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Category: 15. Social science studies
- SIDE001. Sider, Gerald. Against experience: the
struggles for history, tradition, and hope among Native American people.
Between history and histories: the making of silences and commemorations.
Ed. Gerald Sider and Gavin Smith. Toronto: University of Toronto Press,
1997. Pages 62-77.
Key source
Publication type: Book chapter
A feelingly argued essay which effectively combines
Marxist theory with two incidents, each carefully set in its historical
and political context, from Robeson County. The first involves a meeting
in which Sider was invited to advise a Lumbee group on a contract opportunity
to build a factory and manufacture shirts for the Army. Sider's own (and
his grandmother's) experience with sweatshop labor, and his strong feelings
about class formation, propelled him to argue against the project based
on the dangers he foresaw. He found his arguments quickly pushed aside
and discovered that, because of a remark he made about substandard housing,
he had quite unintentionally offended a women he had expected to be an
advocate. The woman's grandparents, he was told, had lived in such housing
and gotten by just fine. She saw Sider as criticizing their values and
their ways. In discussing this and a later conversation with the woman,
Sider describes a complex mix, among working people and minorities, of
cynicism about one's choices, and a more or less subdued longing
to both participate in and withdraw from the dominant society (often in
both cases probably fueled as much or more by economic pressure as by
either envy on dismay), all enmeshed in a hard-won, if partial, cultural
autonomy (p. 71).
The second incident involves the impact of sharecropping
on agriculture in Robeson County. Sider describes a small farm which
had been divided among two sharecropping families, one Indian and one
white. One family had barely earned a meager living prior to the division.
Now, both families were desperate. Sider was trying to obtain government
surplus food for the families and needed the landlord's signature to
prove that the families had earned less than $1,200 the previous year.
The landlord refused, reasoning that if you give these niggers
free food they won't work (p. 74). Sider discusses this incident
in terms of silence and experience, which are names for different
aspects of this antagonism, this distance, between people and (substantial
elements of) their 'own' culture (p. 75). He urges readers to
be conscious of the struggle between experience and silence; between,
on the one hand, what happens to people in fact and in their understanding
and, on the other, what is and is not, can and cannot be, discussed,
negotiated, socially reconfigured (p. 75). Sider states, the
same appalling violence that made those farm workers 'niggers' simultaneously
made me white and . . . it took a very long time for me to hear, in
addition, how deeply I was implicated in the consequences of such actions
- as a receiver not only of stolen labor but of stolen lives (p.
75).
Additional subjects: Sharecropping | Marxist theory | Lumbee
Regional Development Association (LRDA)
This annotation was edited on: June 13, 2002
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