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Racism - A Short History - George M Fredrickson.pdf - WNLibrary

Racism - A Short History - George M Fredrickson.pdf - WNLibrary

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INDEX<br />

American Indians (cont’d) Anti-Judaism, 18–19, 172n.5. See also me-<br />

of Spanish treatment of, 41–42; Euro- dieval antisemitism<br />

pean admiration of appearance of, Anti-Semitic League (German), 78<br />

60; free from Crucifixion blame, 37, antisemitism: of central and eastern Eu-<br />

41; Valladolid debate (1550) over sta- ropean nations, 103; comparing histotus<br />

of, 36–38<br />

riographies of white supremacism<br />

American racial divisions, 57<br />

and, 90–95, 156–168; contribution to<br />

“American School of Ethnology,” 66– modern racism by, 46–47; current<br />

67, 79–80<br />

persistence of, 143–144; democratic<br />

American South: association of defeat revolution challenging, 64–66; as Gerwith<br />

African Americans in, 106; aver- man cultural code function, 113–114;<br />

sive racism triggered in, 10; emanci-<br />

German fear of Jewish success and,<br />

pation of slaves in, 81–84; examining<br />

78–79; German political exploitation<br />

rise of racist regime in, 105; imperialof,<br />

84; interwar decline of German,<br />

ism ideology and segregation of, 110;<br />

Jim Crow laws of, 83, 101, 102, 109,<br />

110–111, 129, 130, 137, 167; miscege-<br />

nation/interracial sex/intermarriage<br />

banned in, 124; “the one-drop rule,”<br />

124; as overtly racist regime, 1–2,<br />

101, 102–103; white supremacy in<br />

the, 102–103. See also overtly racist re-<br />

gimes; Reconstruction period (U.S.);<br />

United States<br />

American white supremacy: comparing<br />

historiographies of antisemitism and,<br />

90–95, 156–168; comparing South Af-<br />

113–114; origins and development of<br />

medieval, 18–23; post–World War II<br />

literature on, 166; Spanish purity of<br />

blood doctrine as, 32–34, 35, 40–42,<br />

53; Voltaire’s secularized racial, 61–<br />

62; World War I defeat and rise of<br />

German, 106, 107, 162–163. See also<br />

German Jews; Holocaust; Jews; medieval<br />

antisemitism<br />

apartheid ideology: Afrikaner nationalism<br />

and, 3–4; end of, 138; “native segregation”<br />

basis of, 110, 133–134; ori-<br />

gins/development of, 109–110, 134–<br />

137; völkisch nationalism element of,<br />

rican and, 102–103; development of,<br />

135–137. See also South Africa<br />

80–81, 111–112; efforts of liberal in-<br />

Appiah, Kwame Anthony, 153–154, 160<br />

terracialists to change, 116; fear of<br />

Aristotle, 36<br />

sexual pollution/violation by, 120; Aryan myth: as justification of humanfound<br />

in post–Civil War South, 102– ity crimes, 92; Nazi embrace of, 164;<br />

103; impact of emancipation on, 81– political purpose of, 90–91; racism ap-<br />

84; as limited description of racism, plied to, 156<br />

155–156; “white man’s burden” justi- “ascriptive Americanism,” 91<br />

fication of, 111. See also African assimilation: French cultural, 142; Ger-<br />

Americans; white supremacist racism man debate over Jewish, 71–72; Hit-<br />

Andrews, <strong>George</strong> Reid, 102<br />

ler’s criticism of, 121; immigrants to<br />

194

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