TOWARDS
THE END OF AUNT JEMIMA
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Pancake flipping. Broadly grinning.
Greasy, smiling, shining face. Teeth broadly flashing a huge show of
white. Head rag, bandanna wearing, servile, anything for the white
folks. Icon of the world of segregation and meek utter unconditional
unending servitude.
The racist, sexist image of Aunt
Jemima has become entrenched into the subconscious memory and culture of all
Americans, and like a health-destroying bad habit, has sneaked into our existence
and psyches as to have become a normal image that no longer holds feelings of
disgust, shame and revulsion. That the manufacturers of Aunt Jemima have for
over 100 years been able to so skillfully integrate this disparaging symbol
into American culture, as to lend it as imparting endearing qualities across
all racial, gender and ethnic groups, has had a profound impact on the image
black Americans have had of themselves and of the image whites, and other
races, have had of black people, and especially the image that black women have
had to contend with.
That black women were relegated to
being wet-nurses for the children of white people, that this asexual image of
the all-giving mammy was created by white men to cover up their massive rapes
of black women during slavery, regardless of the fact that black women in
slavery on average were very thin/skinny because of a sub-standard slave diet,
and that the majority of black women slaves did not live past the age of fifty
years, this image was created to present the propaganda that black women were
so matronly, so obese, so un-womanly, that there was no way any white man would
have sex with such a black woman, let alone rape her.
Hence the creation of the Mammy/Aunt
Jemima icon to justify rape of black women not only during slavery, but the
continued perpetuation of legally and publically sanctioned rape of black women
during Jim Crow segregation. Contrary to what many people think, the many black
women who were forced into white homes to care for the white family because of
the role of domestic servant was the only employment they could obtain, the
image of the well-endowed, obese black Mammy is a lie. The majority of the
black women who worked in white homes during segregation were young, slender
black women. The creation of Aunt Jemima by white men was to soothe the
conscious and fears of white women who felt that these “Jezebels” (ironic that
the white men who raped black women would have the balls to call black women
whores after they, the white men, raped black women for generations, and would
slander black women with the epithet “Whore/Jezebel), but, white men created
the Mammy image so white women would not have to fear that the Jezebel black
woman would lure their weak-willed white men away, so that white women would
not have to fear that these “temptresses” would wreck their already in turmoil
white home life, therefore, Aunt Jemima was created to give the South an image
of tranquil, docile, happy ex-slave black people who only lived to serve the white
people’s bottomless needs. On the contrary, the many black women who were
forced into working in white people’s homes resented this type of work and the
horrors that came with it, since the job of domestic was all that was allowed
to black women then.
And the all-pervasive degrading
image of Aunt Jemima has relegated black women into a low economic status of
life, forever slaves to a hateful stereotypical image of the all-serving,
selfless, all-giving, give-out, work to the death, slave like a mule hitched to
a plow, deny any and all essence of her being a human being—–MAMMY.
And despite all their efforts,
despite all their work and accomplishments that so many black women have done,
the mammy image always forces them back into the slave plantation kitchen
of many American’s minds. As the author, Deborah Gray White, author of “Ar’nt I
a Woman?” put it so well:
“In the pictures painted by
Americans, Mammy towered behind every orange blossom, mint julep, erring white
child, and gracious Southern lady. . . .In the 1930s, 1940s, 1950s Hollywood
film producers and New York advertising agencies built their own monuments to
Mammy. With their films, their pancake boxes, and their syrup bottles, they
imprinted the image of Mammy on the American psyche more indelibly perhaps than
ever before.We probably can not measure the effect of the mass packaging of
Mammy with precision, but the fact is that Mammy became a national symbol of
perfect domesticity at the very time that millions of black women were leaving
the cotton fields of the South in search of employment in Northern urban areas.
Surely there is some connection between the idea of Mammy, the service and
domestic jobs readily offered to black women, and their near-exclusion from
other kinds of work.”
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A CHRONOLOGY OF THE HISTORY OF THE
RACIST STEREOTYPE AUNT JEMIMA
1889
Pearl Milling Company founded by
Charles Rutt and Chris Underwood.
Creation of the first ready-mixed
pancake flour.
Aunt Jemima chosen by Charles Rutt as
advertising’s first living trademark.
Aunt Jemima Manufacturing Company
replaces Pearl Milling Company.
1890
Aunt Jemima trademark registered by
Bert Underwood, brother of Chris.
Aunt Jemima Manufacturing Company
sold to R. T. Davis Milling Company.
1893
Nancy Green debuts as Aunt Jemima at
World’s Columbian Exhibition, Chicago, 1893.
1895
Aunt Jemima paper dolls introduced.
1900
Master of promotional strategies for
Aunt Jemima trademark, R. T. Davis, dies.
1903
Reorganization of R. T. Davis
Milling Company.
1905
Aunt Jemima rag dolls introduced.
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1914
R. T.Davis Milling Company
reincorporated as Aunt Jemima Mills Company.
1926
Aunt Jemima Mills Company sold to
Quaker Oats Company for $4,202,077.28
1940S
Painted package illustration of Aunt
Jemima becomes a realistic photograph.
1955
Aunt Jemima Restaurant opens at
Disneyland.
1960s
Aunt Jemima image featured on
packages and in advertising campaigns becomes a composite.
1989
Aunt Jemima trademark is 100 years
old.
1989
Trademark modified and reintroduced
on May 27.
1991
Quaker Oats/Aunt Jemima forms an
alliance with the National Council of Negro Women.
Women Who Have Portrayed Aunt Jemima |
Nancy Green (1834 - 1923)
The first Aunt Jemima, Nancy Green, was born a slave in 1834.
She signed an exclusive contract which gave her the right to portray the
character for the rest of her life. Green was featured at the 1893 World’s
Columbian Exposition in Chicago. Green, as Aunt Jemima, cooked pancakes, sang
songs, and told stories of the Old South.
Anna Robinson ( ? - 1951)
In 1933, Anna Robinson became the second Aunt Jemima, and
was featured at the Chicago Century of Progress Exhibition. Robinson’s likeness
was captured on a painted portrait, an image that changed the product’s packaging.
Edith Wilson ( ? - 1981)
Prior to becoming the character, Edith Wilson was a classic
blues singer and actress in Chicago. She appeared in “Amos ‘n’ Andy” and the
movie, To Have and Have Not. Quaker Oats had Wilson
portray Aunt Jemima on radio, television, and in personal appearances from 1948
to 1966. Wilson was the first Aunt Jemima to appear in television commercials.
Ethel Ernestine Harper (
? - 1981)
Ethel Ernestine Harper was Aunt Jemima during the 1950s.
Prior to assuming the role, Harper graduated from college at the age of 17 and
became a teacher. As an actress, Harper performed in the Hot
Mikado
and the Negro Follies.
Rosie Hall (1900 - 1967)
Rosie Hall worked for Quaker Oats in the company’s
advertising department until she discovered their need for a new Aunt Jemima.
In 1988 they declared her grave an historical landmark.
Aylene Lewis ( ? - 1964)
Aylene Lewis first portrayed Aunt Jemima in 1955 at a
restaurant of the same name at Disneyland. As Aunt Jemima, Lewis posed for
pictures with visitors.
Ann Short Harrington
(1900 - 1955)
Little is known about the career of Ann Harrington.
Clippings from New York papers indicate the Harrington was “discovered” working
as a cook in Syracuse, New York for the Kappa Sigma fraternity house. Before
the fraternity, Harrington had worked for the former New York Governor Thomas
E. Dewey. It is unknown how long Ann Harrington portrayed Aunt Jemima, but she
apparently appeared on television shows as the character in the New York area.
THE
ANATOMY OF A STEREOTYPE THAT HAS MOCKED, DENIGRATED AND VILIFIED BLACK WOMEN
FOR OVER 100 YEARS
The
term stereotype was coined by a Frenchman named Firmin Didot in 1798. Stereotyping
was associated with a printing mechanism that consisted of a plate upon which
letters had been cast to create a permanent and unchangeable record or image.
Around 1824 the term was being applied in a metaphorical sense due to its
association with consistent monotony of perceived expectations and ideas that
arise from prejudicial notions of fantasy, versus reality based in fact.
The
phrase was introduced to the general public by Walter Lippmann in 1926. He
described it as:
“An
ordered more or less consistent picture of the world to which our habits,
our capacities, our comforts and our hopes have adjusted themselves. . ., it is
a form of perception which implies a certain character on the data of our sense
before the data reach intelligence.”
Stereotypes
are the set of traits used to explain and predict the behavior of members of
socially defined groups, therefore, based on this definition, stereotypes can
and will result in perceptions of an extreme consistent nature, allowing for
little, if any, variation within the target it seeks to define. Cut to the
chase, a stereotype can be defined as a consistent representation of black
people in advertising with images, words/text, and situations that in the end
suggest that ALL members of the race (ergo, black people) are the SAME.
The
stereotypes most associated with Aunt Jemima are considered as very negative by
many black people. Traditional stereotypes are negative and always portray the
intended group of people given the stereotypes in an unfavorable and disgusting
light, and the main intent of stereotypes serves to stand for a whole diverse
group of human beings. And nowhere is this more seen than in the case of Aunt
Jemima, who is known to blacks, whites, Latinos, Asians, etc. as the
motherly-think-of-everyone-else-before-herself-even-if-it-means-her-demise-both-physical-and-mental
Mammy image, due to 100 years of mass marketing.
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And
it is the negative stereotypes of Aunt Jemima that seriously hinder and degrade
the image of all black American women.
And
it is through the mass media that the images of Aunt Jemima are proliferated
and bombard the mental cognizance of persistent memory. And make no mistake
about it, mass media plays a very vital role in the perpetuation of
racist/sexist stereotypes against black people. The stereotyping of black
people by media provides negative role models for both the minority/subjugated
group (black people) and the majority/dominant group (white people). This
causes a rift of cultural isolation, racial and residential segregation,
increasing the distance between the two, making communication extremely
difficult, and fuels the lingering legacy and detrimental effects of the
pervasive stereotypes.
And
the stereotypes of Aunt Jemima/Mammy are the most insidious that black women
continue to have to challenge, fight and suffer from:
-The
happy slave
-The
devoted servant
-The
happy non-white
-The
natural-born cook
-The
mental inferior
-The
woman who is so ugly in appearance that she is no one a man would want to
romance, love, or bring into his life or show off around his male
buddies/friends
Aunt
Jemima would also be the happy-go-lucky, clowning, grinning, childlike,
soulful, hostile [but wary] perpetual servile slave.
Other
attributes of Aunt Jemima/Mammy are the following:
-Strong,
kind, loyal
-Obese,
almost cow-like in image
-Slatternly,
lazy and filthy in her appearance
-Her
dark skin was mocked with a greasy eye-blinding shine
-Asexual,
unattractive, matronly in appearance
-Always
the “motherly type”—-but, not the type for a man to marry
-Good-humored
to a fault, never had reason to cry or experience sorrow
-The ubiquitous
head rag (which incidentally, was originally a West African gele headwrap worn by
black Africans, but made into a pernicious stereotype by white people during
slavery and by media ads of the 20TH Century). This image gave way to the
phrase “handkerchief head”.
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(Ironically,
the name “Jemima” is biblical in nature and is an anglicized version of the
feminine Hebrew name Yamimah, the second of Job’s
daughters born to him at the end of his self-entitled book of the Bible.
Jemima, the offshoot of irascible mammy, was sweet, jolly, even-tempered, and
polite. Yamimah/Jemima, Hebrew for “dove,” was Job’s youngest daughter,
symbolizing innocence, gentleness, and peace. But the name belies its meaning.
The caricature connotes not naïvéte but stupidity, not peace but docility.
Jemima was an obese, darkly pigmented, broad-bosomed, handkerchief-headed,
gingham-dressed, elderly servant content in her subjugation.)
When
black women slaves stepped off the plantation, they envisioned a life free from
perpetual toil of slavery, but, white America would not let them shed the
shackles of the racist image of Aunt Jemima. With the packaging of Aunt Jemima
securely embedded into the minds of all Americans, the icon of Aunt Jemima was
here to stay.
In
the 1923s, the Daughters of the Confederacy asked the Congress to set aside a
site in the Capitol area where a monument in recognition of the “Black Mammy”
could be built. Black people were so angered and offended at the thought of
such an outrage even being suggested that they protested vociferously against
this monument of insulting degradation against the image of black womanhood,
and as a contemptuous sign of black servitude. They instead suggested that “a
better memorial would be to extend the full rights of American citizenship to
the descendants of these Mammies”. Ending the lynching, public humiliation of
black people on trolley cars and other forms of transportation, giving black
people the right to vote, were what black people needed, not more racist/sexist
slaps in the face. So great was the pressure brought by black people, black
leaders and black groups, that the monument was rightfully killed in the House
of Representatives.
I
have admiration and reverence for Nancy Green and the many black women who
portrayed Aunt Jemima.
They
made do as they could with the world that was handed to them, and showed
themselves, as so many, many black women have, that they were of better,
sterner stuff than those white people who insulted, belittled, degraded, and
mocked them.
The
many Nancy Greens who had to go into white homes and face rape from the white
husbands and sons, faced abuse from the white wives, faced disrespect, faced
being cheated out of wages that amounted to nothing more than $2-3 dollars a
day for hard labor under conditions that were no better than slavery—–those
black women were the real humans, the real women, the real Southerners.
On
days when I think I have it so bad, when I think I can’t go on, I remember all
those brave black women who came before me, and I say to myself: “If they can
go on after enduring hells that I can only conceive of in nightmares, then who
am I to complain?”
It
is white-run America that created these images; created these images to destroy
the integrity, the value, the humanity of black women. That white men used
black women as sexual toilets, and that white men tried to justify their sexual
hatred of black women with the creation of “Mammy” was white Southern society’s
way of sweeping under the rug white male sexual aggression against black women.
By creating “Mammy”, white men , and white women, were seeking to assuage their
guilt over all the hundreds of thousands of rapes done to black women during
slavery and segregation. The creation of Mammy was to deflect from the reality
of what many black women and girls suffered at the hands of white male rapists
in the South. And this subservient image was created as a controlling image
against black women. Black women who had more honor and humanity than all the
white people who sought to destroy them.
Would
that white America and all of America could learn from these fine women’s
humility and love of life that they were willing to take the brunt of abuse so
that their children, and their children’s children would have a better, less
hellish life.
That
is what a real woman does.
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The devastation
of the enduring legacy of Aunt Jemima/Mammy still haunts all black women no
matter how substantial their successes in America. In 1986, Oprah Winfrey
became offended when “Saturday Night Live” producer Lorne Michaels asked her to
perform a skit with her playing Aunt Jemima in the process of being laid off by
the Quaker Oats Company. Oprah was incensed and refusing to play the part,
instead wanted to open the show with a sketch showing her arguing with Michaels
over the skit, that no matter how much education, fame, knowledge, or position
a black woman gains in America, in the end she is still a servile, slaving,
mule of the world Aunt Jemima/Mammy in white America’s eyes. Even the Secretary
of State Condoleeza Rice has not escaped the slanderous insult that Aunt
Jemima brings with it; she too, has been called an Aunt Jemima, as well, by a
radio host who refused to apologize to Madame Secretary, but, he was willing to
apologize to Aunt Jemima, and give radio listeners of a contest, free pancake
mix and syrup!
This
contemptuous insult is hurled at all black women no matter what their
occupation, acheivements or station in life.
And
that is how many people, of many races, still wish to view black women.
That
no matter what we accomplish, we will always be mammies, wet-nurses and
proverbial cooks in people’s eyes, no matter how many degrees we have, no matter
what board room corporation we run, no matter how we take care of our families
and communities. That someone of the stature of Oprah Winfrey could be
relegated to being seen as a selfless serve Massa and Missus Mammy is a
testament to the America’s love and desire to keep black women in the kitchen,
on the plantation, cooking and slaving away for white-run America’s benefit,
white-run America’s contentment, white-run America’s happiness.
AUNT
JEMIMA MAKES A CHANGE IN 1989
In
1989, the Quaker Oats Company changed their image of Aunt Jemima. Gone was the greasy
shine, the head rag, the obese figure. In its place came the pearl earrings, a
slimmed down face/figure, and a helmeted perm. But, no matter what the changes,
Aunt Jemima is still Aunt Jemima—a hated, racist, sexist icon, that continues
to haunt black women. She may look like a black Betty Crocker, but, she is
still Aunt Jemima.
In
2007 America, Aunt Jemima commands a huge share of the breakfast foods market
in pancake mixes, syrup, and frozen waffles/pancakes. But, there are still some
black people today who are insulted by the continuing image of this icon still
being sold and merchandised to Americans. And as a stereotypical image Aunt
Jemima has offended some members of the black community, many of whom refuse to
buy the product for fear of looking like aiders and abettors in this most
sexist and racist of symbols that has lived for so long in the world of
advertising and the perpetuation of a stereotype that will not die and go down
into that grave and stay dead.
In
1991, the Quaker Oats Company fearing the backlash of the 1960s and 1970s of
the Black Power Movement, and recognizing the challenges the black community
was putting on the marketers of racist merchandise (Cream of Wheat, Uncle Ben’s
Rice, and Aunt Jemima), created a contest and entered into a venture with the
National Council of Negro Women in the hopes of making the trademark into a
more positive symbol with the black American community. They ran the year-long
contest, which was to recognize the leadership skills and talents of black female
college students. Many women were honored across various sectors of
black society, from many cities across America. The program ended with a
national winner representing:
“The
nominees and winners in each city will symbolize community involvement and
strong family values—those traditional qualities that Aunt Jemima brands
continue to represent and support.
“There
are many women across the country whose hard work and dedication deserve
recognition and appreciation. We want to lift up examples of women in different
fields who inspire us all to greater community service.”
Wow.
Service.
Hard
work.
Slavish
servile support of other people’s interests other than her own.
Hmm.
Sounds
very Aunt Jemimaish to me.
The
winner at the breakfast award that was held at the Quaker Oats
Chicago headquarters, was given an award and was named “Black Woman
Community Leader of the Year”.
However,
the program did receive some flak from the black community.
SO
WHERE DO WE STAND WITH AUNT JEMIMA?
The
selling of Aunt Jemima adorned merchandise is still with us. People
continue to buy this product which has outlasted (with the exception of
Uncle Ben’s Rice and Rastus of Cream of Wheat) many racist stereotypical
products created to insult and degrade black Americans.
Aunt
Jemima has outlived:
-Gold
Dust Twins
-Nigger
Head Oysters
-Racist
trade cards
-Rising
Sun Stove products
-Pickaninny
Brand Peanut Butter
-Kirkman’s
Soap
And
that’s just to name a few.
Black
women still have to contend with the insulting blow that Aunt Jemima has delivered
for over 100 years.
For
the last 30 years, I have waged a silent boycott of Quaker Oats’s Aunt
Jemima icon by not buying products that continue to degrade and disrespect me
as a black woman.
And
enough time has been spent waging this battle against this company which has no
interest in retiring this most hated of racist and sexist symbols.
Therefore, I
have created a petition to end the flagrantly disrespectful Aunt
Jemima image, here:
http://www.PetitionOnline.com/aj461153/petition.html
My
petition is to implore the Quaker Oats Company to cease its use of Aunt Jemima.
For Quaker Oats to start showing the respect to black women that we have more
than earned the right to after 400 years of living with sexist and racist
denigration from the cruel stereotypes created by white America.
Please,
if you also wish to join with me in the demise of Aunt Jemima, I ask that you
sign my petition.
Together,
with enough of our signatures, we can hopefully, and finally, put Aunt
Jemima out of her misery.
And
finally for the Quaker Oats Company to start to truly give respect and honor to
all the glorious contributions that so many black women have made in their
lives in this country.
It
is not necessary to degrade and insult an entire race of women to sell a
product. And that is the message I wish to send to Quaker Oats.
Enough
is enough.
LINKS/REFERENCES:
http://www.ferris.edu/htmls/news/jimcrow/mammies
http://www.chron.com/content/chronicle/metropolitan/96/04/07/aunt-jemima.html
http://www.auntjemima.com/aj_history
http://www.ejumpcut.org/archive/onlineessays/JC28folder/Mammy.html
http://www.thecemetaryproject.com/Graves%202/aunt-jemima.htm
http://www.uwm.edu/Dept/Grad_Sch/McNair/2004/mcgee.pdf
“Aunt
Jemima, Uncle Ben and Rastus: Blacks in Advertising, Yesterday, Today and
Tomorrow”, by Marilyn Kern-Foxworth, foreword by Alex Haley.
Praeger Publishers, 1994.