Our Past Betrays Us: Collective Memory, Homicide and Southern Lynching


Autoria(s): Gabriel, Ryan Patrick
Contribuinte(s)

Tolnay, Stewart

Data(s)

14/11/2013

14/11/2013

2013

Resumo

Thesis (Master's)--University of Washington, 2013

Recent sociological research shows enduring impacts of historical patterns of lynching between 1882 and 1930 in the southern U.S. on a variety of modern societal outcomes. In particular, Messner, Baller, and Zevenbergen (2005) find that lynching is associated with contemporary white-on-black homicide. While they link violence to lynching, the mechanisms responsible for this relationship remain obscure. In this paper I define and estimate mediating institutional- and population-based mechanisms that transmit a collective memory of racial domination consistent with lynching that affect modern white-on-black homicide in the South. These mechanisms include: a measure of white-flight segregationist academies, two variables for the level of political support for the segregationist U.S. Presidential candidates, Strom Thurmond and George Wallace, and measures county net-migration rates between 1950 and 1980. Analyses reveal that the positive and significant association between lynching and white-on-black homicide is attenuated and becomes non-significant with the inclusion of all of the mechanisms. I interpret these results to suggest that the racist cultural schema manifested through lynching was transferred to intervening institutions and upheld by population dynamics that influence contemporary white-on-black homicide. These findings have implications for the role of collective memory in explaining temporally distant events and interpersonal racial conflict.

Formato

application/pdf

Identificador

Gabriel_washington_0250O_11929.pdf

http://hdl.handle.net/1773/24248

Idioma(s)

en_US

Direitos

Copyright is held by the individual authors.

Palavras-Chave #Collective Memory; Homicide; Southern Lynching #Sociology #sociology
Tipo

Thesis