The growing divides in our country, which Chris Hedges foresees as a very
present danger, ala Yugoslavia's experience - are seen by John McWhorter to be
exascerbated by the higher-ed divide.
Here's his salient opinion piece from the
NY Times Sept 17, 2021: OPINION JOHN MCWHORTER
The University of Wisconsin
Smears a Once-Treasured Alum Sept. 17, 2021 John McWhorter By John McWhorter
Opinion Writer What is it about the University of Wisconsin and race? The
administration’s recent decision to move a rock from view because a journalist
referred to it with the N-word almost 100 years ago was goofy enough. But there
has been more at the school in this vein.
This week a group including alumni,
faith leaders, actors, and the N.A.A.C.P. wrote to University of Wisconsin
officials asking them to repeal the tarring and feathering of an alumnus of the
school, the renowned actor Fredric March. The letter, which was also sent to the
Wisconsin governor, Tony Evers, and shared with me, decried the decisions to
strip March’s name from theaters on the Madison and Oshkosh campuses, which the
writers blamed on “social-media rumor and grievously fact-free, mistaken
conclusions” about March.
March has been done a resounding wrong. I have no
animus against the University of Wisconsin, but what we are seeing in these two
sad episodes — the removal of the rock and the defenestration of March — is how
antiracist “reckoning” can, if done without proper caution, detour into mere
posturing, even at the cost of justice itself.
Fredric March is not the most
famous of names among long-ago movie stars. But he attended the University of
Wisconsin more than 100 years ago and went on to become as central in the old
Hollywood firmament as Tom Hanks is today.
If you’re a fan of movie classics,
you’ll most likely recognize him from his Academy Award-winning performance in
“Dr. Jekyll and Mr. Hyde” in 1931; in the original “A Star is Born” in 1937; as
a middle-aged veteran in “The Best Years of Our Lives” in 1946, which earned him
another Oscar; and as Willy Loman in the 1951 version of Arthur Miller’s “Death
of a Salesman.” Onstage he originated the role of James Tyrone on Broadway in
Eugene O’Neill’s “Long Day’s Journey Into Night,” winning a Tony Award.
But no
matter. Some wise people at the University of Wisconsin have decided that what
we should know about Fredric March is that he belonged to a campus organization
called the Ku Klux Klan as a lad. Except there is no evidence that his group was
affiliated with the similarly named, but separate and notorious,K.K.K. March
wasn’t some white-hooded Klansman. Attention must be paid.
March’s alma mater
once treasured him as a favorite son. They put his name on buildings. But in
2018, they took his name off the Fredric March Play Circle Theater on the
Madison campus, and then last year the Oshkosh campus decided to take his name
off a theater building as well.
The movement that sparked this Scarletization of
March was led by students. Typical rhetoric was statements like this from one
Madison student: “I cannot believe that my friends and I have been performing in
a space named after someone who would have considered all of us to be lesser
beings.” She added, “I find it so ironic that we are sharing our intersectional
stories in a theater that honors a racist.”
Despite the conclusion of a report —
commissioned by Madison’s chancellor — that there was no evidence linking the Ku
Klux Klan organization March belonged to with its more widely known namesake,
the student-driven campaign resulted in the removal of the actor’s name from
that theater building. Throughout, there was apparently little or no
investigation of what the man actually stood for.
But March was, to use our
current term of art, a lifelong ally of Black people par excellence.
As the
journalist George Gonis, who helped to write the recent letter in support of
March, has uncovered in his research on the actor, March gave orations as a high
schooler on what we would today call antiracism. In 1939, when the Daughters of
the American Revolution barred Black contralto Marian Anderson from singing at
Constitution Hall, he was not only one of the signatories on the famous protest
letter, but attended Anderson’s protest concert on the steps of the Lincoln
Memorial, despite it meaning taking that night off from the Broadway play he was
in. When Martin Luther King Jr. and Harry Belafonte were strategizing in the
latter’s apartment in New York about civil rights efforts in Birmingham in 1963,
March was there, too (King wrote a certain letter from jail soon thereafter).
The next year, March was one of the white people who spoke on a national
broadcast the NAACP sponsored in 1964 celebrating the 10th anniversary of Brown
v. Board of Education.
This is a Klansman???
Hardly. It just happened that in
1919 into 1920 March briefly belonged to an organization that happened to also
be called Ku Klux Klan.
Yes, I know — but wait. It was a student interfraternity
organization. The Ku Klux Klan of revolting memory had emerged at first amid
Reconstruction and then flamed out. The 20th-century Klan emerged gradually in
the wake of the racist film “The Birth of a Nation” in 1915 and became a
national phenomenon starting in 1921. In Wisconsin in 1919, when March was
inducted into his group, it was possible to have never heard of the Ku Klux Klan
that was later so notorious.
We can’t know whether this group modeled this name
after the Ku Klux Klan organization depicted in “The Birth of a Nation.” But
what we do know is that there is no evidence that their mission had anything to
do with racism, and that when the “real” Klan made its way to campus in 1922,
the organization March had joined (but left in 1920) immediately dissociated
itself from that group and changed its name.
The name of the campus’s Ku Klux
Klan seems to have been an accident. Clumsy, probably. The boys may not have
thought of the “real” Klan as significant enough players in 1919 to merit
avoiding the same name, and just liked the sound of it because of the sequential
k’s and such. There is no record of this organization doing or supporting
anything racist — and let’s recall that in this era, racism was thought of as so
acceptable in conventional expression that one could in a newspaper casually
refer to a big rock with a racist epithet for Black people.
Some antiracist
activists may see this as nit-picking. They may argue that these young people
must have known there was a racist Ku Klux Klan and didn’t care enough to change
the organization’s name, and that this evidences a kind of racism in itself.
These are reasonable points. But against them, to seek a fair-minded
assessment rather than a Star Chamber, we must note that in addition to what I
wrote above, March’s life also included battling McCarthyite red-baiting (to
which he was subjected) and antisemitism. His wife, the actress Florence
Eldridge, was a lifelong prominent progressive. He was friends his whole adult
life with the philosopher Max Otto, a member of the Unitarian Universalist
faith, which has been famously aligned with the civil rights movement.
Even
Madison’s chancellor, Rebecca Blank, has written that March had “fought the
persecution of Hollywood artists, many of them Jewish, in the 1950s by the
House Un-American Activities Committee” and that March “took actions later in
life to suggest (he) opposed discrimination.” Oshkosh’s chancellor, Andrew
Leavitt, acknowledged this history too, and said “there is no evidence to show
that the UW-Madison group March belonged to was linked to the national
movement of the Ku Klux Klan in its time.” But Leavitt said people on campus
felt “shock and pain” over learning about March’s involvement in the similarly
named group, and said: “I no longer possess — and this institution should
reject — the privilege of nuancing explanations as to how a person even
tangentially affiliated with an organization founded on hate has his name
honorifically posted on a public building.”
Could March have possibly been a
progressive but a racist one? Then how about the fact that Canada Lee, a Black
activist actor, considered him an ally? Or that after the Daughters of the
American Revolution episode, March often socialized with Marian Anderson? Or
that now, people appalled at March’s treatment and writing in support include
Black figures such as King comrade Dr. Clarence B. Jones, Langston Hughes’s
biographer Arnold Rampersad, and actors Louis Gossett Jr. and Glynn Turman?
Not to mention, white though he was, lifelong leftist activist Ed Asner just
before his death?
To take the measure of the man, rather than engage in
21st-century American virtue signaling, makes the case for Fredric March as a
racist rather hopeless.
Yet some may take in all of the above and still feel
that March has been treated fairly, thinking apparently March went from
antiracist teen orator to a spell as a Klansman collegiate bigot to a life
marked by antiracist activism. Our interest is less in engaging how plausible
that is than in filleting March to show that we know that racism is bad. We
must do so by fashioning a fantastically know-nothing interpretation of a mere
nine months of the man’s life and walk on proud of our antiracist spirits.
But
I take the liberty of assuming that those who truly feel this way constitute a
set-jawed huddle of people studiously impervious to explanation in favor of a
battle pose. I must take one more liberty and venture: That is not the way
most of us think, including those of us quite agonized over how to turn a
corner on race in America. This witch-burning mentality is something most of
us less concur with than fear. These “Crucible” characters (Arthur Miller
helps us again) get their way by threatening to shame us the way they are
shaming the latest transgressor.
The students who got March’s name taken off
those buildings made a mistake, as did the administrators who again caved to
weakly justified demands, seemingly too scared of being called racists to take
a deep breath and engage in reason.
The University of Wisconsin must apologize
to March and his survivors. His name should be restored to both of the
theaters now denuded of his name, including the Madison building, which he in
fact helped bring into being and for which he funded the lighting equipment
even before the building was named after him.
This must happen in the name of
what all involved in this mistake are committed to: social justice — which
motivated March throughout his life.
Have feedback? Send a note to
McWhorter-newsletter@nytimes.com. John McWhorte
r (@JohnHMcWhorter) is an
associate professor of linguistics at Columbia University. He is the author of
“Nine Nasty Words: English in the Gutter: Then, Now, and Forever” and, most
recently, “Woke Racism,” forthcoming in October.
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