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Race, reconstruction, and the invention of "Negro Superstition," 1862-1877

Race, reconstruction, and the invention of "Negro Superstition," 1862-1877
Race, reconstruction, and the invention of "Negro Superstition," 1862-1877
This article traces the postbellum development and dissemination of the notion of “negro superstition.” By the end of Reconstruction, many whites across the nation, both liberal and conservative, shared in the belief that credulity was the keystone of African American culture. The formulation of superstition as innate racial trait served the conjoined causes of sectional reconciliation and white supremacy, eroding white support for black citizenship. As liberal estimations of black Christianity declined and conservative depictions of African American magical beliefs proliferated, “voodoo” gained traction as a potent imaginary, shorthand for racial atavism, unreason, and dangerous sexuality.
1469-5154
1125 - 1152
Cox, David
bc93fe7a-9b53-4029-8100-1516f236544e
Cox, David
bc93fe7a-9b53-4029-8100-1516f236544e

Cox, David (2021) Race, reconstruction, and the invention of "Negro Superstition," 1862-1877. Journal of American Studies, 55 (5), 1125 - 1152. (doi:10.1017/S0021875820001723).

Record type: Article

Abstract

This article traces the postbellum development and dissemination of the notion of “negro superstition.” By the end of Reconstruction, many whites across the nation, both liberal and conservative, shared in the belief that credulity was the keystone of African American culture. The formulation of superstition as innate racial trait served the conjoined causes of sectional reconciliation and white supremacy, eroding white support for black citizenship. As liberal estimations of black Christianity declined and conservative depictions of African American magical beliefs proliferated, “voodoo” gained traction as a potent imaginary, shorthand for racial atavism, unreason, and dangerous sexuality.

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Cox JAS FINAL - Accepted Manuscript
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Accepted/In Press date: 22 May 2020
e-pub ahead of print date: 5 December 2021

Identifiers

Local EPrints ID: 482235
URI: http://eprints.soton.ac.uk/id/eprint/482235
ISSN: 1469-5154
PURE UUID: fbac908e-0422-4a61-8c67-fa02ae8617d6

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Date deposited: 21 Sep 2023 16:56
Last modified: 16 Mar 2024 12:43

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