The White Man's Burden: Historical Origins of Racism in the United StatesAn abridgement of the acclaimed White Over Black, which won both the National Book Award and a Bancroft Prize. This study attempts to answer a simple question: What were the attitudes of white men toward Negroes during the first two centuries of European and African settlement in what became the United States of America? |
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Содержание
Initial English Confrontation with | 3 |
Defective Religion | 10 |
Libidinous Men | 18 |
Enslavement of Africans in America | 26 |
The Practices of Portingals and Spanyards | 33 |
Virginia and Maryland | 39 |
Scots Irish and Indians | 46 |
Freedom and Control in | 57 |
The Secularization of Equality | 120 |
The Imperatives of Economic Interest and National | 125 |
The Limitations of Antislavery | 134 |
Humanitarianism and Sentimentality | 141 |
The Contagion of Liberty | 149 |
The Resulting Pattern of Separation | 155 |
Self and Society | 165 |
The Issue of Intellect | 175 |
Free Negroes and Fears of Freedom | 64 |
Regional Styles in Racial Intermixture | 70 |
Negro Sexuality and Slave Insurrection | 79 |
The Negros Spiritual Nature | 87 |
Inclusion and Exclusion in the Protestant Churches | 93 |
The Negros Physical Nature | 99 |
Rational Science and Irrational Logic | 106 |
THE REVOLUTIONARY ERA 17551783 | 113 |
White Women and Black | 182 |
The Individual and His Society | 188 |
The Chain of Being and the Stamp of Color | 194 |
Erasing the Stamp of Color | 201 |
The Virginia Program | 207 |
Exodus | 217 |
Suggestions for Further Reading | 227 |
Часто встречающиеся слова и выражения
actually Africans American antislavery apes appearance attitudes beasts became become blacks called cause century Christian churches clear colonies colonists color common concept concerning condition continued conversion course culture described distinction early effect eighteenth century England English Englishmen enslaved equality especially Europeans evidence existence explained expression face fact fear feeling free Negroes freedom hand human idea important Indians individuals inferior interest islands Jefferson labor land later least less liberty living logic Maryland matter means merely mind natural necessity never once original perhaps persons political possessed possible practice probably problem Quakers question race racial reason religious remain remarks result seemed sense separate servants served settlers sexual slavery slaves social society South status suggests tended things thought tion trade treated turned Virginia West white men women wrote