Saturday, 1 March 2014

Black American Archetypes Pt. 1

The Mammy 

Description 

The Mammy often portrayed an overweight, boisterous, usually dark-skinned black maid.  
"Mammy" played by Awarding winning actress Hattie McDaniel

Portrayal in popular culture 

"Mammy" in Gone With The Wind
Mammy Two Shoes in the animated Tom and Jerry series 
Matilda in Guess Who's Coming To Dinner 








Blackface


Description 

first depicted on stage known in minstrel shows during the Antebellum era throughout the nation. Whites would portray stereotypes of blacks  but there were black performers in minstrel.
Al Jolson's portrayal of a blackface character in The Jazz Singer


Portrayal in popular culture 

Aunt Jemina portrayed by  Tessa Gardella 
Al Fuller in Mammy portrayed by Al Jolson 



The Coon/Sambo

Stepin' Fetchit (left) stage name of  Actor Lincoln Perry

Description 

Usually portrayed as shiftless, dunce, ignorant, happy-go-lucky, clumsy, similar in character to blackface  minus  exaggerated physical attributes, thus black actors often depicted them.  



Portrayal in popular culture 
Stepin Fetchit
Amos 'n' Andy


The Uncle Tom 


Description  

Contrary to popular belief,  Tom (from the novel Uncle Tom's Cabin) was a hero, refusing to expose runaway slaves which led to his faithful but honourable death. An apologist for slavery, white supremacy and practically worships the ground that white people stand on. Usually portrayed as gentlemanly, docile and accommodating. 
James Baskett plays Uncle Remus in Song of The South



Portrayal in popular culture 
Uncle Remus 
Uncle Ruckfus  in the animated series The Boondocks
Stephen in Django Unchained

The Mandingo Negro


Ken Norton plays "Ganymede" a Mandingo Fighting Slave
Description 

the slave masters perception that the male slaves were natural 'beast' suited to slave work, but sex crazed and incapable of cognition.

Portrayal in popular culture 
Ganymede in Mandingo
Jack Jefferson in The Great White Hope 








The Black Buck

Description 
Untamed, pathologically violent black male in early American film, a man who refuses to comply with to the white man's authority. He is thus portrayed as a outlaw, a major threat white society and order. With the huge popularity of blaxploitation movies in the 70's, a new type crime laden black character was developed with a more nuanced role.


Jules Winnfield played by Sam Jackson
Portrayal in popular culture 

Gus in Birth of a Nation 
Jules Winnfield in Pulp Fiction 
Nigger Charley in The legend of Nigger Charley     












The Runaway Slave Complex

Went the runaway slave plans to escape, his fellow slaves on the plantation refuse to assist him believing he may not succeed, which may backfire on them. However, once his escape is successfully, the question the slaves ask: well can't you come you haven't helped us?




Thursday, 27 February 2014

John Brown: America's Enigma

John Brown was probably the greatest white hero the U.S. ever produced. It's a shame most whites (historians excluded) don't know he was the catalyst to the Civil War. Blacks should also cherish him too, why he was one of the few willing to die for the principle of freedom. Yet your Patrick Henry's and Thomas Jefferson's get all the fucking credit for preaching "Give me liberty, or give me death!", and "The tree of liberty must be refreshed from time to time with the blood of patriots and tyrants" respectively.  Yet these men never shed one drop of blood in the process.