Pageants, Parlors & Pretty Women (BOOK REVIEW)
Pageants, Parlors & Pretty Women:
Race and Beauty in the 20th Century South
by Blain Roberts
University
of North Carolina
Press
Hardcover, $39.95
378 pages, Illustrated
ISBN: 978-1-4696-1420-5
Book
Review by Kam Williams
“[This
book] tells us how Jim Crow and civil rights were expressed in southern women’s
bodies. Using female beauty as a lens, the book brings into focus an untold
social and cultural history of southern women and of the South generally...
I
argue that female beauty in the American South was, more so than in the rest of
the country, deeply racialized…I also emphasize the complexity inherent in the
pursuit of beauty… I approach beauty as an expansive category that encompasses
ideals, practices, labor, and even spaces…
Underscoring
almost every conversation about beauty in the region were worries about
morality and sexuality… Pageants, Parlors & Pretty Women provides a fresh
perspective on the anxieties that plagued southerners from the late 19th
C. through the mid-20th C. Or, put another way, it reveals how the female body
both informed and reflected the challenges of life during Jim Crow.”
--
Excerpted from the Introduction (pages 6 -10)
America has a
long, ugly legacy of promoting diametrically opposed images of black and white
females. This can be traced all the way back to Founding Fathers like Thomas
Jefferson, an adulterer who had a white wife, but fathered a half-dozen
children with Sally Hemmings, one of his hundreds of slaves.
Yet, in his
only book, “Notes on the State of Virginia,” the
hypocritical third President of the U.S. frowned upon race-mixing while
denouncing black women as unattractive on account of their hair texture and
skin color. He actually went so far as to pronounce sisters so promiscuous that
they would just as soon mate with an ape as a human.
Sadly, such
racist notions continued to shape popular attitudes about African-American
femininity after Emancipation, especially in the South with its
strictly-enforced color line. In the wake of the Civil War, Caucasian women “were
transformed into symbols of white supremacy and, eventually, massive
resistance,” to integration and equal rights.
That is the
proposition put forth by Blain Roberts in Pageants, Parlors & Pretty Women:
Race and Beauty in the 20th Century South. Roberts, a History
Professor at California State University,
Fresno,
discusses at great length the role which beauty played in maintaining the
racial divide.
For, the enduring
plantation myth still propagated post slavery placing white women on pedestals
as paragons of virtue in need of protection proved to be the ideal tool for
justifying the persistence of white supremacy ad infinitum. And Jim Crow Era bigots
found affirmation in the Miss America beauty pageant which would for many decades
be not only lily-white but dominated by entrants from former Confederate
States.
The opus
also delineates the black female struggle to escape the stranglehold of their
stereotype as “sexually licentious” and “innately depraved and dirty.” They
fought back by turning to skin lighteners and straightening combs until finally
being freed by the Sixties’ “Black is beautiful!” movement to embrace their
natural hair and skin tones.
A far more
sophisticated examination of black and white pulchritude than Gone with the
Wind’s long unquestioned suggestion that it’s as simple as Mammy vs. Scarlett
O’Hara.
To order a copy of Pageants, Parlors & Pretty Women,
visit: http://www.amazon.com/exec/obidos/ASIN/B00JN8AQLS/ref%3dnosim/thslfofire-20
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