The Fight Against Lynching at the End of the Reconstruction Era
[2023-07-26 17:40:18]
Because the reconstruction recurred in the southern part of the 1870s, African-Americans worked hard, especially in spite of the fact that the color of the skin actually gained rights, people regained white family superiority. Unfortunately, African Americans who live in the southern part of this period mean that they are going to be more target. According to the Victorian race and sex system, white women are delicate and brittle and pure, while white men can protect white women's purity from the influence of black men's sensuality and violent monsters.
Consider the 1931 terrace riot in Tulsa. After the end of the so-called reconstruction era in 1877, the black people were often pursued, tortured and lynched. This has happened more than 40 years ago before the Tulsa riot, but Tulsa has an incredibly vibrant and completely isolated society. They have their own doctors, lawyers, business, dentists, banks ... all. These are just 3 cases of blacks who suffered from fear in that era. There are countless people else, but while studying these things, I noticed not only the evil that I did but also the extent of the excellence of many black communities in that era . Dust, incredible poverty, Great Depression. Anyway, this is a difficult time to live. Needless to say Blacks.
In the United States, African-American lynch is usually interrupted, but it often occurs in the southern part of the post-reconstruction period, especially in the twentieth year of the turn of the 20th century. At the time, the southern states adopted a new constitution and law to deprive the rights of African Americans and to force legal separation and control of Jim Crow. Most Lynch is done by Caucasian mobs against Blacks victims. They are suspected of being arrested from prison even before a trial by a whites' jury or even before being arrested. Political information - white superiority and promotion of black helplessness - are an important part of the ceremony. Lynching was photographed to expand the intensity of these acts, and was posted as a popular souvenir in the postcard, the United States of America. In public activities, the victims are sometimes shot, burned alive, or subject to torture and murder. In some cases, the part of the broken body is considered a souvenir by the audience.
In the southern part of the post-restoration era, lining pictures were printed for various purposes, such as postcards, newspapers, souvenirs of events. In many cases, these images represent African-American lynch victims and all or part of the population that exists. The audience usually includes women and children. No perpetrator of Lynch was found. It is said that about 15,000 people participated in special lynching. Before the event begins, Lynch usually appears in the newspaper to give the cameraman arrival and prepare the camera equipment in advance. After lynching, the photographer plans to sell the photo as it is or as a postcard (up to 50 cents, or $ 9 as of 2016).