One thing we have touched on this semester in our
discussions on the post-Jim Crow South is whether or not the movements
themselves were successful in racially equalizing society. While the general
consensus is that the movements were not totally successful because of the
prevalent racism and continued disparity in opportunities offered to people of
color, the evidence of this failure is fairly subjective, as evidenced by the
interviews and accounts provided in Zandria Robinson’s book This Ain’t Chicago. Those accounts are
absolutely vital to understanding the shortcomings in the fight for racial
equality, but proponents of the effectiveness of the Civil Rights movement
could argue that these are isolated opinions taken specifically for the purpose
of that book. However, one piece of statistical evidence proving the continuation
of racial inequality is the segregation still very prevalent in large Southern
cities.
If you have ever been to the National Civil Rights
Museum downtown, you have probably seen the diagram of black and white
populations as they are distributed across Memphis. The interesting part about
this diagram is not the side displaying the pre-Civil Rights Movement era of segregation,
which shows a severe distinction between white areas of residence and black
areas of residence in the city. The surprising part is that the diagram of the
current racial distribution in Memphis is nearly identical to that of the Jim
Crow era of legal segregation. When looking at the shortcomings of the Civil
Rights Movement and Southern race relations in general, this comparison is
striking. There is often an illusion of progress, especially in the white
community, that veils any possibility of systematic racism or white privilege
to relieve white people of continued shame and guilt over the racial
discrimination that is still pervasive today.
Growing up in the Deep South, I was taught in school
to believe that the Civil Rights Movement relieved society of racism in
general. But on observing the differences between my middle-class suburb outside
Birmingham and the often poverty-stricken suburbs downtown that contained
mostly poor people of color, I formed a different view of what racism really
was and how it manifested itself in the current moment. That diagram of
discrimination and continued segregation represents white fear of being equal
and truly racially integrated with people of color, and a continued attempt to
morally justify racial inequality with removal from integrated settings. It is
incredibly difficult to comprehend solutions to systematic racism when it is
fundamentally ingrained in societal values.
Growing up in a predominantly white neighborhood and attending a mostly white elementary school and middle school, I was also raised to believe that the civil rights movement ended racism and discrimination. I was raised in a society blinded by white privilege. It is very evident that I am not the only one who was raised blind to my privilege. Continued segregation is caused by white fear as you say, but I also believe it stems partially from ignorance of privilege.
ReplyDeleteI also grew up in a suburb of Birmingham and can definitely relate to what you're describing. As I started to be able to explore the city once I started driving, the stark differences between what I thought was reality and what actually is reality was staggering and unavoidable. It wasn't until I started school at Rhodes that I realized that what I had noticed in Birmingham was a picture of how racism plays out in Birmingham, you're describing.
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