Clean and White: A History of Environmental Racism in the United States

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Clean and White offers a history of environmental racism in the United States focusing on constructions of race and hygiene. When Joe Biden attempted to compliment Barack Obama by calling him “clean and articulate,” he unwittingly tapped into one of the most destructive racial stereotypes in American history. This book tells the history of the corrosive idea that whites are clean and those who are not white are dirty. From the age of Thomas Jefferson to the Memphis Public Workers strike of 1968 through the present day, ideas about race and waste have shaped where people have lived, where people have worked, and how American society’s wastes have been managed. In the wake of the civil war, as the nation encountered emancipation, mass immigration, and the growth of an urbanized society, Americans began to conflate the ideas of race and waste. Certain immigrant groups took on waste management labor, such as Jews and scrap metal recycling, fostering connections between the socially marginalized and refuse. Ethnic “purity” was tied to pure cleanliness, and hygiene became a central aspect of white identity. Carl A. Zimring here draws on historical evidence from statesmen, scholars, sanitarians, novelists, activists, advertisements, and the United States Census of Population to reveal changing constructions of environmental racism. The material consequences of these attitudes endured and expanded through the twentieth century, shaping waste management systems and environmental inequalities that endure into the twenty-first century. Today, the bigoted idea that non-whites are “dirty” remains deeply ingrained in the national psyche, continuing to shape social and environmental inequalities in the age of Obama.

Author(s): Carl A. Zimring
Publisher: New York University Press
Year: 2016

Language: English
Pages: 286
Tags: Racism, United States

Cover......Page 1
Contents......Page 8
Acknowledgments......Page 10
Introduction: The Biopolitics of Waste......Page 12
PART I. ANTEBELLUM ROOTS......Page 18
1. Thomas Jefferson’s Ideal......Page 20
2. The Decay of the Old......Page 38
PART II. NEW CONSTRUCTIONS......Page 60
3. Searching for Order......Page 62
4. “How Do You Make Them So Clean and White?”......Page 90
PART III. MATERIAL CONSEQUENCES......Page 118
5. Dirty Work, Dirty Workers......Page 120
6. Waste and Space Reordered......Page 148
PART IV. ASSIMILATION AND RESISTANCE......Page 178
7. Out of Waste into Whiteness......Page 180
8. “We Are Tired of Being at the Bottom”......Page 203
Conclusion: A Dirty History......Page 228
Notes......Page 234
Bibliography......Page 254
B......Page 274
C......Page 275
F......Page 276
H......Page 277
K......Page 278
M......Page 279
O......Page 280
S......Page 281
T......Page 282
W......Page 283
Z......Page 284
About the Author......Page 286