PANEL: Policing Whiteness: Intersections
of Race and Sexuality in Legal History
Friday, October 23, 1:30-3:00
Chair: Ariela J. Gross, University
of Southern California School of Law
Race, Law and Time: Writing Legal
History from a Local Perspective
Walter Johnson, Department of History, New York University
This is a paper about race, law, and time.
It begins from the idea that many historians have taken legal history as
the best way into the messy question of racial definition at any given
moment. This is especially true of scholars who have participated in the
discussion of the origins of racial thinking in seventeenth-century
Virginian (most notably Edmund Morgan and most recently Kathleen Brown and
Thomas Morris) but also true of many who have worked on racial definition
in the nineteenth century (Ira Berlin, Martha Hodes, Morris again, Ariela
Gross, myself). The paper does not dispute the idea that courtrooms and
congresses were important arenas in which racial ideologies were
articulated and promulgated. It does, however, dispute the idea that legal
decisions (particularly those made by courts of appeals) can be used to
index popular ideas about race. The broad historical changes that can be
traced through comparing judges' decisions - the effort to effect a more
perfect congruence between blackness and slavery in the 1850s by
curtailing manumission and, in many states, attempting to enslave free
people of color, for example - obscure a continual ferment that was
evident in the (local) courts from which racial determination suits
originated.
Centering on an 1857 Louisiana case
(Morrison v. White, No. 442, 16 La. Ann. 100 (1861)) in which a woman
escaped from a slave trader and sued him on the basis that she was white,
the paper will contrast the legal effects of cases of racial determination
to their local effects. While the Supreme Court decisions (there were
three) in Morrison v. White fall in with the broad legal trend
which sought a greater congruence between the categories of race and
slavery, the local effects of the case were quite the opposite; the
notions of race which were broached in the courtroom were so various and
so contradictory that no one could argue that the case contributed to any
clarification of the legal definition of race; the slave trader who was
being sued was at one point mobbed by an angry mob of whites who supported
his slave's claim to whiteness; and the juries in the local courthouse
continually decided the case in a way that ran against prevailing legal
notions of how such cases should be decided. In short, the local history
of Morrison v. White stands in direct contradiction to its legal
history; the relations of race and law over time - the legal history of
race - had a different shape depending upon whether you were sitting in a
courtroom in Jefferson Parish or a Supreme Court chamber only a few miles
away in New Orleans.
Configuring the National Body through
Antimiscegenation Law, Lynch Law, and Immigration Restriction
Robert S. Chang, Loyola Law School, Los Angeles
This paper examines multiracialism in light
of the ways in which anti-miscegenation law, lynch law, and immigration
restriction have worked separately and in tandem to police the national
body, or "We the People."
Multiracialism is not a new phenomenon.
Interracial heterosexual sex and marriage, which can produce multiracial
persons, has been policed and monitored legally and extra-legally.
Racial-sexual policing took place legally through anti-miscegenation laws
and extra-legally through lynch law. Immigration restrictions were urged
to prevent the threat that certain alien bodies posed to the purity of
white womanhood. The success and failure of these measures could be
monitored, in part, through the U.S. Census which counted certain
multiracial persons at various times, with 1920 as the last year that
"mulattoes" existed as a category. Soon, multiracial persons may be
counted again by the Census. Is this an acknowledgment of the ultimate
failure of anti-miscegenation laws and racist immigration restrictions to
maintain the racial composition/purity of the national body? How does
multiracialism figure in the debate over color-blindness and
race-consciousness?
This paper examines these questions by
comparing the present to the early part of this century when it was
undergoing what might be termed a national identity crisis precipitated by
changing demographics. During this period, national identity became
reconceptualized in terms of familial relations. Racial-sexual policing
and immigration restriction were about policing the family that is
America, and both played prominent roles in helping America negotiate its
identity crisis during this period. Understanding this earlier identity
crisis provides a context for understanding our current national identity
crisis. Although anti-miscegenation laws are no longer valid, their
residue remains. In 1986, 99% of White Americans were married to White
Americans. Further, extralegal forms of racial-sexual policing still take
place, and thinly veiled racist immigration restrictions remain possible.
the struggle over the family that is America, over the national body, is
not yet over. This paper explores the ways in which multiracialism has
been and continues to be a part of this struggle.
Comment:
Adrienne Davis, Washington College of Law, American University
Annette Gordon-Reed, New York Law School