schellenbergk wrote: Thu Jan 06, 2022 7:31 pm
DarkImbecile wrote: Thu Jan 06, 2022 7:19 pm
What is the point you are trying to defend here exactly? That it’s odd to have done a film depicting a white man being lynched?
Yes - because at the time there was an epidemic of black men being lynched. The filmmaker himself was moved to make the film based on a specific lynching of a black man but he was not allowed to cast a black man in the role of innocent victim.
The film is odd because we are forced to see Henry Fonda in a part that should have gone to lets say Paul Robeson.
This is a far cry from other films “M” & “Ox”
American Civil Rights hero and trade union activist A. Philip Randolph, 1917 wrote:In the South lynching was long employed in dealing with agitators, white and black, who were charged with inciting Negro slaves to riot. The Ku Klux Klan, the White Cappers and Red Shirters applied the lynch law. It is, typically, an American institution, though Russia and southern Europe have practised it. So much then for an historical survey of lynching. Now, then, the next question which logically arises is: What are its causes?
[...]
First, it is maintained by some that race "prejudice" is the cause. But the falacy of this
contention is immediately apparent in view of the fact that out of 3,337 persons lynched
between 1882 and 1903, there were 1,192 white persons.
[...]
The reason does not lie in race prejudice, but in the class struggle. Blame your capitalist
system. Of course, this does not justify or expiate the crime; it simply explains it.
Now, even progressive heroes like Randolph can be wrong but notice how he, a black man in 1917, was eager to pour cold water on the idea that lynching was something only plaguing black people.
So I'd say two things are equally true:
A.) Hollywood at that time was terrified of addressing white racism.
B.) Our era is one in which we're so saturated in race discourse, particularly in the last 4-7 years, that we see it as primary where and when even victims of racism did not.