[For this year’s annual non-favorites series, I wanted to highlight moments when important and in many ways impressive Americans gave in to white supremacist prejudices, modeling the worst of our national community in the process. Got grievances of your own to air, about anything and everything? Share ‘em for a therapeutic crowd-sourced post, please!]
On an ugly
moment when white supremacy took precedence over athletic supremacy.
I was
super excited when I was invited to
review Cecelia Tichi’s book Jack London: A Writer’s Fight for a Better
America (2015) for the American Historical
Review. There were lots of reasons for my excitement, including how
important Tichi’s book Shifting Gears: Technology, Literature,
Culture in Modernist America (1987) was for my development as an
AmericanStudier, and how much I appreciated her goal in this new project of
recuperating London as a public intellectual (and thus a model for that role in
21st century America as well). But I was also just super excited to
learn more about London, whom I knew largely as the author of hugely popular boys’
adventures stories about wolves and sailors and that one
incredibly realistic
and depressing story about a man who needs to build a fire in
order to keep from freezing to death and the dog who becomes a witness to the
unfolding horrors (all of which of course was a central rationale behind
Tichi’s attempt to recreate the more socially and politically engaged sides of
London as both a writer and a public figure).
I’m not
trying to dwell on my one criticism of Tichi’s book here, but it turned out
that one of the things I learned about London was a frustratingly bigoted
moment that Tichi understandably but problematically minimized in her project.
She did note (if still to my mind a bit too briefly) London’s lifelong fascination
with Social Darwinism and that philosophy’s consistently
hierarchical and racist worldviews; but it was in response to the controversial
(at least for white supremacists) rise of early 20th century
African American boxing champion
Jack Johnson that London would articulate much more overtly his own racism. In
December 1908 Johnson became the first African American world heavyweight
champ, defeating the reigning champ Tommy Burns, and that historic moment led London
to implore a retired white champion to return to the ring and defend his
race. Covering the 1908 fight as a
syndicated sportswriter, London concluded his column, “But now one
thing remains. Jim Jeffries must now emerge from his [Burbank, CA] Alfalfa farm
and remove that golden smile from Jack Johnson's face. Jeff, it's up to you.
The White Man must be rescued.”
Initially
reticent, Jeffries did eventually emerge from retirement, facing Johnson in a July 4th, 1910 championship
bout in Reno. Jeffries was by this time so out of shape that “bout”
probably isn’t the word, though, as he was quickly knocked down for the first
time in his career and threw in the towel at that point. Given that white
Americans often find reasons to riot in both sporting events and racism
(although not usually at the same time), it’s unfortunately no surprise that
Johnson’s victory led to riots around the country that left
a handful of African Americans dead and many more injured (riots, I’ll note,
that to this day, when they’re remembered at all, are usually and all too
typically described with that deeply loaded phrase “race riot”).
Perhaps it should be no more surprising that when an African American athlete
reached the pinnacle of his sport, theories of physical prowess and the
survival of the fittest gave way to white supremacist bigotry and ignorance,
even from an otherwise intelligent and (as Tichi convincingly argues) socially
progressive figure like Jack London. But it’s still frustrating to see how
powerful such white supremacist nonsense can be—although, to send this series
on a positive note, it’s also deeply satisfying to see it literally and
figuratively knocked on its ass.
Crowd-sourced
post this weekend,
Ben
PS. So one
more time: what do you think? Other non-favorites (of any and all types) you’d
share?
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