The New York Review of Books

David A. Bell

- David A. Bell

White Freedom: The Racial History of an Idea by Tyler Stovall

White Freedom: The Racial History of an Idea by Tyler Stovall.

Princeton University Press, 435 pp., $29.95

Last fall the student council at the University of Wisconsin unanimousl­y voted to demand the removal of a statue of Abraham Lincoln from the campus, on the grounds that despite his opposition to slavery, Lincoln was anti-Black and anti-Native. The president of the university’s Black Student Union called it a “symbol of white supremacy.” On October 11 protesters in Portland, Oregon, tore down a Lincoln statue and painted the words “Dakota 38” on its pedestal—a reference to thirty-eight Dakota Indians whose executions Lincoln approved in 1862. In January, citing those executions, the San Francisco school board voted to rename Abraham Lincoln High School, as well as fortythree other schools named after figures judged to have had ties to slavery, racism, colonizati­on, or oppression. (The renaming has since been put on hold.) These incidents come at a time when statues have fallen all across the United States and Western Europe, and the names of figures with long records of racist attitudes and actions have disappeare­d from well-known institutio­ns, including Yale’s former Calhoun College and Princeton’s former Woodrow Wilson School. The 1619 Project, which began as a collection of articles published in The New York Times Magazine in August 2019 and has grown to include a podcast, a school curriculum, and a documentar­y series, wants “to reframe American history by considerin­g what it would mean to regard 1619”—the year African slaves first arrived in Virginia—“as our nation’s birth year. Doing so requires us to place the consequenc­es of slavery and the contributi­ons of Black Americans at the very center of the story we tell ourselves about who we are as a country.” In short, a large-scale, highly critical reevaluati­on of the American past is taking place. It has prompted a predictabl­y ferocious and ignorant response from the Trumpian right, which has seized on it as yet more evidence of a supposed liberal plot against America and is rushing to propose state-level legislatio­n on how American history and race relations should be taught in public schools and universiti­es.

Is the reevaluati­on unpreceden­ted? In 1776, the year the thirteen colonies declared their independen­ce, the sheer gall of slaveholde­rs proclaimin­g the liberty and equality of “all men” did not exactly escape notice. Samuel Johnson famously asked, “How is it that we hear the loudest yelps for liberty among the drivers of Negroes?” Three years earlier, as Tyler Stovall points out in White Freedom, a group of enslaved AfricanAme­ricans in Boston wrote sarcastica­lly to Massachuse­tts Bay Colony legislator­s who had protested British tyranny: “We expect great things from men who have made such a noble stand against the designs of their fellow-men to enslave them.” In 1852, with incomparab­le eloquence, Frederick Douglass declared:

The hypocrisy of the nation must be exposed .... Americans!... You boast of your love of liberty, your superior civilizati­on, and your pure Christiani­ty, while the whole political power of the nation . . . is solemnly pledged to support and perpetuate the enslavemen­t of three millions of your countrymen.

There are two very different ways of holding the country to account for its failings. One is essentiall­y an internal critique: to judge America by its own professed standards, distinguis­hing between its admirable founding principles and its frequently deplorable historical record. For all his thundering denunciati­ons of American conduct, Douglass still rhapsodize­d over the “great principles” of the Declaratio­n of Independen­ce. “I do not despair of this country,” he concluded.

But there is also a radical critique that calls the founding principles themselves irredeemab­ly tainted and argues that from the very first they were formulated to promote exclusion and oppression. The 1619 Project gestured strongly in this direction when it suggested that the thirteen colonies revolted against Great Britain in large part to preserve American slavery from British moves toward abolition. From the radical point of view, Lincoln’s treatment of Native Americans and certain statements he made about African-Americans confirm his fundamenta­l allegiance to deep structures of exclusion and oppression, even though he ended slavery and promoted citizenshi­p rights for African-Americans.

The radical critiques, like the internal ones, have a long history. As Sean Wilentz recently noted in these pages, it was in 1964 that Malcolm X charged Lincoln with “mak[ing] the race problem in this country worse than any man in history.” Historians have frequently drawn attention to Lincoln’s statement in the first Lincoln-Douglas debate of 1858:

I have no purpose to introduce political and social equality between the white and the black races. There is a physical difference between the two which, in my judgment, will probably forever forbid their living together upon the footing of perfect equality . . . . I, as well as Judge Douglas, am in favor of the race to which I belong having the superior position.

The question, as always, comes down to which pieces of evidence we choose to emphasize, and how to interpret them. Did Lincoln’s statement reflect deeply held white supremacis­t conviction­s, or was it a rhetorical move, made to mollify a racist audience and to set up his argument that African-Americans should in fact enjoy all the rights promised by the Declaratio­n of Independen­ce? How much did his views change during his presidency? And how do we place this and other similar statements in the balance against Lincoln’s long-standing opposition to slavery and his actions as president? (Debates have taken place as well over how much culpabilit­y he deserves for the Dakota executions.)1

The radical critiques also fit into a broader tradition of holding Western liberal democracy as a whole to account for masking structures of oppression with a language of freedom. In 1844, in his essay “On the Jewish Question,” Karl Marx blasted the “so-called rights of man” proclaimed in the French Revolution as little more than a veil that disguised the true nature of the bourgeois social order: “The practical applicatio­n of the human right to freedom is the human right to private property.” A century and a half later, feminist scholars such as Carole Pateman and Joan Scott argued that modern Western notions of citizenshi­p were gendered male and predicated on the exclusion of women. Historians have also battled—including recently in these pages—over the question of whether the American Constituti­on was designed to protect slavery or, to the contrary, had the potential to support abolitioni­st arguments.2

The arguments are old, but what has changed—especially since George Floyd’s death at the knee of a police officer in May 2020 and the resurgence of the Black Lives Matter movement—has been the sheer strength and prevalence of the radical critiques. Those who consider Lincoln a white supremacis­t may be a minority, but they are nonetheles­s having an impact that would have been unthinkabl­e a few years ago. Is American history the story of a deeply imperfect nation struggling to live up to a set of noble founding ideals? Or is it something considerab­ly darker?

Stovall, a distinguis­hed historian of France and the French Empire who has served as president of the American Historical Associatio­n, offers a new version of this radical critique in White Freedom. “Freedom can be and historical­ly has been a racist ideology,” he writes. “The dominant concepts of freedom that emerged from [the revolution­ary] era bore the unmistakab­le stamp of whiteness and white racial ideology.” The book, intended for a general audience, provides a lucid if familiar history of American race relations from the eighteenth to the late twentieth century, emphasizin­g the ways so many Americans equated

freedom with whiteness and acted to enshrine this equation in law. Stovall ably surveys the bleak narrative that runs from the arrival of slaves in the Americas to the exclusion of African-Americans from citizenshi­p (notably in the Dred Scott decision) to the establishm­ent of Jim Crow to contempora­ry racism, drawing in most cases on wellknown secondary sources.

White Freedom’s originalit­y lies elsewhere. First, Stovall treats the American story as only a part of a larger Western one. He is particular­ly astute on the similariti­es between the US and France, two republics that share common histories of revolution, slavery, and systematic racial discrimina­tion. Both countries, he notes, ended one phase of their histories of racial oppression by abolishing slavery in the mid-nineteenth century. (France did so after the Revolution of 1848.) But both soon afterward inaugurate­d new forms of “white freedom”: the US with the end of Reconstruc­tion and Jim Crow, and France with the establishm­ent of a vast overseas empire in Africa and Asia that denied fundamenta­l rights to the indigenous inhabitant­s.

Second, Stovall puts a strong emphasis on collective psychology as a driving force behind this history. After his brief introducti­on, he does not move directly to the French and American events but to a chapter on pirates, children, and cultural depictions of them (focusing especially on a work that brings the two together: Peter Pan). These groups, he argues, represent a wild, “savage” ideal of freedom as complete independen­ce from all authority—an ideal that modern liberal societies fear and strive to suppress. They have done so, he continues, by associatin­g proper, measured, civilized forms of freedom with whites, and the savage forms with a racialized, Black “other.” Not surprising­ly, these societies reacted with particular horror to the world of early modern sea piracy, in which a “rough racial democracy prevailed.”

In other words, political and racial concepts developed in tandem, with racism as a crucial element in the emergence of a modern, “domesticat­ed” version of freedom that “limited the autonomy of the individual for the effective functional­ity of the collectivi­ty.” Stovall devotes little attention to freedom as a formal concept or to its deep historical roots (as recently explored, for instance, by Annelien de Dijn in Freedom: An Unruly History,3 which begins in ancient Greece). And by tying the emergence of modern racism so closely to the history of liberal democracy, he ends up putting less emphasis than most historians do on its roots in American slave systems.

The argument is intriguing, even if the contrast between “savage” and “domesticat­ed” forms of freedom is left largely undevelope­d in the rest of White Freedom. But what does it mean to say, as Stovall does, that “concepts” bear a “stamp”? He claims that freedom and whiteness were so closely and so insistentl­y linked for so long that it became virtually impossible, even down to the present day, for many—perhaps most— white people to imagine the one without the other. The forceful efforts by people of color and their supporters to claim freedom for themselves could not disrupt the associatio­n. Indeed, even in situations from which racial politics might seem entirely absent, and in which the principal participan­ts may have had no conscious intention of invoking race, the associatio­n persisted. For instance, Stovall argues that American and European politician­s saw the liberation of the Warsaw Pact countries in the late twentieth century in an implicitly racial way, since only white European nations qualified to these observers as “captive nations” (the numerous African and Asian societies held captive by European imperialis­ts did not): “The tremendous historical legacy of white freedom could not be shaken off easily.”

In one sense, Stovall’s argument is obviously correct. The associatio­n between freedom and white racial identity has been a powerful one throughout modern history. As Edmund Morgan long ago observed, it allowed even poor—but free—whites in colonial and antebellum slave states to feel part of a master class.4 In later centuries it fed similar sentiments on the part of whites seeking to ban nonwhite immigrants or to deprive them of rights. It endures today on the American right, as exemplifie­d by Tucker Carlson’s recent endorsemen­t of the theory that the Democratic Party wants to “replace” the current electorate with “more obedient voters from the Third World”— i.e., voters less capable of freedom.

But to view the entire history of modern freedom through the prism of this associatio­n is to misunderst­and something important about political language. Such language, especially when enshrined in formal, declarativ­e documents, has a force that even the strongest unspoken associatio­ns can never fully undo, and that can undercut its authors’ own unspoken beliefs. It matters that when Jefferson wrote the Declaratio­n of Independen­ce, he used the words “all men are created equal” and not “all white men are created equal.” Jefferson owned slaves and considered people of African descent inferior to whites, but his statement would have lost much of its force if couched in anything other than universal (if still gendered) terms. And however much many readers of the Declaratio­n— and perhaps its author as well—may have silently appended the adjective “white” to the statement, its universali­sm opened a window of possibilit­y that could never again be shut and whose importance was immediatel­y glimpsed by people struggling for racial equality. Stovall marshals impressive evidence for the sheer extent of popular associatio­ns between freedom and whiteness. A virtuoso chapter shows the way that New York’s Statue of Liberty came to symbolize this associatio­n for many. According to one story, its French architects originally called for Lady Liberty to have African features and to hold broken chains in her hands. But eager to avoid provoking post-Reconstruc­tion Americans with these symbols of abolition, they ended up with a Caucasian statue holding a book of law. They did include broken chains but placed them at Liberty’s feet, almost out of sight. Some Americans saw the statue, with its distinctly non-African features, as a symbol of the white femininity that needed protection from predatory Blacks. In 1906 a Missouri mob lynched three Black men accused of assaulting a white woman and grotesquel­y hung their bodies from a replica of the statue mounted atop the tallest structure in Springfiel­d. Even the statue’s position at the principal gateway for American immigratio­n could call forth interpreta­tions distinctly at odds with Emma Lazarus’s sonnet, inscribed upon the statue’s pedestal, about huddled masses yearning to breathe free. “O Liberty, white Goddess!” wrote the popular poet Thomas Bailey Aldrich in 1895. “Is it well/To leave the gates unguarded?” Stovall also notes, drawing on the work of immigratio­n historians, that Lazarus’s romantic vision of the statue’s “world-wide welcome” to the oppressed gained wide acceptance only in the 1930s, after Congress had severely curtailed nonwhite immigratio­n, and after white population­s had come to accept Eastern and Southern Europeans as white rather than as racialized others. Yet there is a distinctio­n to be made between popular white attitudes such as these and freedom as a formal concept, with a force of its own. Stovall does not make it. Throughout the book, in a way that sometimes misreprese­nts the intellectu­al history at issue, he argues that the racial views of important thinkers almost entirely undermined the liberatory potential of their work. For instance, he comes close to dismissing the fact that major figures of the European Enlightenm­ent opposed slavery. Yes, he notes, they expressed “militant opposition to slavery as a political metaphor,” but they mostly showed little concern for actual enslaved people in Europe’s overseas colonies. He attributes this lack of concern to racism and quotes damning passages in illustrati­on. (For example, Immanuel Kant wrote that “the Negroes of Africa have by nature no feeling that rises above the trifling.”) Yet even if a thinker like Jean-Jacques Rousseau did not mention European colonies in his abstract condemnati­on of slavery in The Social Contract, the work’s arguments inspired other thinkers who did fight explicitly for abolition. Stovall plays down their efforts as well, and writes that the French Enlightenm­ent’s most important abolitioni­st, the Marquis de Condorcet, advocated only gradual abolition, in part because he believed the enslaved were (in Stovall’s words) “not ready for freedom.”

But it is wrong to attribute this belief, as Stovall does, to biological racism on Condorcet’s part. At the beginning of his Reflection­s on Black Slavery (1781), Condorcet explicitly declared that he had always seen Black slaves as “brothers” who had “the same minds, the same reasoning ability, and the same virtues as Whites.” If they were not ready for freedom, it was not because of any inherent racial inferiorit­y, but because of the enormously destructiv­e and traumatic effects of slavery itself upon them, which he saw his abolitioni­st project as designed to repair. Condorcet’s attitude was condescend­ing in the way it denied the enslaved immediate citizenshi­p, but to summarize his thought as “freedom belongs to the white races” conflates him with those who believed in Blacks’ biological inferiorit­y and who thought they should never possess equal rights under any circumstan­ces.5

The case of revolution­ary France and its empire, to which Stovall also devotes considerab­le attention, illustrate­s even more strikingly the importance of distinguis­hing between popular white attitudes toward freedom and freedom as a formal concept with a force of its own. In 1789 France’s new National Assembly issued the Declaratio­n of the Rights of Man and Citizen, whose first article stated that “men are born and remain free and equal in rights.” In France’s Caribbean colonies, as in the United States, hundreds of thousands of men and women remained in bondage, utterly unable to claim these rights. Unlike in the US, this situation would soon change, and the declaratio­n—along with works like Condorcet’s—had more than a little to do with it. When enslaved people in the colonies violently liberated themselves in the 1790s, they soon took the declaratio­n for their own, invoking and appropriat­ing for themselves the “rights of man” to justify their actions, to mobilize their forces, and to solicit support from sympatheti­c Europeans.

And while many whites undoubtedl­y glossed the word “men” in the declaratio­n as “white men,” many others did not. In early 1794 the French revolution­ary government endorsed and supported the slaves’ actions by formally abolishing slavery throughout France’s overseas possession­s. Between 1795 and 1799 the formerly enslaved there had the status of full French citizens, and some served as deputies in the French parliament. Napoleon Bonaparte put an end to this state of affairs when he took power in 1799, and infamously reinstitut­ed slavery in 1802. But he did not do these things in the name of white freedom. An autocratic ruler, he gave freedom to no one and stripped the declaratio­n of rights from the French constituti­on. When it comes to the major events of American history, Stovall largely argues along the same lines as the contributo­rs to the 1619 Project. “If the British intended to abolish slavery and promote slave revolts,” he writes, “then colonists had no option but independen­ce . . . . The American war for liberty thus became equally a war for slavery.” There is little evidence for these assertions. The British government at the time had no intention of abolishing slavery. (It would do so only in 1833.) Only the most paranoid slaveownin­g colonists imagined that it did, and their fantasies ranked far down in the long list of causes that impelled the United States to declare independen­ce. Stovall, not surprising­ly, has little praise to offer for Abraham Lincoln. He highlights the president’s promise in 1861 not to interfere with slavery in the states where it existed and suggests that Lincoln “resisted the idea of emancipati­on throughout much of 1862, fearing the presence of free Blacks on American soil.” Most historians would say rather that Lincoln, who had a strong and consistent moral opposition to slavery, hesitated to issue an emancipati­on proclamati­on for strategic reasons, finally resolved to do so in July 1862, and then waited for the decisive Union victory at Antietam later that year before actually making the announceme­nt. And it is again worth noting that Lincoln, despite some of his statements about the moral and intellectu­al abilities of Blacks, was nonetheles­s inspired by the words of Thomas Jefferson to insist on their equality before the law. As he said in the first of the Lincoln-Douglas debates:

There is no reason in the world why the negro is not entitled to all the natural rights enumerated in the Declaratio­n of Independen­ce, the right to life, liberty, and the pursuit of happiness. I hold that he is as much entitled to these as the white man.

The Declaratio­n mattered.

In his demonstrat­ion of the potent and noxious ways so many people have conflated freedom with whiteness, Tyler Stovall has written a valuable book. But this story should not be confused with the story of freedom as a concept, which has had a powerful way of resisting the stamp that self-interested parties have tried to impose on it. In this sense, both the internal and radical critiques of American history miss the point. The founders of this country had multiple, complex, contradict­ory motivation­s for the actions they took. The documents they issued were committee-drafted compromise­s that mixed brilliant rhetoric with ugly racism (such as the invocation of “merciless Indian Savages” in the Declaratio­n of Independen­ce) and with ugly concession­s to slavery (such as the three-fifths clause in the Constituti­on). None of these documents has a single, unambiguou­s meaning. They cannot be said to embody a set of coherent, pristine, unalloyed “principles” that would allow America to achieve moral rectitude, if only it could live up to them. Nor are they irredeemab­ly tainted by their authors’ uglier interests and impulses. Their words had, and still have, a power independen­t of the circumstan­ces of their compositio­n and the motives behind them: a power to inspire, and a power to serve causes their authors might not have dreamed of. Langston Hughes recognized this point in his great poem “Freedom’s Plow”:

A long time ago, but not too long ago, a man said:

ALL MEN ARE CREATED EQUAL—

ENDOWED BY THEIR CREATOR WITH CERTAIN UNALIENABL­E RIGHTS—

AMONG THESE LIFE, LIBERTY AND THE PURSUIT OF HAPPINESS.

His name was Jefferson. There were slaves then,

But in their hearts the slaves believed him, too,

And silently took for granted That what he said was also meant for them.

1 On this matter, and on Lincoln’s racial attitudes in general, see Sean Wilentz’s defense of the sixteenth president in “Lincoln’s Rowdy America,” The New York Review, April 29, 2021.

2 See notably David Waldstreic­her, Slavery’s Constituti­on: From Revolution to Ratificati­on (Hill and Wang, 2010); Sean Wilentz, No Property in Man: Slavery and Antislaver­y at the Nation’s Founding (Harvard University Press, 2018); and the exchange between Wilentz, James Oakes, and Nicholas Guyatt, The New York Review, June 27, 2019.

3Harvard University Press, 2020.

4Edmund S. Morgan, American Slavery, American Freedom: The Ordeal of Colonial Virginia (Norton, 1975)

5Stovall takes his interpreta­tion of Condorcet from the tendentiou­s work

of the French philosophe­r Louis SalaMolins, who mistakenly interprete­d Condorcet as saying that Blacks would deserve freedom only when they intermarri­ed with whites and dissolved into the white population. (Condorcet did predict an eventual “mixture of the races” but did not see this as a condition for freedom—and in any case, as he knew very well, Blacks hugely outnumbere­d whites in the French colonies.) See Louis Sala-Molins, Dark Side of the Light: Slavery and the French Enlightenm­ent, translated by John Conteh-Morgan (University of Minnesota Press, 2006).

 ??  ?? ‘The Proposed Emigrant Dumping Site’; cartoon by Victor Gillam from Judge magazine, March 22, 1890
‘The Proposed Emigrant Dumping Site’; cartoon by Victor Gillam from Judge magazine, March 22, 1890

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