments:
Post a Comment