Thursday, August 06, 2020

Recalibrating Race: What the Data Say

Nothing But A Man

Many institutions, from various walks of American life — e.g., sports organizations, businesses, universities, cities, states, churches, associations — have been doing things recently to discuss some racist ideas and symbols that sustain racism against African Americans.
Last weekend the Lyric Theatre in Blacksburg, VA, in collaboration with the Montgomery County Dialogue on Race, presented the classic film from 1964, Nothing But a Man, followed on Sunday by a discussion with Q & A by my colleague Dr. Biko Agozino and myself.
They advertised the film with my words that this “is the best film ever done on African American life.” Seeing this movie again did nothing to change my mind.
Let’s look at the making of the film. This racially sensitive film was made by Michael Roemer (co-producer and director) and his classmate from the Harvard class of 1949, Robert Young (co-producer and cinematographer).
They did this film independently, outside of the studio system which ruled things at that time. The story with a mostly black cast was about the realities of racism and black life in the segregated South.
The film is also memorable for its cast, most of whom were neophyte black actors just beginning their rise to stardom. For example, Julius W. Harris, a male nurse and onetime bouncer, had never acted before but went on to make more than 70 films.
Ivan Dixon and Abbey Lincoln starred in
Nothing But a Man [1964]
The lead role was played by Ivan Dixon, best remembered today for his later role in television’s long “re”-running television series Hogan’s Heroes; however, he acted in many films. His co-star was Abbey Lincoln, whose only previous film appearance had been as herself in The Girl Can’t Help It. And she went on to a great movie and jazz-singing career.
The movie also featured a very young Yaphet Kotto in only his second film. Gloria Foster was early in her career, and this was probably the first film even for Moses Gunn and Esther Rolle, each of whom went on to make many movies.
The movie very low budget, made on a budget of $250,000. Everyone —cast and crew alike — was paid $100 a week during filming.
Nothing But a Man stood at the margins of cultural production in the United States in the mid-1960s. It was not in keeping with familiar black good-time film genres, especially minstrelsy and musicals. 
It did not provide a sympathetic white character as a point of identification for white audiences.
It did not presume the goal of assimilation into white society. Instead, the movie illustrated obstacles to and the possibilities for mobilizing black opposition to white supremacy.
It is useful to consider the context of the making of the film. It was filmed in 1963, in the middle of the Civil Rights Movement. The time of Birmingham, with Bull Connors and his dogs and firehoses. That was the year of the assassination of Medgar Evers, the March on Washington, and the bombing of the church in Birmingham, killing four little girls.

Segregation should be considered 
a code word for terror.

They released the film in 1964, the same year that Sidney Poitier received the Academy Award for his role in Lilies of the Field, a tribute that so insulted me that I have not watched an Academy Awards show since.
The unbelievable story of Lilies of the Field was simply that this ordinary black guy, who was not a Catholic, stopped in the desert and helped a group of nuns build a chapel for no pay for a broke guy — the ultimate “black person helping whites” movie theme that made Poitier rich from his movies in the 1960s.
Both films were reactions to the civil rights movement, with one, Nothing but a Man, addressing the realities of racism, and the other, Lilies of The Field, suggesting to African Americans they can get rewarded if they play nice, don’t demonstrate, and help white folks.
Nothing But a Man shows what life was like for black Americans during racial apartheid in America during the mid-twentieth century. It shows that segregation was a lot more than separate water fountains, or separate schools, or sitting in the back of the bus. It was racial oppression: always fearing for your job and your ability to feed your family, avoiding a white mob, laughing when nothing is funny, and scratching when nothing is itching.
Segregation should be considered a code word for terror, something well dealt with in this movie.

• • •• • •
Wornie Reed is Professor of Sociology and Africana Studies and Director of the Race and Social Policy Research Center at Virginia Tech University. Previously he developed and directed the Urban Child Research Center in the Maxine Goodman Levin College of Urban Affairs at Cleveland State University (1991-2001), where he was also Professor of Sociology and Urban Studies (1991-2004). He was Adjunct Professor at the Case Western Reserve University School of Medicine (2003-4). Professor Reed served a three-year term (1990-92) as President of the National Congress of Black Faculty, and he is past president of the national Association of Black Sociologists (2000-01).
This column first appeared online at What the Data Say and is shared here by permission.

Wednesday, August 05, 2020

CPT | Racial Recalibration seems more like it

Cuyahoga Politics Today

A Day of Learning

By R.T. Andrews

There is so much happening of grisly consequence these days, starting with the health, economic and civic ramifications of the COVID-19 pandemic and the responses thereto by so many of our leaders, ranging from disappointing [DeWine] to it-is-what-it-is [Jackson] to absolutely horrendous [Trump].

Throw in what has quickly shaped up to the largest public corruption scheme in Ohio history, involving yet another Speaker of the Ohio House and the everyday mayhem of life in these United States, and we are seriously looking for some silver linings.

Thanks to an eagle-eyed friend from our college days, who has the same eclectic info-harvesting gene that energized the legendary Icabod Flewellen, we can share some sense of possibility that may exist in this moment of racial recalibration.

We say recalibration, although we know the term-du-jour is racial reckoning, which seems to us to be a bit more conclusive than the moment warrants. The issue of race is top-of-mind for millions of Americans these days in ways that it has not been since perhaps the 1960s. Of course, most of those new millions are white, because as they are discovering, America was founded, structured, and continues to operate on a basis of white supremacy that centralizes race in the mental operating system of virtually every person of color in the country.

But humans are fascinating creatures, and we all have the possibility of learning and self-improvement when sufficiently motivated by a desire to engage in the hard work of change.

That’s when programs like the following can provide us with insights and learning that the following programs are offering us today, via the continuing magic of the internet and the consequences of a COVID quarantine.

Leading off at 3p today is a webinar on “The Hidden Rules of Race”, a discussion about wealth inequality and why reparations are a critical tool and powerful tool to address it. The program is a presentation of The Roosevelt Institute and features RI’s president and CEO, Felicia Wong, Community of Change president Dorian Warren, and William A. Darity, the Samuel DuBois Cook Distinguished Professor of Public Policy at Duke University. Register and join via Zoom.

At 4PM comes a program from Harvard University’s Hutchins Center for African and American Research, “America’s Racial Reckoning: The Pandemic[s] and the Election”, hosted by Henry Louis Gates and moderated by Charlayne Hunter-Gault. Their assembled panel includes Charles Blow, Donna Brazile, David Brooks, Shermichael Singleton, Neera Tanden and Lawrence A. Bobo. This event will be streamed live at www.pbs.org/newshour and www.youtube.com/hutchinscenter.

Arthur Schomburg
If there is a can’t miss discussion today, it may very well emanate from New York Library’s Schomburg Center [the likely inspiration for Flewellen’s dream project], named for the famous Afro-American bibliophile Arthur (originally Arturo) Alfonso Schomburg (1874-1938) of Puerto Rican and German descent.
That is where noted author Isabel Wilkerson will discuss her acclaimed new book, Caste, The Origins of Our Discontents, officially published just yesterday. I read her essay last month on the topic and was blown away by its power and language, so I was not surprised to see a New York Times critic rave over the book — “about how brutal misperceptions about race have disfigured the American experiment” — in a review headlining it as "an ‘instant American classic’ about our abiding sin".
If it’s not too late, you may be able to register for tonight’s 8PM free program here.

Zack Reed
Closer to home, and actually first on the clock for today, former Cleveland city councilman and 2017 mayoral runner Zack Reed up will be the featured guest at the City Club of Cleveland. It’s no secret that Reed, currently a statewide minority affairs coordinator under Ohio Secretary of State Frank LaRose, plans to run again for mayor next year. His appearance is one of an unspoken series of appearances by 2021 hopefuls being hosted by the City Club. Tune in here at noon to hear Reed’s views on issues including police reform, safety, gun violence, and affordable housing.

• • •• • •
We report with sadness the passing of Dr. Shirley S. Seaton on July 29. A memorial service will be held next year. Her obituary will be posted here later this week.
• • •• • •