Representations of race and racism in the textbooks used in southern black schools during the American Civil War and Reconstruction era, 1861–1876 (Pre-published version)
Citation
Brosnan, A. (2016) Representations of race and racism in the textbooks used in southern black schools during the American Civil War and Reconstruction era, 1861–1876, Paedagogica Historica, 52(6), 718-733, available: https://doi.org/10.1080/00309230.2016.1223703.
Brosnan, A. (2016) Representations of race and racism in the textbooks used in southern black schools during the American Civil War and Reconstruction era, 1861–1876, Paedagogica Historica, 52(6), 718-733, available: https://doi.org/10.1080/00309230.2016.1223703.
Abstract
During the American Civil War and Reconstruction era, 1861–1876,
formerly enslaved men and women demanded access to education.
Aided by northern white missionaries, free blacks and some southern
whites, freed men and women throughout the American South built
schoolhouses, hired teachers and purchased textbooks. Some of these
textbooks were specifically created for the freed people, otherwise
known as freedmen’s texts or textbooks. Others were the same as those
that were typically used in antebellum northern common schools.
This article analyses the textbooks that were used in southern black
schools between 1861 and 1876. In particular, it investigates how black
people were portrayed in the textbooks and to what end. Ultimately,
this article finds that in both sets of textbooks, black people were
portrayed as racially inferior to whites. This, I argue, was principally
done to maintain white supremacy. Recognising that textbooks are
reflective of societal attitudes and values, such a portrayal suggests
that the white Americans of this period subscribed to the notion
that mankind was naturally divided into distinct racial groups and,
more significantly, that whites were the inherently superior race. It
also suggests that the powerful white Americans of this period were
committed to perpetuating the racial subordination of black people,
both before and after the Civil War period.
Keywords
TextbooksCivil War
Reconstruction
American South
Black education
Freedpeople