Cracker (pejorative)

"A pair of Georgia crackers" as depicted by illustrator James Wells Champney in the memoir The Great South by Edward King, 1873

Cracker, sometimes white cracker or cracka, is a usually disparaging term for white people,[1] especially poor rural whites in the Southern United States. In reference to a native of Florida or Georgia, however, it is sometimes used in a neutral or positive context or self-descriptively with pride (see Florida cracker and Georgia cracker).[2]

Etymology

Slave foremen in the antebellum South used bullwhips to punish African slaves, with such use of the whip being described as "cracking the whip." The white foremen who cracked these whips thus became known as "crackers."[3][4][5] Contemporary sources suggest, however, that it was not slaves but pack animals over which the whips were "cracked."[6][7][8]

"The whips used by some of these people are called 'crackers', from their having a piece of buckskin at the end. Hence the people who cracked the whips came to be thus named."[7]

An alternate theory traces this term from the Middle English cnac, craic, or crak, which originally meant the sound of a cracking whip but came to refer to "loud conversation, bragging talk".[9] In Elizabethan times this could refer to "entertaining conversation" (one may be said to "crack" a joke) and cracker could be used to describe loud braggarts; this term and the Gaelic spelling craic are still in use in Ireland, Scotland and Northern England. It is documented in Shakespeare's King John (1595): "What cracker is this same that deafs our ears with this abundance of superfluous breath?"[10][11] This usage is illustrated in a letter to the Earl of Dartmouth which reads:

"I should explain to your Lordship what is meant by Crackers; a name they have got from being great boasters; they are a lawless set of rascalls on the frontiers of Virginia, Maryland, the Carolinas, and Georgia, who often change their places of abode."[12]

The compound corn-cracker was used of poor white farmers (by 1808), especially of Georgians, but also extended to residents of northern Florida, from the cracked kernels of corn which formed the staple food of this class of people. This possibility is cited in the 1911 edition of Encyclopædia Britannica,[13] but the Oxford English Dictionary ("cracker", definition 4) says a derivation of the 18th-century simplex cracker from the 19th-century compound corn-cracker is doubtful.

A "cracker cowboy" with his Florida Cracker Horse and dog by Frederick Remington, 1895

Usage

Positive and Neutral usage

"Cracker" has also been used as a proud or jocular self-description. With the huge influx of new residents from the North, "cracker" is used informally by some white residents of Florida and Georgia ("Florida cracker" or "Georgia cracker") to indicate that their family has lived there for many generations. However, the term "white cracker" is seldom used self-referentially and remains a slur used to demean Caucasians.[14]

Frederick Law Olmsted, a prominent landscape architect from Connecticut, visited the South as a journalist in the 1850s and wrote that "some crackers owned a good many Negroes, and were by no means so poor as their appearance indicated."[15]

In On the Origin of Species, Charles Darwin quotes a Professor Wyman as saying, "one of the 'crackers' (i.e. Virginia squatters) added, 'we select the black members of a litter for raising, as they alone have a good chance of living.'"

In 1947, the student body of Florida State University voted on the name of their athletic symbol. From a list of more than 100 choices, Seminoles was selected. The other finalists, in order of finish, were Statesmen, Rebels, Tarpons, Fighting Warriors, and Crackers.[16][17]

Georgia Cracker label depicting a boy with peaches

Before the Milwaukee Braves baseball team moved to Atlanta, the Atlanta minor league baseball team was known as the "Atlanta Crackers". The team existed under this name from 1901 until 1965. They were members of the Southern Association from their inception until 1961, and members of the International League from 1961 until they were moved to Richmond, Virginia in 1965. However, it is suggested the name was derived from players "cracking" the baseball bat and this origin makes sense when considering the Atlanta Negro League Baseball team was known as the "Atlanta Black Crackers".

Singer-songwriter Randy Newman, on his socio-politically themed album Good Old Boys (1974) uses the term "cracker" on the song "Kingfish" ("I'm a cracker, You one too, Gonna take good care of you"). The song's subject is Huey Long, populist Governor and then Senator for Louisiana (1928–1935). The term is also used in "Louisiana 1927" from the same album, where the line "Ain't it a shame what the river has done to this poor cracker's land" is attributed to President Coolidge.

In 2008, former President Bill Clinton used the term "cracker" on Larry King Live to describe white voters he was attempting to win over for Barack Obama: "You know, they think that because of who I am and where my politic[al] base has traditionally been, they may want me to go sort of hustle up what Lawton Chiles used to call the 'cracker vote' there."[18]

Crackin' Good Snacks (a division of Winn-Dixie, a Southern grocery chain) has sold crackers similar to Ritz crackers under the name "Georgia Crackers". They sometimes were packaged in a red tin with a picture of The Crescent, an antebellum plantation house in Valdosta, Georgia.

The Florida Cracker Trail is a route which cuts across southern Florida, following the historic trail of the old cattle drives.

Pejorative usage

"Cracker" began use as a pejorative for White American (rather than specifically for poor or rural white southerners) in Black nationalism since the Civil Rights Movement, and more frequently as an insult in rap lyrics and in the context of race-related unrest and controversy since the 2000s.

In his 1964 speech "The Ballot or the Bullet", Malcolm X used the term "cracker" in reference to white people in a pejorative context.[19] In one passage, he remarked, "It's time for you and me to stop sitting in this country, letting some cracker senators, Northern crackers and Southern crackers, sit there in Washington, D.C., and come to a conclusion in their mind that you and I are supposed to have civil rights. There's no white man going to tell me anything about my rights."[19]

On November 29, 1993, in a speech given at Kean College in New Jersey, Nation of Islam spokesman Khallid Abdul Muhammad called Pope John Paul II "a no good cracker".[20]

Rapper Snoop Dogg boasts he "...make money off crackers" in the song "Go to Church" (2006) by Ice Cube. In the video the slur is not censored. Rapper and actor Ice Cube says the word cracker three times in a song about killing white people called "Enemy." The following is one example of his use of the racial slur, "Sent me a subpoena cause I kill more crackas than Bosnia Herzegovina."

In 2012, Michael Dunn shot and killed Jordan Davis in an argument over loud music coming from a car. Dunn claimed he had heard "Something, something cracker", "I should fucking kill that mother fucker", and seen the barrel of a shotgun.[21][22][23][24]

On June 27, 2013, in the trial of George Zimmerman, concerning the shooting of Trayvon Martin, a witness under examination (Rachel Jeantel) testified that Martin said (on the phone) to her that a "creepy ass cracker is following me" minutes before the altercation between Martin and Zimmerman occurred. Zimmerman's attorney then asked her if "creepy ass cracker" was an offensive term, to which she responded "no". That testimony and response brought about both media and public debate about the use of the word "cracker". A CNN report referenced the regional nature of the term, noting that cracker is regarded as a "sharp racial insult that resonates with white southerners even if white northerners don't get it."[25] MSNBC hosts went on to say that Rachel Jeantel was just speaking "Black English".

See also

References

Specific

  1. Cracker Definition from the Merriam Webster Online Dictionary
  2. Ste. Claire, Dana (2006). Cracker: Cracker Culture in Florida History. University Press of Florida.
  3. Smitherman, Dr. Geneva (2000), Black Talk: Words and Phrases from the Hood to the Amen Corner, Houghton Mifflin Books, 100.
  4. Herbst, Philip H (1997), The Color of Words: An Encyclopaedic Dictionary of Ethnic Bias in the United States, Intercultural Press, 6z1.
  5. Major, Clarence (1994). Juba to Jive: A Dictionary of African-American Slang. Puffin Books. ISBN 0-14-051306-X.
  6. Buckingham, James S (1842), The slave states of America, Fisher, Son, & Co., 210.
  7. 1 2 Thornton, Richard H (1912). An American Glossary. JB Lippincott., 218-219.
  8. Cattle and Cowboys in Florida Florida Center for Instructional Technology College of Education, University of South Florida, 2002.
  9. Dolan, T. P. (2006). A Dictionary of Hiberno-English. Gill & MacMillan. p. 64. ISBN 978-0-7171-4039-8
    • Shakespeare, William (2008) [1989]. Braunmuller, A. R., ed. The life and death of King John. Oxford World's Classics. New York: Oxford University Press. ISBN 978-0-19-953714-3.
  10. Wedgwood, Hensleigh (1878). A dictionary of English etymology. Macmillan & Co.
  11. Burrison, John A. (2002). "Cracker". Georgia Encyclopedia. Retrieved 2013-09-29.
  12. "Cracker". Encyclopædia britannica. 1911 Encyclopedia. 2006-08-25 [1911]. Retrieved 2010-11-01.
  13. "Project 21 Release: Black Network Suggests Apology from Rainbow Coalition After Official Calls NASCAR Fans "Cracker" and "Redneck"". Nationalcenter.org. 2003-07-09. Retrieved 2010-11-01.
  14. Olmsted, Frederick Law (1856). Our Slave States. Dix & Edwards. p. 454.
  15. "FSU Adopts Seminoles as the Nickname for Athletic Teams". Nolefan.org. Retrieved 2010-11-01.
  16. "www.garnetandgreat.com". www.garnetandgreat.com. Retrieved 2010-11-01.
  17. Smith, Ben (2008-09-24). "Bill Clinton: Will respect Jewish holidays, then 'hustle up ... cracker vote' in Florida – Ben Smith". Politico. Retrieved 2010-11-01.
  18. 1 2 X, Malcolm. "The Ballot or the Bullet". Retrieved 25 March 2012.
  19. "Farrakhan Invited To Speak at School". The New York Times. 1994-03-05.
  20. http://www.theroot.com/articles/culture/2014/02/did_white_male_insecurity_kill_jordan_davis.html?wpisrc=burger
  21. McWhorter, John (2014-02-17). "How Not to Lose Another Jordan Davis". Time.
  22. Walker, Tim (2014-02-16). "Hung jury for Michael Dunn, white killer of unarmed black teenager Jordan Davis". The Independent (London).
  23. "Accused "Loud Music" Shooter Dunn: "It was life or death"". CBS News. 2014-02-11.
  24. Foreman, Tom. "'Cracker' conveys history of bigotry that still resonates", CNN, 2 July 2013, accessed 30 July 2013.

General

External links


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