Between Black and White: Attitudes Toward Southern Mulattoes, 1830-1861Posted in Articles, History, Media Archive, Slavery, United States on 2011-12-19 02:36Z by Steven |
Between Black and White: Attitudes Toward Southern Mulattoes, 1830-1861
The Journal of Southern History
Volume 45, Number 2 (May, 1979)
pages 185-200
Robert Brent Toplin, Professor of History
University of North Carolina, Wilmington
The documents of slavery—laws, narratives speeches, and political tracts—contain abundant references to “Negroes” and “mulattoes.” By the standards of antebellum America, the distinction was not accidental or minor. Contemporary attitudes about the difference between Negro and mulatto related to fundamental racial ideas. For many years Americans from both the North and South openly expressed a marked bias favoring the mulatto over the Negro. The variations in white attitudes toward mulattoes in the antebellum period need closer investigation than they have received, especially in connection with conflicting opinions about miscegenation, sexual oppression, and racial identification. In many respects disputes about the mulatto’s position in southern society related to fundamental points in the debates about slavery and abolition.
Historians of slavery recognize that antebellum Americans often showed special interest in mulattoes, but their estimates of the extent and importance of this interest vary greatly. In a careful study of white attitudes from 1550 to 1812 Winthrop D. Jordan…