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I started collecting racist objects when I was a teenager and the stuff was everywhere.
At a certain point I ended up with thousands of pieces. I didn't know what I would do with it,
I just thought a lot about what it meant to be a person of color living during Jim Crow.
I had no intention of creating a museum, but the collection kept growing,
so in the 1990s I gave my collection to the University.
I took 15 years, but in 2012 we opened this museum,
I have lots of respect for
museums that celebrate african-american history, that celebrate african-american accomplishment,
but that's not what this facility was. I wanted to create an actual racism facility to have people
focused on
this specific topic, in terms of our history. So if you just have a society with millions of postcards like this
Does that reinforce certain ideas about black people and white people?
Some of the best discussions we have in the museum are about the word nigger
Which sounds kind of weird by the way because I'm a sociologist and we don't believe words have any inherent meaning
They're just sound science that we give but we do believe that people- once the meanings are given that they are shared
I mean no piece is inherently racist
It's a racist society which will create racist objects and will racialise other objects.
That's why the watermelon is- has a race, so there's nothing inherent about a watermelon that makes it racist
But you know darn well that it's been racialized
someone looking at ancho mama objects or other "mammy" images
They don't think of that as offensive. They think of good time spent with the families
It's very nostalgic. Someone else looking at those same pieces. They see the vestiges of slavery and segregation
So often we're not deciding that something is
Racist, but what we are doing are collecting pieces that help us talk about racism
We have lots of friends at the museum, and we receive hundreds of pieces a year. The first director of museum,
He said to me one day: "Hey, there's a couple of guys I want you to meet."
Here we go, here's some Jim Crow related materials. These are the dolls and
Some of them are older, some are newer
These are like 1950s. Male and female. Yeah. Well those are really interesting
Our group of friends were all collecting this because we realized what it said about our society and what it said about
Where we were in the past and where maybe we still were.
When we met David Pilgrim, in the whole Jim Crow Museum and all of that, it was like-
Finally there's a place where we can put- The sense of relief that we could let go of these objects so other people could
learn from it. We have some understanding of
bigotry, we have some understanding of
Being the outsider
Or not being accepted or being told that we are not welcomed
We can't be accepted you you have no place here. I
Think because we've experienced that in our own lives because we're gay
There's a little transference there to trying to help
understand the even bigger question of bigotry and then likewise racism.
Wow, this is really racist. This is an ashtray where the black washer woman
She has her one breast stuck in the wringer, and so she's hollering. My god. That's also sexist.
I think that Jim Crow would love that. This is the Jim Crow. This is on multiple levels. This is a wonderful piece
Once we finally discovered the Jim Crow Museum
it give us more impetus to go out and find, collect, save. They now have at least 500 things from us.
By collecting those things we get a broader picture
of how racism
continued all the way up into the 60s and 70s and still continues
I've seen things about President Obama that were horrible
I think people who go to the Jim Crow museum are often surprised when they see something from
2015
as racist as many of the things from a hundred years ago, and we've had friends who are a complete mess
after they left because suddenly they've been confronted with the truth
For many years when I traveled I would say that the United States
despite its history of enslavement and Jim Crow that we are today more democratic and more egalitarian than we've ever been and
I stopped saying that about two years ago
I'm not suggesting that we are back in the Jim Crow period, don't get it twisted
It's not like that
But what I am saying is I hear and see a level of
racist rhetoric that is reminiscent of when I was growing up in Alabama under Governor George Wallace
People say they don't want to talk about race, but they're doing it all the time
But they're not talking about it in places where their ideas can be challenged