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The following references may be useful when improving this article in the future:
Flynt, Wayne (2004). Dixie's Forgotten People: the South's Poor Whites (new ed.). Bloomington, Indiana: Indiana University Press.
ISBN978-0-253-34513-4.
Schinko, Carsten (2010). "Why Trash? Thirteen Ways of Looking at Poor (White) Folks". Amerikastudien / American Studies. 55 (1): 143–164.
ISSN0340-2827.
JSTOR41158485.
Sullivan, Nell (2003). "Academic Constructions of 'White Trash'". In Adair, Vivyan Campbell and Dahlberg, Sandra L. (eds.). Reclaiming Class: Women, Poverty, and the Promise of Higher Education in America. Philadelphia: Temple University Press. pp. 53–66.
ISBN978-1-59213-021-4.
Taylor, Kirstine (2015). "Untimely Subjects: White Trash and the Making of Racial Innocence in the Postwar South". American Quarterly. 67: 55–79.
doi:
10.1353/aq.2015.0014.
ISSN1080-6490.
S2CID145307795.
At User:Beyond My Ken's suggestion, I'm making some suggestions for fixes here. There is lots of unfounded, outdated or unsourced information on this page, so I made a bold edit. My edits were reverted with minimal explanation (e.g., without saying which parts were problematic), so I am opening a discussion here for editors to get involved in so we can move forward with this.
Stylistically, this article also reads like a personal essay, rather than an encyclopedia entry, with lots of editorialising, comment and hyperbole. Some of these are matters of taste, but where they stray into POV, weasel words and peacock prose, I think they need to be addressed as well.
I believe that the existing article is of poor quality and has some serious problems which have to be addressed. We should avoid ownership attitudes when trying to come to a new consensus, and revert only when needed (WP:ROWN).
For example, the first paragraph in the history section is quite long but only has a single (quite old) source for some quite contentious information. It implies a large number of children were tricked into indentured servitude in the Americas, when more recent scholarship suggests most children transported in this way were sponsored by family members to come work on their land. Just because a single source makes such a claim, if doesn't mean it's noteworthy or should be given equal weight to other info.
Scholarship also indicates that the number of indentured workers at any one point was less than the overall number of people who were free wage labourers and ex-indentured servants at any one time (except for a few notable exceptions). The Wikipedia page
Indentured servitude in British America confirms most of this and is at odds with this section, which feels like ira paraphrasing a single author's view.
Lewisguile (
talk) 09:26, 22 May 2024 (UTC)reply
I will make a new topic for each area I believe needs improvement. We can then discuss them individually as requested.
Lewisguile (
talk) 09:26, 22 May 2024 (UTC)reply
Hello Beyond My Ken
I respectfully disagree with your opinion. I feel that the edits made by Lewisguile on this article were well evidenced, accurate and an important restoring of a factual telling of these histories.
I hope that a decision would be made which is a fair and respectful telling of this topic.
Thank you. So far, we've only had your response. I'll check back in a few days, when hopefully a few more people will see this. I am hoping the issue raised, and which triggered reversion, was more to do with stylistic choices (i.e., my copy edits) rather than the factual and bias issues I corrected. If so, then hopefully it'll be a quick job to address the specific issues raised below, and we can return to the subject of copy edits at a later date.
Lewisguile (
talk) 15:34, 24 May 2024 (UTC)reply
I should add, some of the edits which were reverted weren't mine, either. There were helpful edits made by others which I agreed with and which were also undone.
Lewisguile (
talk) 09:10, 27 May 2024 (UTC)reply
Factual issue: tobacco brides
The article claims 'The Virginia Company also imported boatloads of poor women to be sold as brides.' This is misleading. The women were transpored to America, but they weren't "sold". The men paid for their transport but they were incentivised with land, inheritance and the right to choose their own husbands.
The Atlantic confirms, 'Although the financially strapped Virginia Company was eager to recoup the costs of sponsoring the Jamestown brides, it was not selling women.'
Also, "boatloads" is arguably loaded language. A more neutral approach would be to indicate roughly how many women were transported.
Lewisguile (
talk) 11:56, 22 May 2024 (UTC)reply
Bias/POV: selective use of quotes
Quotes are often used selectively in this article, and often omit important context that works against the article’s presumed “thesis”. The arguments presented by scholars and critics are only partially referred to.
For example, Leah Donnella argues that “white trash” is also offensive to people of colour because a) it implies that those other people are inherently “trash” so don’t need a racial qualifier, and b) the tropes used to portray “white trash” as “bad poor” are the same tropes used to stereotype people of colour.
'Sociologist Matt Wray also claims that the term is used to perpetuate the long-held belief that poor whites are more racist than wealthier whites. This helps affluent whites to avoid criticism as racists while characterising poor whites as the embodiment of "real" prejudice. Wray states:
This is important context for why "white trash" is racist and covers a crucial part of the modern stereotype of "white trash" as more racist than other people.
The same happens with Lucas Lynch. He is quoted as saying "white trash" is racist, but the wider context is left out. This was what I suggested adding:
Notably, Lynch agrees with Wray (as does Donnella).
Kirstine Taylor also points out the contradiction of accusing "white trash" of a) being more racist than other whites and b) being more like people of colour, and specifically points out that poor whites are singled out as "racial transgressors" because of this. I suggested the following:
'While the term stereotypes poor whites as being more racist than other whites, Kirstine Taylor argues that the term is also used to accuse them of negative characteristics stereotypically ascribed to blacks, and even of allying with blacks against other whites, making them "racial transgressors" in the eyes of wealthier white people.' (Source:
https://www.jstor.org/stable/43823007)
So there is a consensus among these modern scholars/critics that a) "white trash" are portrayed as more racist than other whites and b) "white trash" tropes are connected to racist tropes used against other racial and ethnic groups too. This is therefore important context to add back in, and not remove.
Lewisguile (
talk) 10:44, 22 May 2024 (UTC)reply
Here there is an avoidance of direct language where it troubles the "thesis" of the article:
'Northerners claimed that the existence of white trash was the result of the system of slavery in the South, while Southerners worried that these clearly inferior whites would upset the "natural" class system which held that all whites were superior to all other races, especially blacks.'
Why not just call it what it is: white supremacy? This ties into the point about editorialising (also: "clearly inferior" is less suitable than "allegedly inferior").
Lewisguile (
talk) 11:05, 22 May 2024 (UTC)reply
I saw, and I think that's a good idea. Wray and Taylor seem better anyway (Lynch is just reiterating what they said).
Lewisguile (
talk) 11:29, 31 May 2024 (UTC)reply
Prose style: Overwriting
This one is more subjective, but I'm leaving it here for completeness' sake. Some of the text uses weasel words and peacock prose, which we can mark in-line for now. More general issues are covered below.
Firstly, the prose is often very verbose and archaic. Consider this sentence:
'In the popular imagination of the mid-19th century, "poor white trash" were a "curious" breed of degenerate, gaunt and, haggard people who suffered from numerous physical and social defects. They were dirty, callow, ragged, cadaverous, leathery, and emaciated, and had feeble children with distended abdomens who were wrinkled and withered and looked aged beyond their physical years, so that even 10-year-olds' "countenances are stupid and heavy and they often become dropsical and loathsome to sight," according to a New Hampshire schoolteacher. The skin of a poor white Southerner had a "ghastly yellowish-white" tinge to it, like "yellow parchment", and was waxy looking;, or they were so white they almost appeared to be albinos. The parents were listless and slothful, did not properly care for their children, and were addicted to alcohol. They were looked on with contempt by both upper-class planters and yeoman – the non-slave-owning smallholders.'
All of these descriptors aren't needed. Gaunt, haggard, cadaverous, emaciated all mean roughly the same thing (=they look thin and deathly). We don't need all of them. You could summarise it as saying they suffer from "numerous physical and social defects" or you could just trim down the examples so they're not long lists of adjectives. Similarly, wrinkled, withered, aged beyond their physical years (=they look old).
This occurs throughout the article.
Lewisguile (
talk) 10:50, 22 May 2024 (UTC)reply
See also: 'lived in poverty because of inherent traits in their nature.' Inherent traits are part of one's nature, so you don't need to say both. 'Inherent traits' alone will suffice.
Lewisguile (
talk) 11:06, 22 May 2024 (UTC)reply
Editorialising
This is one paragraph:
'In the mid-19th century South, even upper-class parents were extremely indulgent of their children, encouraging both boys and girls to be aggressive, even ferocious. They soon learned that they were expected to grab for what they wanted, wrestle with their siblings in front of their parents, disobey parental orders, make a racket with their toys, and physically attack visitors. Patrician girls would later be taught to be proper young ladies, but boys continued to be unrestrained, lest they become effeminate. These behaviors – which were also practiced by poorer whites to the extent their circumstances allowed – propelled young men into gambling, drinking, whoring and fighting, which "manly" behavior was more or less expected – but which their mothers carefully did not allow themselves to be aware of – and which was certainly preferred to effeminacy. This pattern of child-rearing was predominate in the backwoods, where it was not limited to the upper class, but could be found among yeoman and poor whites alike. For white trash, given this method of raising children, combined with violent folkways inherited from their English, Irish, and Scottish progenitors, it is not unremarkable that their culture should have been a violent one.'
As well as featuring a number of archaic words ("lest", "whoring"), it also displays editorialising and a clear POV (we describe children as "even ferocious", mothers "carefully" don't pay attention, presumed violence is clearly deemed "unremarkable"). If a reliable source has argued that these "violent folkways" were inherited from British and Irish progenitors, for example, then we should quote that source, instead of saying it in Wikipedia's voice.
Lewisguile (
talk) 11:00, 22 May 2024 (UTC)reply
See also:
'Poor Southern whites in the 19th century were often casual about male sexual activity outside of marriage, sometimes exhibiting a moral informality that was only slightly suppressed by the rise of evangelical revivalism and increasing church discipline. This behavior was part of a roistering tradition that had roots in the British origins of the class, and differentiated white trash from both the yeoman class and landed gentry of the plantations, where church proscriptions and social inhibitions held sway, respectively.'
More archaic language and presenting sources' opinions on causation as fact.
Lewisguile (
talk) 11:02, 22 May 2024 (UTC)reply
Again, the article states opinion as if it were fact:
'Americans may have degenerated somewhat in comparison to their ancestors, one of the weakening effects of civilization, but they still maintained their superiority over other "races", and white Southerners of all kinds, but especially poor ones, were themselves inferior to their countrymen from New England and the north'
Firstly, this is only a reference to white or European Americans; non-European Americans are erased by this statement. Secondly, "somewhat" is a weasel word. Thirdly, that white Americans have "degenerated" due to the "weakening effects of civilization" and yet still maintain "their superiority" is clearly an opinion. We should make this clear with appropriate language.
Lewisguile (
talk) 11:10, 22 May 2024 (UTC)reply
Here's another bit:
'Use of "white trash" epithets has been extensively reported in African American culture. Some black authors have noted that blacks, when taunted by whites as "niggers", taunted back, calling them "white trash" or "crackers". Black parents often teach their children that poor whites are "white trash". The epithet appears in black folklore. As an example, blacks who were slaves would, when out of earshot of whites that owned slaves, refer to harsh slave owners as a "low down" man, "lower than poor white trash", or "a brute, really".'
The first part, bolded, implies that this is an ongoing situation, but the sources used are from 1999 and 2001. I think this needs to be contextualised as historic unless we have a good source to indicate this is still an ongoing issue.
The last sentence also over-labours the point and is overwritten (it's enough to say "refer to harsh slave owners as "lower than poor white trash").
Lewisguile (
talk) 11:39, 22 May 2024 (UTC)reply
And here:
'In 2000, Chuck Jackson argued in the African American Review that Hurston's meditation on abjection, waste, and the construction of class and gender identities among poor whites reflects the eugenics discourses of the 1920s.'
The word "reflects" could imply Hurston herself believes in eugenics or is endorsing them. A more accurate summary of the review would be that she "critiques" these discourses (she tries to compare the plight of poor whites and black people, according to the source).
Lewisguile (
talk) 11:41, 22 May 2024 (UTC)reply
Factual issue: Indentured servitude
The opening paragraph of the history section is:
'Beginning in the early 17th century, the
City of Londonshipped their unwanted excess population, including vagrant children, to the American colonies – especially the
Colony of Virginia, the
Province of Maryland, and the
Province of Pennsylvania – where they became not
apprentices, as the children had been told, but
indentured servants, working particularly in the fields, especially in Maryland and Tidewater Virginia. Even before the beginning of the
Atlantic slave trade brought Africans to the
British colonies in 1619, this influx of "transported" English,
Welsh,
Scots, and
Irish was a crucial part of the American workforce. The
Virginia Company also imported boatloads of poor women to be sold as brides. The numbers of these all-but-slaves was significant: by the middle of the 17th century, at a time when the population of Virginia was 11,000, only 300 were Africans, who were outnumbered by English, Irish and Scots indentured servants. In
New England, one-fifth of the
Puritans were indentured servants. More indentured servants were sent to the colonies as a result of
insurrections in Ireland.
Oliver Cromwell sent hundreds of
Irish Catholics to British North America during the
Irish Confederate Wars (1641–1653).'
This paragraph only has a single reference and yet there are numerous claims, presented as fact, which conflict with the material at
Indentured servitude in British America.
We need a direct citation for shipping unwanted people and orphaned children to the Americas against their will. I am almost certain this may have some basis in fact, but I can't adjudicate how accurate it is without such a source. Most modern scholars say that the majority of transported children were brought over by their extended families to work.
It conflates penal transportations with indentured servitude. We should be accurate and specific when talking about each.
The "selling" of brides is hyperbole and misleading (see topic up the page).
"all-but-slaves" is editorialising. If this is a direct quote, make that clear. Indentured servitude is a specific form of bonded servitude, sometimes described as slavery, but we shouldn't present an opinion on that as fact. We should also be accurate to avoid the
Irish slaves myth.
"only 300 were Africans..." is partial information. How many were from other groups, specifically? It's editorialising in that it seems to present a very vague point to add to a "thesis". Again, let's avoid the Irish slaves myth too.
"More indentured servants" -- how many? Two? A million? It's vague and seems only added to build to a thesis.
There's no talk about the duration of indentured servitude, that most Europeans were engaged in free wage labour, or that the number of free and formerly indentured workers outnumbered indentured servants at any given time, with some exceptions.
Apart from the issues above, I think one thing that needs to be considered about this article is its scope. It starts out about a "derogatory racial and classist slur", but expands to include an over-sized and detailed history of poor, white, southern Americans. Is this the purpose of the article? Is this not content that should be in a more suitable article, rather than as part of an article about a slur? Is this content not already elsewhere in Wikipedia? Do the sources for all this even include the phrase? There is a distinct hint of
WP:COATRACK about it all.
Escape Orbit(Talk) 11:20, 28 May 2024 (UTC)reply
Very fair point. I did wonder that myself.
Lewisguile (
talk) 17:43, 28 May 2024 (UTC)reply
The most heavily cited source in the
§ History section is
Isenberg (2016). "White trash" is literally in the title. That said, the book is from a
trade publisher rather than an academic press, and claims to tell an
"untold history" by "upend[ing] assumptions" in the vein of many a bestseller. So it's doubtful whether the source represents
current scholarly consensus. —
Sangdeboeuf (
talk) 18:07, 30 May 2024 (UTC)reply
I think this potentially accounts for the disparities between, e.g., her account of indenture and the actual Wikipedia page on the same topic. Isenberg is probably building a thesis to sell her book, so she is naturally being selective, and simplifying for a mainstream audience.
Lewisguile (
talk) 11:35, 31 May 2024 (UTC)reply