[One of my favorite cultural works of the last year was Small Axe, filmmaker Steve McQueen’s anthology film series about the West Indian community in England from the 1960s through the 1980s. I’m not an EnglandStudier, but I think there are plenty of ways to apply the five wonderful films to AmericanStudying. So this week I’ll highlight a handful, leading up to a Guest Post on McQueen’s prior films!]
On a telling
question about the possibility and limits of police reform, and why we need to
keep asking it.
In the last
paragraph of my year
in review post on race, memory, and justice, I briefly addressed the
complicated and even contradictory (yet clearly coexisting) realities of the racist
origins and development of yet widespread African
American support for the police in the United States. While there are
various ways to understand and engage those concurrent realities, I would say
that they do naturally lend themselves to an emphasis on police reform (rather
than, say, abolition) as a vital goal. The third Small Axe film, Red, White, and Blue,
depicts precisely such a reformer, a historical figure who sought to change the
institutional racism of English policing (among other problems he hoped to
address) from the inside: Leroy
Logan (played by John
Boyega in the film), a longtime London Metropolitan Police officer who
founded the Black Police Association
(now the National Black Police Association) and chaired it for its first 30
years (1983-2013, when Logan retired from the force). Logan’s recent
autobiography, Closing
Ranks: My Life as a Cop (2020, and co-written with George Luke), describes
both the frustrations and failures and the successes and progress of that
reformist career.
In watching Red, White, and Blue, I couldn’t help but
think about a very different recent cultural work: HBO’s Watchmen (2019), and specifically its historical storyline
featuring the character
of Hooded Justice. That fictional character reminds us that the US has had
African American police officers for far longer than the UK (Logan is presented
in the film, apparently accurately, as one of the first Black officers when he
begins his career in the early 1980s), but that they have nonetheless consistently
come up against the same institutional racism and prejudice, the same
challenges to both their own career and any overarching progress, that Logan
encountered. And just because The Wire is
never far from my AmericanStudying brain, I likewise thought about a character like
Bunny
Colvin, an African American police lieutenant whose efforts to change both
policing and the war on drugs in the show’s fictionalized Baltimore ultimately
lead to his own departure from the force rather than any substantive or at
least enduring changes. Reform from within makes sense as at least part of the
equation, but such fictional characters (dealing with all too historical and
ongoing realities) illustrate just how challenging such reforms will always be.
But if I can
quote from one more American text, Don Henley’s song “Inside Job” (from the 2000
album of the same name): “Insect politics/Indifferent universe/Bang your head
against the wall/But apathy is worse.” Of course those last two aren’t the only
options when it comes to policing problems in the US (or anywhere else), and I
don’t want to dismiss entirely here the far more radical idea of abolition. But
the truth of social reform and movements throughout American history is that
they have almost always involved a series of changes, rather than massive or
sweeping overhaul (with perhaps the only exception being the abolition of
slavery, which did involve massive changes but also and not coincidentally the
bloodiest conflict in US history)—and I would also argue that making such
changes can be just as radical, if not as striking, as such overhauls might be.
So frustrating as it might be, I think we need to keep banging our heads
against the wall of police reform; and in the story of Leroy Logan,
historically and as fictionalized so potently by Red, White, and Blue, we’ve got an excellent portrayal of both the
frustrations and (eventually but unquestionably) the possibility of reform and
change.
Last Axe
application tomorrow,
Ben
PS. What do you
think? Other takes on Caribbean American connections?
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