An extensive discussion of pejoratives like "Aunt" and "Uncle" as they were used in relation to black people, from historian Ronald Davis:
https://files.nc.gov/dncr-moh/jim%20...0etiquette.pdf
I am not going to cut and paste this in the usual manner as it contains potentially offensive language, but here are relevant passages:
"All black men, on the other hand, were called by their first names or were referred to as "Boy," "Uncle," and "Old Man"--regardless of their age . . . Black women were addressed as "Auntie" or "girl." Under no circumstances would the title "Miss." or "Mrs." be applied . . . This practice of addressing blacks by words that denoted disrespect or inferiority reduced the black person to a non-person, especially in newspaper accounts."
There are many discussions of this found on line. It is, in part, why the brand name "Aunt Jemima" was retired.
And with all due respect to you, it doesn't matter what the actual plot of the film is, it's still a historical whitewash of a difficult era for African-Americans, be they sharecroppers, carpetbaggers, freemen or what have you. This has always been the issue with the film. It's true that the film-makers did not intend the picture to be overtly racist, and they largely succeeded. The trouble is that in intending to create a simple anodyne story of the Old South and a beloved old story teller, they managed to ignore the violence and inequity of the era to the rage of the people whose racial memories they (foolishly) provoked. Really, every time that I have come across this picture, I think that Disney was a fool to have undertaken it. In fact, after the film started shooting he began to have misgivings about it, telling the producer: “the negro situation is a dangerous one. Between the negro haters and the negro lovers there are many chances to run afoul of situations that could run the gamut all the way from the nasty to the controversial.” Well, he was right.
No offense to anybody, fellas, but I don't think it's appropriate for a bunch of pasty-assed white folks like ourselves to say that Song Of The South is not racist. It's neither our place, our history or our struggle.
https://files.nc.gov/dncr-moh/jim%20...0etiquette.pdf
I am not going to cut and paste this in the usual manner as it contains potentially offensive language, but here are relevant passages:
"All black men, on the other hand, were called by their first names or were referred to as "Boy," "Uncle," and "Old Man"--regardless of their age . . . Black women were addressed as "Auntie" or "girl." Under no circumstances would the title "Miss." or "Mrs." be applied . . . This practice of addressing blacks by words that denoted disrespect or inferiority reduced the black person to a non-person, especially in newspaper accounts."
There are many discussions of this found on line. It is, in part, why the brand name "Aunt Jemima" was retired.
And with all due respect to you, it doesn't matter what the actual plot of the film is, it's still a historical whitewash of a difficult era for African-Americans, be they sharecroppers, carpetbaggers, freemen or what have you. This has always been the issue with the film. It's true that the film-makers did not intend the picture to be overtly racist, and they largely succeeded. The trouble is that in intending to create a simple anodyne story of the Old South and a beloved old story teller, they managed to ignore the violence and inequity of the era to the rage of the people whose racial memories they (foolishly) provoked. Really, every time that I have come across this picture, I think that Disney was a fool to have undertaken it. In fact, after the film started shooting he began to have misgivings about it, telling the producer: “the negro situation is a dangerous one. Between the negro haters and the negro lovers there are many chances to run afoul of situations that could run the gamut all the way from the nasty to the controversial.” Well, he was right.
No offense to anybody, fellas, but I don't think it's appropriate for a bunch of pasty-assed white folks like ourselves to say that Song Of The South is not racist. It's neither our place, our history or our struggle.
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