Winthrop D. Jordan
Winthrop D. Jordan passed away on February 23, 2007. Click here for his obituary.
This HNN Doyen profile was published in the summer of 2006.
What They're Famous For
Winthrop D. Jordan is the William F. Winter Professor of History
F.A.P. Barnard Distinguished Professor
Professor of Afro-American Studies at the University of Mississippi.
He received his AB from Harvard University, his MA
from Clark University, and his Ph.D. from Brown University where he was awarded the
Distinguishing Alumnus citation from the Graduate School.
Jordan was briefly an Instructor of history at Phillips Exeter Academy and later a Professor of history at
University of California, Berkeley, 1963-82, where he was also Associate Dean for
Minority Group Affairs Graduate Division., 1968-70.
He is the author of
several books, including the award winning and groundbreaking White Over Black:
American Attitudes Toward the Negro, 1550-1812 and
Tumult And Silence At Second Creek, he is also the co-author of several
textbooks for junior high and high school students. Jordan is the recipient
of seven book awards, including the National Book Award and a two time winner
of the Bancroft Prize.
Jordan retired from teaching in 2004. To mark this event his
former students edited and contributed essays as a tribute to the career
of one of America's great thinkers and perhaps the most influential
American historian of his generation. The anthology was
published in 2005 as Affect and Power: Essays on Sex, Slavery, Race, and Religion
in Appreciation of Winthrop D. Jordan. In the introduction
Sheila L. Skemp described Jordan's impact on his students:
"Jordan's legendary seminar-an introduction to the discipline,
a requirement for every M.A. student in the Department of History, and experience
no student will easily forget... He teaches his students to have an open mind about
just what those voices from the past are saying. No matter how relevant his own work
is, Jordan never allows his own political or ethical agenda to interfere with his
reading of the sources, and he urged his students to put their own preconceived
notions aside as well. When their work led them in new directions and they arrived, often despite themselves,
at unexpected conclusions, no one was more delighted than Jordan to discover that common
wisdom is neither infallible nor particularly wise."
Personal Anecdote
My distinguished medical career ended when as a college sophomore I got a D- in
Chem 1A. I took no history courses in college. Partly this was owing to being a
history professor's son, but also because I had taken a great deal of history at
the secondary school level. Yet the principal reason was that Harvard offered a
much less demanding major in its new Department of Social Relations. That major
offered an appealingly wide range of courses in the social sciences and, fully
as important, a lot less work. I spent nearly as much time singing with the
Harvard Krokodiloes as going to classes.
After graduating in Social Relations I spent nearly a year in a home-office
management training program at the Prudential Life Insurance Company. After several
months at their headquarters in Newark, I realized that my interests and abilities
were less than a good fit with bureaucratic management. So I cast about for a job
teaching something ? anything (perhaps English, Physics, French, or History) ? at
a prep school. Serendipitously, it turned out that Phillips Exeter was looking for
someone to teach history, and we agreed that I should start work on an M.A. in
U.S. history at Clark University. Teaching the extremely bright students at Exeter
led me toward getting a Ph.D. In a stroke of good fortune I was denied admission
at Harvard and then chose Brown because I was admitted there. I gradually became
aware of how lucky I was, as I became interested in early American history because
of the marvelous books at the John Carter Brown Library. Also, perhaps because of
my undergraduate acquaintance with cultural anthropology, I found dealing with the
16th-18th centuries interesting and intellectually profitable because their denizens
lived in cultures so different from modern ones.
At that time (the latter 1950s) the field of history was still dominated by my
fellow male "WASPS." In the 1960s I enthusiastically welcomed signs of broadening in
the profession and especially the slackening of the outrageous, falsely genteel
anti-Semitism that had sapped the moral integrity of the old establishment.
Thus my undergraduate background meant that my approach to history was strongly
influenced by the social sciences of the early 1950s. For my Ph.D. dissertation,
I chose a subject that I thought of as a study of an old culture which was still
imposing a crushing weight on the nation's publicly stated political and moral
ideals. More particularly, I aimed to understand the large component of emotion
and indeed irrationality that characterized the attitudes of the white majority
toward "Negroes" in this country. Certainly "ideas" mattered in such an investigation,
but they were often so blatantly absurd (especially in the "Age of Reason") that
I was constantly led to pondering the cultural dimensions of affect concerning "race."
No doubt I was influenced by the developing civil rights movement of the late 1950s,
though I steered clear of reading much about it in newspapers. More important,
the revelations about the wartime Holocaust in Europe loomed over the social
sciences in those years; indeed it was no longer possible to think about
"racial prejudice" without being acutely aware of the horrifying consequences of
politicized anti-Semitism. I thus came to history with intellectual interests
and perspectives that virtually dictated the kinds of topics that would engage
my attention throughout my historical career. In addition, my mother's side of
the family was still steeped in a Quaker and strongly abolitionist tradition.
Less obviously, my exposure to the barbarous prose of the social sciences led
to a determination on my part to write in language that at least attempted
a measure of grace and clarity.
My dissertation dealt with a matter about which historians had written little.
Even after Kenneth Stampp's revolutionary study, The Peculiar Institution (1956)
and the massive amount of research stimulated by Stanley Elkins's assertions
about "Sambo" in his Slavery (1959), white opinions about blacks took a back seat
to "black culture," which by the early 1970s was being called the "hottest field"
in historical studies.
Many years after publication of White over Black (1968) I wrote more directly about
certain black slaves as they became involved in a conspiracy near Natchez, Mississippi.
Over this long period, however, I also published short pieces on "other" subjects that
seemed to me closely related to racial attitudes in American culture. These topics
included past definitions of the temporal stages of the human life-cycle as well as
familial imagery in political thought. Yet there was indeed an intellectual glue that
bound such explorations together with my further inquiries into important matters about
race that White over Black had failed to cover, including the culture of Tudor England
and development of the United States's unique one-drop racial rule. If I had to name
this glue, I would call it "affect."
Because I had focussed on "thought" that was not intellective, I warmly welcomed a
recent retrospective assessment of White over Black by Lawrence Shore in History and
Theory which concluded that the book had shown that "if you ignore the evidence it is
easy to deny the power of the irrational." Indeed such persistent denial must be easy,
since so many historians had and have been achieving it for years. Denial has recently
spilled over into discussions of "race." I hope soon to write about the modern social
and scientific conceptualizations of "race," which has proven such an appallingly
dangerous term that many critics want to ban the word itself and to claim, mistakenly,
that it is totally foreign to natural science including evolutionary biology. For
present purposes I will merely emphasize that human beings constitute a single entity,
whether it is called a single species, a breeding population, a gene pool, children of
God, or the family of man. I personally find great value and aptness in all these
designations. My doubts arise only in regard to the second term in the species name,
Homo sapiens.
Quotes
By Winthrop D. Jordan
This study attempts to answer a simple question: What were the attitudes of white
men toward Negroes during the first two centuries of European and African settlement
in what became the United States of America? It has taken a rather long time to find
out, chiefly because I have had to educate myself about many matters concerning which
at the outset I was very ignorant. This book does something to answer the question,
but I am aware that it affords only partial illumination. Like most practicing
historians today, I have assumed the task of explaining how things actually were
while at the same time thinking that no one will ever really know. Which is to say
that this book is one man's answer and that other men have and will advance others.
I hope that mine is a reasonably satisfactory one, but I shall be enormously surprised
and greatly disappointedif I am not shown to be wrong on some matters. --
-- Winthrop D. Jordan in "White Over Black
American Attitudes Toward the Negro, 1550-1812"
"The dilemma was apparent. Virginia's distress was then America's writ large. The
white American wanted, indeed had, to remain faithful to himself and to his great
experiment. In doing so he was caught between the necessity, on the one hand, of
maintaining his identity as the fruit of England's and Europe's loins and as the
good seed of civilization planted in the wilderness, and on the other, the necessity
of remaining faithful to his own image as the world's exemplar of liberty and
equalitarianism, as the best hope of the civilization which he cherished. Whichever
path he took he seemed to abandon part of himself, so that neither could be taken
with assurance or good conscience. Individual Americans divided according to their
private necessities, while at the same time the nation divided in response to pressures
generated by economic, demographic, and cultural differences, but no American and no
section of America could rest at ease with the decision. For Virginians especially,
for many Americans, and for the nation as a whole it was impossible to make a clearcut
choice.
Within every white American who stood confronted by the Negro, there had arisen a
perpetual duel between his higher and lower natures. His cultural conscience--his
Christianity, his humanitarianism, his ideology of liberty and equality--demanded
that he regard and treat the Negro as his brother and his countryman, as his equal.
At the same moment, however, many of his most profound urges, especially his yearning
to maintain the identity of his folk, his passion for domination, his sheer avarice,
and his sexual desire, impelled him toward conceiving and treating the Negro as
inferior to himself, as an American leper. At closer view, though, the duel
appears more complex than a conflict between the best and worst in the white
man's nature, for in a variety of ways the white man translated his "worst"
into his "best." Raw sexual aggression became retention of purity, and brutal
domination became faithful maintenance of civilized restraints. These translations,
so necessary to the white man's peace of mind, were achieved at devastating cost to
another people. But the enormous toll of human wreckage was by no means paid
exclusively by the Negro, for the subtle translation of basic urges in the white
man necessitated his treating the Negro in a fashion which tortured his own conscience,
that very quality in his being which necessitated those translations. So the peace of
mind the white man sought by denying his profound inexorable drives toward creation
and destruction (a denial accomplished by affirmations of virtue in himself and
depravity in the Negro) was denied the white man; he sought his own peace at the
cost of others and found none. In fearfully hoping to escape the animal within himself
the white man debased the Negro, surely, but at the same time he debased himself.
Conceivably there was a way out from the vicious cycle of degradation, an opening of
better hope demanding an unprecedented and perhaps impossible measure of courage,
honesty, and sheer nerve. If the white man turned to stare at the animal within him,
if he once admitted unashamedly that the beast was there, he might see that the old
foe was a friend as well, that his best and his worst derived from the same deep well
of energy. If he once fully acknowledged the powerful forces which drove his being,
the necessity of imputing them to others would drastically diminish. If he came to
recognize what had happened and was still happening with himself and the African in
America, if he faced the unpalatable realities of the tragedy unflinchingly, if he were
willing to call the beast no more the Negro's than his own, then conceivably he might
set foot on a better road. Common charity and his special faith demanded that he make
the attempt. But there was little in his historical experience to indicate that
he would succeed. -- Winthrop D. Jordan in "White Over Black
American Attitudes Toward the Negro, 1550-1812"
About Winthrop D. Jordan
"The author has put simple solutions and flashy theories aside and brought
to his task a patience, skepticism, thoroughness, and humility commensurate with the
vast undertaking. He combines these qualities with imagination and insight. The result
is a massive and learned work that stands as the most informed and impressive
pronouncement on the subject yet made." --
C. Vann Woodward, New York Times Book Review reviewing "White Over Black
American Attitudes Toward the Negro, 1550-1812"
"A monumental work of scholarship, brilliant in conception and execution,
humane, convincing, informed by warmth and wit, illuminating reading for all those
concerned with America's tragedy. . . . As an historian with keen psychological
insights into his material, Winthrop Jordan is uniquely qualified to illuminate
America's anguished dilemma." -- Publishers Weekly reviewing "White Over Black
American Attitudes Toward the Negro, 1550-1812"
"White Over Black will stand as a landmark in the historiography of this
generation. Its richness and insight, its sensitive, penetrating analysis of the
unspoken as well as the explicit, its union of breadth with depth, make it a
brilliant achievement." -- Richard D. Brown, New England Quarterly
"[A] rare thing: an original contribution to an important subject. In helping
us understand today's racial crisis, Jordan has ideally fulfilled the historian's
function of investigating the past in order to enlighten the present." --
The judges for the 1969 National Book Award for History and Biography
"This monumental study is a tremendously important block, fascinating and
appalling, of American social and cultural history. . . . Though the study was begun
years before the current civil rights agitation, it is quite indispensable for a
full appreciation of the realities and wellsprings and the dilemmas of the contemporary
struggle." -- The Phi Beta Kappa Senate award committee for the 1968 Ralph Waldo
Emerson Award
"One of the most remarkable feats of detective work achieved by a modern historian." --
David Brion Davis, New York Review of Books reviewing "Tumult and Silence at Second Creek
An Inquiry Into a Civil War Slave Conspiracy"
"This work represents the reconstruction of history at its very best." --
John Hope Franklin reviewing "Tumult and Silence at Second Creek
An Inquiry Into a Civil War Slave Conspiracy"
"
This book, Winthrop D. Jordan tells us in his opening sentence, "is a story,
but at the same time it is not." With this paradox, Mr. Jordan characterizes the outcome
of more than 20 years of investigation into events that occurred nearly a century and a
half ago. "Tumult and Silence at Second Creek: An Inquiry Into a Civil War Slave
Conspiracy" is at once an effort to capture the experience of black and white
Mississippians confronting the implications of the Civil War for Southern slavery
and also -- and perhaps even more fundamentally -- an exploration into the nature
of historical inquiry and interpretation.
Mr. Jordan, a professor of history and Afro-American studies at the University of
Mississippi, has written a work of historical scholarship that leaves its scaffolding
standing and visible, a study in which the process of discovery is at least as important
as the result. He not only invites the engaged reader to participate in the struggle to
understand the past, but he also includes almost all the available evidence in
appendixes. -- Drew Gilpin Faust reviewing "Tumult and Silence at Second Creek
An Inquiry Into a Civil War Slave Conspiracy"
"What Jordan brings forth, in more subtlety and detail than space allows to
examine here, is the complexity of slave life, of contradictions and ambiguities-both
black and white-overloyalty and betrayal, trust and violence, sex and domination,
freedom and bondage, oppression and resistance, paternalism and independence, and life and death
in the slave South.
This is both a fascinating and fustrating study, fasvcinating for what Jordan is
able to wring out of a small handful of skimpy documents, and fustrating for what
he is unable to explain because history would surrender nothing further, even to
his skilled hands." --
C. Peter Ripley, Florida State University reviewing "Tumult and Silence at Second Creek
An Inquiry Into a Civil War Slave Conspiracy"
"I think it is so good for us to go back. The issue of slavery is such an
enduring topic. Dr. Jordan is a premier historian in the United States. His book
'White Over Black' is a model for other historians." -- David Sansing,
professor emeritus of history University of Mississippi at the Porter L. Fortune,
Jr. History Symposium in 2000
"At the annual meeting of the Organization of American historians, in the Spring of 1998,
an overflow crowd gathered to honor the thirtieth anniversary of the publication of Winthrop
Jordan's magisterial work, White Over Black. Many of us old folks remembered where we
were when the book first appeared, as we marveled at the impact it made on the profession
then-an impact that continues to have reverberations even today. Young scholars joined the conversation,
acknowledging that their comprehensive exam lists invariably include White Over Black
as a "must read." Audience members and panelists alike commented on the book's merits and
their memories of reading it in graduate seminars or undergraduate courses. The panel
continued in an appropriately academic fashion, until a young woman stood up and asked
to be heard. She was from the Carribean island of Dominica, and had first encountered
White Over Black as a young woman. The book, she said simply changed her life. It
was the first thing she had ever read that enabled her to understand herself, who
she was. and what her relationship to the rest of the world was all about. The book,
moreover, moved her to become a historian, so that she too, could join a community that
asked the right questions and, at least on occassion, arrived at the right answers. Most
historians would give anything to know that just once their work has had a profound-and positive-
effect on someone's life. Winthrop Jordan experiences that sense of satisfaction more
often than most of us." -- Sheila L. Skemp in the introduction for
"Affect and Power: Essays on Sex, Slavery, Race, and Religion
in Appreciation of Winthrop D. Jordan"
Finally Winthrop Jordan set me off in the right direction as I began this essay as a chapter of my dissertation.
His guidance, criticism, and inspiration call for a special debt of gratitude." --
David J. Libby in "Affect and Power: Essays on Sex, Slavery, Race, and Religion
in Appreciation of Winthrop D. Jordan"
Basic Facts
Teaching Positions:
Brown University, Providence, RI, lecturer in history, 1959-61;
College of William and Mary, Institute of Early American History and Culture,
Williamsburg, VA, fellow, 1961-63;
University of California, Berkeley, assistant professor, 1963-67,
associate professor, 1967-69, professor of history, 1969-1982.
William F. Winter Professor of History F.A.P. Barnard Distinguished Professor
Professor of Afro-American Studies at the University of Mississippi, 1982-2004.
Area of Research:
Afro-American History, Early American History.
Education:
Harvard University, A.B., 1953;
Clark University, M.A., 1957;
Brown University, Ph.D., 1960
Major Publications:
White over Black: American Attitudes toward the Negro, 1550-1812,
(University of North Carolina Press, for Institute of Early American History and
Culture, 1968).
The White Man's Burden, (Oxford University Press, 1974).
Tumult and Silence at Second Creek: An Inquiry Into a Civil War Slave
Conspiracy, (Louisiana State University Press, 1993).
Editor, Contributor, Joint Author:
(Editor) Samuel Stanhope Smith, An Essay on the Causes of the Variety of
Complexion and Figure in the Human Species, Harvard University Press, 1965.
(With Miriam Greenblatt and John S. Bowes) The Americans, the History of a
People and a Nation, (Science Research Associates, 1982).
(With others) The United States, (Prentice Hall,
1982).
(With Ernest R. May, James F. Marran, John S. Bowes, Miriam Greenblatt
and others) The American People: A History from 1877, (McDougal, 1986).
(With Ernest R. May) The American People: A History to 1877,
(McDougal, 1986).
(Editor with Sheila L. Skemp) Race and Family in the Colonial South:
Essays, (University Press of Mississippi, 1987).
(With Greenblatt and Bowes) The Americans: A History, (McDougal, 1994).
(Editor) Slavery and the American South : essays and commentaries,
(University Press of Mississippi, 2003).
Jordan has also contributed numerous articles and book review
to professional journals
Awards:
Jordan's many awards include fellowships from the Institute of Early American History
and Culture, the Guggenheim Foundation, the Social Science Research Council and the
Center for the Advanced Study of the Behavioral Sciences, as well as a Distinguished
Alumnus Citation from Brown Universitys Graduate School.
1968, Winner of the Francis Parkman Prize, Society of American Historians;
1969, Winner of the National Book Award;
1969, Winner of the Bancroft Prize, Columbia University;
1968, Winner of the Ralph Waldo Emerson Award, Phi Beta Kappa all for
White Over Black
American Attitudes Toward the Negro, 1550-1812
1993, Winner of the Bancroft Prize;
1993, the Eugene M. Kayden National University Press Book Award;
1992 the Jules and Frances Landry Award all for Tumult and Silence at Second Creek
An Inquiry Into a Civil War Slave Conspiracy.
1976, Fellowship Center for Advanced Study in the Behavioral Sciences (CASBS).
Additional Info:
Jordan worked at Prudential Life Insurance Co., Newark, NY,
as a management trainee, 1953-54; and then at
Phillips Exeter Academy, Exeter, NH, as an instructor in history, 1955-56.
Jordan has been widely reported in the press and has made several appearances on C-Span
regarding the debate to whether Thomas Jefferson did in fact father his slave Sally
Hemmings's children, based on his claim in
White Over Black: American Attitudes Toward the Negro, 1550-1812 (1968) that
"She bore five, from 1795 to 1808; and though he was
away from Monticello a total of roughly two-thirds of this period, Jefferson was at
home nine months prior to each birth."
Posted on Sunday, July 2, 2006 at 7:06 PM | Comments (0) | Return