Mammy archetype
A mammy, also spelled mammie,[2] is a Southern United States archetype for a black woman who worked as a nanny and/or general housekeeper that, often in a white family, nursed the family's children.[3] The word mammy originated as an alteration of mamma, meaning mother.[4]
History
One of the earliest fictionalized versions of the mammy figure was Aunt Chloe in Harriet Beecher Stowe's Uncle Tom's Cabin, which was first published in 1852.[5] As the mammy figure progressed into the 20th century, the persona was sacrificed to the demands of the white majority, who widely mythologized the figure. Memoirs that describe the roles of mammies from the 1890s to the 1920s downplayed the mammy's relationship with her family.[5]
The background of the Mammy figure was the history of slavery in the United States. African American female slaves were tasked with the duties of domestic workers in White American households. Their duties included preparing meals, cleaning homes, and nursing and rearing their owners' children. Out of these circumstances arose the image of the mammy.[6]
While originating in the slavery period, the mammy figure rose to prominence during the Reconstruction Era. In the Southern United States, the mammy played a role in historical revisionism efforts to reinterpret and legitimize their legacy of chattel slavery and racial oppression. The mammy image endured there to the 20th century. In 1923, the United Daughters of the Confederacy proposed the erection of a mammy statue on National Mall. The proposed statue would be dedicated to "The Black Mammy of the South".[6]
The historicity of the mammy figure is questionable. Historical accounts point to the identity of most female domestic servants as teenagers and young adults, not "grandmotherly types" such as the mammy. According to Black Feminist Thought (1990) by Patricia Hill Collins, the life expectancy of enslaved women was 33.6 years, meaning that they died at too young an age to fit the mammy portrayal. Melissa Harris-Perry has argued that the mammy was a creation of the imagination of the White supremacy, which reimagined the powerless, coerced slave girls as soothing, comfortable, and consenting women.[6] In 1981, Andy Warhol included the mammy in his Myths series, alongside other mythological and folklore characters such as Santa Claus, Mickey Mouse, and Superman.[6]
In Mammy. A Century of Race, Gender, and Southern Memory (2008), Kimberly Wallace-Sanders argued that the mammy's stereotypical attributes point to the source of her inspiration: "a long lasting and troubled marriage of racial and gender essentialism, mythology, and southern nostalgia.[6]
The romanticized mammy image survives in the popular imagination of the modern United States. Chanequa Walker-Barnes, a licensed psychologist, argues that political correctness has led to the mammy figure being less prevalent in the 21st century culture, but the mammy archetype still influences the portrayal of African American women in fiction. Women portrayed as good caretakers, nurturing, selfless, strong, and supportive. Playing the supporting characters to white protagonists. She cites as examples Miranda Bailey, Mercedes Jones, and Ivy Wentz.[6]
Sociological perspective on the Mammy Archetype
Collins would describe the overall treatment of Whites to Blacks as "othering."[7] When people engage in “othering” it creates a binary in which the "subject" (the dominate group) objectifies the “other” (the minority group) and shapes their identity and reality (Collins, 2000, p. 77).[7] For example, Whites view themselves as the "subjects" who have the right to “define their own reality, establish their own identities” whereas Blacks are the objects whose history is defined as it relates to the history of the "subject" (Collins, 2000, p. 78).[8] The process of defining relationships as binaries creates an incredible amount of tension between different races, genders and other groups. Black women are subjected to controlling images like the mammy, which make it difficult for them to rise past oppressive structures in work, education or a number of other institutions. The oppression can take the form of race, class, gender and sexual orientation attacks (Oppression).[9]
According to a study conducted by Signal Alon and Yitchak Haberfeld, nine years post-schooling, Black women earn the lowest hourly wages compared to White and Hispanic women: $9.01, $10.73 and $11.81, respectively (Alon & Haberfeld, 2007, p. 378).[9] Additionally, minorities like Black women have the highest infant mortality rate as well as births out of wedlock (Baca Zinn & Thornton Dill, 1994, p. 4).[10] Lastly, they are more likely than White women to live in poverty and be single mothers (Baca Zinn & Thornton Dill, 1994, p. 4).[10]
Maxine Baca Zinn and Bonnie Thornton Dill state that women of color are subordinated because, “patterns of hierarchy, domination, oppression based on race, class, gender and sexual orientation are built into the structure of our society” (Baca Zinn & Dill, 1994, p. 4).[10] Thus, inequality is socially constructed phenomenon with biological factors like race and gender at the center. Baca Zinn and Thornton Dill argue that biological factors relevant because they are “socially ranked and rewarded” (Baca Zinn & Thornton Dill, 1994, p. 4).[10] By using these biological factors, society has a tendency to differentiate between cultural groups and then rank these groups as they compare to “a presumed standard” i.e. being a White male (Baca Zinn & Thornton Dill, 1994, p. 4).[10] Although these biological factors are inherited, thus out of any individual’s control, Black women are still oppressed.
Evidently, Black women are forced to believe that the only way to overcome their oppression is through a higher education and/or a successful job. Yet, the "subject" (usually White males) fail to acknowledge that many Black women come from lower-class or uneducated backgrounds and do not have the resources to attain a higher education and/or a long-term occupation. The "subject" will continue to oppress the "object" because they are colorblind (Collins, 2000).[11] To be colorblind means to think that social inequalities do not exist (Collins, 2000).[11] As they do not exist, the White hierarchy continues to oppress Black women through images like Aunt Jemima and the Pine-Sol lady.
Characteristics
The mammy was usually portrayed as an older woman, overweight, and dark skinned. She was an idealized figure of a caregiver: amiable, loyal, maternal, non-threatening, obedient, and submissive. The mammy figure demonstrated deference to White authority. On occasion, the mammy was also depicted as a sassy woman. She was devoted to her owners/employers and her primary goal in life was to care for their needs. Some portrayals had the mammy have a family of her own. But her caregiving duties would always come first, leading to the mammy being portrayed as a neglectful parent or grandparent.[6]
Sister Citizen: Shame, Stereotypes, and Black Women in America (2011) by Melissa Harris-Perry describes the relationship between the mammy and other African Americans: "Mammy was not a protector or defender of black children or communities. She represented a maternal ideal, but not in caring for her own children. Her love, doting, advice, correction, and supervision were reserved exclusively for white women and children." [6]
The mammy was contrasted with the Jezebel stereotype which depicted younger African American women as conniving and promiscuous. The mammy was occasionally depicted as a religious woman. More often than not, the mammy was an asexual figure, "devoid of any personal desires that might tempt her to sin". This helped the mammy serve as both a confidant and a moral guide to her young charges, capable of keeping them in line.[6]
Mammy. A Century of Race, Gender, and Southern Memory (2008) by Kimberly Wallace-Sanders includes other characteristics of the mammy. A large dark body, a round smiling face, a deeply sonorous and effortlessly soothing voice, a raucous laugh. Her personal attributes include infinite patience, self-deprecating wit, an implicit understanding and acceptance of her own inferiority, and her devotion to whites.[6] The mammy was also large-breasted, desexualized, and potentially hostile towards men. Many of these characteristics were denied to African American female slaves but were generally attributed to the mammy.
Manner of dress
The dress often reflected the status of her owner or employer. The mammy was usually neat and clean and wore attire that was suitable for her domestic duties. Sometimes a mammy considered herself to be dressed up, but that was usually just an addition of a bonnet and a silk velvet mantle, which probably belonged to her mistress. Sometimes she would even don a Sunday black silk.[12]
Education
Like most of the slaves at that time, the mammy was often illiterate though intelligent in her own sense. Among many of the slaves, there could have been a mammy who possessed the abilities to read and write, often taught to her by the children of the family for whom she worked. However, as intelligent as she might have been, most of her intelligence was a result of past experiences and conflicts. In particular, a mammy of an aristocratic family could be identified by her air of refinement.[12]
Living conditions
When the mammy did not stay in the house of her master or was not busy attending to the needs of the master's children, she would usually live in a cabin that was distinguished differently than the cabins of the other servants in either size or structure with her husband and children. Her cabin stood near the master's house but at a distance from the cabins of the other servants.[12]
Although the duties were far less tiring and strenuous than those of the other servants, her hours were often long, leaving little time for her own leisure. It was not until the mammy had become too old for these duties that she would enjoy any home life of her own, since she was always preoccupied with the home life of her master. There was a flexibility about the mammy's duties that distinguished her from just being an ordinary nurse or a wet nurse, even though there was a possibility that she could perform either of these tasks. In some of the more wealthy households, the mammy had assistants that would help her take care of the household's children. These women were often much younger than the mammy herself.[12]
The mammy, unlike the other servants, was usually not up for sale, and the children of the mammy would be kept in the same family for as long as possible, retaining the same relationships that the mammy had with the master.[12]
Roles in plantation households
The role of the mammy in plantation households grew out of the roles of African American slaves on the plantation. African American servants played vital roles in the plantation household. The majority of these duties generally were related to caring for the children of the family, thus relieving the mistress of the house of all the drudgery work that is associated with child care. When the children had grown up and were able to take care of themselves properly, the mammy's main role was to help the mistress with household tasks. As her years of service with the family increased, the mammy's sphere of influence increased as well. She was next to the mistress in authority and had the ability to give orders to everybody in the house.[12]
The mammy was often considered to be part of the family as much as its blood members were considered. Although she was considered of a lower status, she was still included in the inner circle. She has often been referred to as a "unique type of foster motherhood." Aside from just tending to the needs of the children, the mammy was also responsible for teaching the proper etiquette to them, such as addressing the elders on the plantation as "aunt" or "uncle", as well as what was best to say on a particular occasion and what was not. The mammy was able to discipline their children whenever they performed something undesirable and was able to retain their respect towards her, even after the children had grown to adults.[12]
Media portrayal
Aunt Jemima was created in 1889; her image as a happy black woman wearing an apron and a red bandana is extremely oppressive (The Quaker Oats Company). [13] Similar to the mammy image, Aunt Jemima is happy to cook for and serve the white family she belongs to. By depicting these women as “content” the white supremacy absolves their responsibility for centuries of black slavery and their consequent oppression.[13] Her image was altered again with the removal of the bandana in 1989 The Quaker Oats Company. Although a “symbol of slavery” has been removed, her subordinated position still exists. Aunt Jemima now has a lighter complexion and pearl earrings which make her look like the “ideal housewife”; a housewife whose duty is to serve the patriarchy.[13]
Like the image of Aunt Jemima, the image of the mammy was given a contemporary makeover as well as she appeared in television sitcoms. Some of the more contemporary features that the mammy received were that her head rag was removed, she became smaller in size, as well as lighter in complexion. In addition, her employer was not always white.[14] Some of the contemporary television sitcoms which featured mammies include Maude, where Esther Rolle, who played the character Florida, worked as a domestic for a white family. A spin-off titled Good Times was made, where Rolle's character became the center of the series; the show focused on her family, which lived generally happy lives in a low-income housing project. Other television series that featured mammies as characters include That's My Mama, Gimme a Break! and What's Happening!!. When other contemporary mammies emerged, they usually retained their occupation as a domestic and exhibited these physical feature changes; however, their emotional qualities remained intact. These contemporary mammies continued to be quick witted and remained highly opinionated. A new twist in the outlook of the contemporary mammy occurred in the sitcom The Jeffersons, where Florence, a maid played by Marla Gibbs, worked for an affluent African American family.[5]
One of the more recent caricatures that still exist in today's society is Tyler Perry's Madea character. Madea is a massive heavyset black woman who is known for her violent acts throughout the Tyler Perry films. She contributes the stereotypes about African American women being bitter, mean, and violent towards everyday people. Tyler Perry also has another character that contributes to the stereotypes amongst the African American community which is the "Crack Mother" caricature. He received a lot of backlash for regenerating this myth of black mothers. In the sitcom The House of Paynes there is a crack mother character who cannot provide for her children and she undergoes the stereotypical detoxification.[15]
Another existing image of the mammy appears by way of the Pine-Sol lady. This image depicts her wearing plain and loose-fitting clothing with cornrow braids Pine-Sol Lady . She often uses words like “honey” and “baby” in advertising her cleaning product: Pine-Sol.[13] This vocabulary still depicts the mammy as subservient. Black slaves used these words to address the white children they were responsible for. By continually being shown as servants, Black women are seen as capable of only lower status jobs.[13]
Additionally, mammy characters were a staple of minstrel show, giving rise to many sentimental show tunes dedicated to or mentioning mammies, including Al Jolson's My Mammy from The Jazz Singer and Judy Garland's performance of Swanee from A Star is Born (a song originally made popular by Jolson). Various mammy characters appeared in radio and TV shows. One prominent example was the radio and later short-lived television series Beulah, which featured a black maid named Beulah who helped solve a white family's problems. In the 1940s and early 1950s, Mammy Two Shoes, the housekeeper in the Tom and Jerry shorts presented an animated example of the mammy, complete with dark skin and a Black accent. As a parody of this stereotype, the 1984 Frank Zappa album Thing-Fish featured characters called "mammy nuns".
In the early 20th century, the mammy character was common in many films. Hattie McDaniel won an Oscar for her performance as "Mammy" in Gone with the Wind in 1939. Common roles in American mass media seeming to be reserved for the Mammy stereotype include secretaries, hospital/medical practice assistants and Greasy spoon diner waitresses.
The "Mammy" character is used in many films, novels, television shows and video games, including:
- Mammy as played by Jennie Lee in D.W. Griffith's 1915 silent epic The Birth of a Nation.
- Aunt Chloe, Uncle Tom's Cabin, 1852
- Aunt Jemima, portrayed by freed slave, Nancy Green, 1893-1923. Following Nancy Green are a long line of Aunt Jemimas, including: Anna Robinson (1923-1951), Edith Wilson (1948-1966), Ethel Ernestine Harper (the 1950s)
- Mammy, played by Hattie McDaniel, Gone with the Wind, 1939
- Mammy Two Shoes, Tom and Jerry series
- Scrub Me Mama with a Boogie Beat, the 1941 hit boogie-woogie song's animated short features many depictions of Mammy, starting with the title card, through to the admonishment, "Look here, Mammy. That ain't no way to wash clothes! What you all need is rhythm!" to the literal "The End" displayed across a mammy's backside.
- Louise Beavers played a mammy, cook, slave, or servant in almost all of her film roles. The more well known are: Belle Starr (1941), Jack London (1943), Imitation of Life (1934), I Dream of Jeanie (1952) and Holiday Inn (1942)
- Calpurnia, To Kill a Mockingbird, 1960
- Delilah, played by Virginia Capers, Big Jake, 1971
- Belle, played by Madge Sinclair, Roots, 1977
- Viola Watkins, played by Ruby Dee, The Golden Girls, 1990
- Louise, played by Margo Moorer, Forrest Gump, 1994
- Ma Soupswill, Rare Ltd., Grabbed by the Ghoulies, 2003
- Aunt Lou, played by Cleo King, season three of the Deadwood TV series, 2006
- Aibileen Clark, played by Viola Davis, The Help, 2011
- Minny Jackson, played by Octavia Spencer, The Help, 2011
- Constantine Jefferson, played by Cicely Tyson, The Help, 2011
See also
Notes
- ↑ "Portrait of Mauma Mollie". World Digital Library. 1850. Retrieved 2013-06-02.
- ↑ Contemporary Caribbean Women's Poetry: Making Style by Denise DeCaires Narain; p.87; "[...] the continued commodification of the black woman as 'mammie' figure."
- ↑ Merriam-Webster Dictionary
- ↑ "Definition of Mammy by Merriam-Webster". Merriam-Webster. Retrieved January 8, 2016.
- 1 2 3 Mythification of the Mammy Figure
- 1 2 3 4 5 6 7 8 9 10 Walker-Barnes (2014), p. 85-88
- 1 2 Collins, Patricia Hill (2000). Black Feminist Thought. New York, NY: Routledge. p. 77. ISBN 0-415-96472-5.
- ↑ Collins, Patricia Hill (2000). Black Feminist Thought. New York, NY: Routledge. p. 78. ISBN 0-415-96472-5.
- 1 2 Alon & Haberfeld, Sigal & Yitchak (November 2007). "Labor Force Attachment and the Evolving Wage Gap between White, Black, Hispanic Young Women". Work and Occupations 34 (4): 378. doi:10.1177/0730888407307247.
- 1 2 3 4 5 Baca Zinn & Thornton Dill, Maxine and Bonnie (1994). Women of Color in U.S. Society. Philadelphia: Temple University Press. p. 4. ISBN 1-56639-105-9.
- 1 2 Collins, Patricia Hill (2000). Black Feminist Thought. New York, NY: Routledge. ISBN 0-415-96472-5.
- 1 2 3 4 5 6 7 The Journal of Negro History
- 1 2 3 4 5 Kowalski, Jennifer (2009). "Stereotypes of History: Reconstructing Truth and the Black Mammy". Transcending Silence.
- ↑ From Mammy to Miss America and Beyond
- ↑ Carpenter, Tracy (December 1, 2012). "Construction of the Crack Mother Icon". Western Journal of Black Studies.
Sources
- Walker-Barnes, Chanequa (2014), "Jezebels, Mammies, and Matriarchs", Too Heavy a Yoke: Black Women and the Burden of Strength, Wipf and Stock, ISBN 978-1620320662
References
- Bernstein, Robin, Racial Innocence: Performing American Childhood from Slavery to Civil Rights, (New York: New York University Press, 2011), 157, 174-176, 180-181.
- Bogle, Donald, Toms, Coons, Mulattoes, Mammies, & Bucks: An Interpretive History of Blacks in American Films (New York: Continuum, 1973/1994), 57.
- Camacho, Roseanne V., "Race, Region, and Gender in a Reassessment of Lillian Smith." Southern Women: Histories and Identities. Columbia: University of Missouri Press, 1992. p. 168.
- Clinton, Catherine, The Plantation Mistress: Woman's World in the Old South (New York: Pantheon Books, 1982), 201-202.
- Jewel, K Sue, From Mammy to Miss America and Beyond: Cultural Images and the Shaping of US Social Policy, 1993.
- Parkhurst, Jessie W., The Role of the Black Mammy in the Plantation Household, The Journal of Negro History, Vol. 23, No. 3
- Smith, Lillian, Killers of the Dream. New York: W.W. Norton, 1949. p. 123-4.
- Thurber, Cheryl, "The Development of the Mammy Image and Mythology." Southern Women: Histories and Identities, Columbia: University of Missouri Press, 1992. p. 96.
- Turner, Patricia A., Ceramic Uncles & Celluloid Mammies: Black Images and Their Influence on Culture (New York: Anchor Books, 1994), 44.
External links
Wikimedia Commons has media related to Mammies. |
- Pilgrim, David. "The Mammy Caricature". Jim Crow Museum of Racist Memorabilia. Ferris State University, Michigan.
- Mammy Dearest: African-American House Servants in Birth of the Nation, Gone with the Wind, and Song of the South American Studies at the University of Virginia
- Wallace-Sanders, Kimberly (June 15, 2009). "Southern Memory, Southern Monuments, and the Subversive Black Mammy". Southern Spaces.
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