News | Top Stories
12 Oct 2024 15:27
NZCity News
NZCity CalculatorReturn to NZCity

  • Start Page
  • Personalise
  • News
  • Sport
  • Weather
  • Shopping
  • Jobs
  • Horoscopes
  • Lotto Results
  • Photo Gallery
  • Site Gallery
  • TVNow
  • Dating
  • SearchNZ
  • NZSearch
  • Crime.co.nz
  • RugbyLeague
  • Make Home
  • About NZCity
  • Contact NZCity
  • Your Privacy
  • Advertising
  • Login
  • Join for Free

  •   Home > News > National

    The audacity of Kamala Harris’ laughter – and the racist roots of Trump’s derision

    American writer Ralph Ellison provided a sharp analysis of the subversive power of Black laughter in 1930s America.

    27 September 2024

    Just when the summer uproar over Donald Trump calling his potential rival “Laffin’ Kamala” and “Cackling Copilot Kamala Harris” was beginning to subside, an apparent new round of attacks by Trump and other Republicans has emerged after their initial U.S. presidential debate.

    The target – again – was Kamala Harris’ laugh.

    Three days after the debate, for instance, Bruce Zuchowski, an Ohio sheriff, posted on his Facebook account that Harris was a “laughing hyena.” Zuchowski was subsequently barred from providing election security during in-person voting.

    Conservative media commentators also have voiced their displeasure, calling Harris’ laugh “contemptuous,” “exaggerated” and “inappropriate.”

    This is not surprising, given that Harris’ laughter was on full display during much of the nationally televised debate – and, worse, Trump was clearly the object of her unrelenting derision.

    Much has been written already about the sexism and racism behind Trump’s contempt for Harris’ laugh.

    But in a little-known, 1985 essay called “An Extravagance of Laughter,” celebrated American writer Ralph Ellison provided a sharp analysis of the subversive power of Black laughter in 1930s America.

    Ellison’s essay, published in a 1986 collection “Going to the Territory,” still offers useful historical racial context for explaining Trump’s animus toward Harris. Among the stories Ellison tells: Black people once had to put their heads in a barrel to laugh because their laughter unnerved white Southerners.

    The dangers of Black laughter

    Best known for his 1952 novel “Invisible Man,” Ellison was one of America’s foremost social critics who confronted racism and white supremacy by telling the stories of alienation among everyday Black people searching for identity in a nation that deemed them inferior.

    In “An Extravagance of Laughter,” Ellison began with an anecdote about attending a theater adaptation of Erskine Caldwell’s novel “Tobacco Road” in New York City in 1936. The popular play detailed the lives of destitute white sharecroppers during the Great Depression. The sharecroppers feared, among other things, losing their social status by dropping below the lower rung reserved for Black people in America.

    While laughing uncontrollably at a comical scene in the play involving the antics of poor white Georgia farmers, Ellison became aware of the stir he was causing among the predominantly white audience.

    A Black man dressed in a business suit is smiling as he sits near shelves of books.
    American novelist Ralph Ellison in 1963. Ben Martin/Getty Images

    For many white Americans, Black laughter was “a peculiar form of insanity suffered exclusively by Negroes, who in light of their social status and past condition of servitude were regarded as having absolutely nothing in their daily experience which could possibly inspire rational laughter,” Ellison explained.

    As Ellison saw it, his laugh during the play was being construed as an affirmation of the Black buffoon stereotype.

    As he described it, the white spectators were “catching fire and beginning to howl and cheer the disgraceful loss of control being exhibited” by a Black man.

    Later in the essay, Ellison lampoons the use of “laughing barrels” in Southern towns, which he described as “huge whitewashed barrels labeled FOR COLORED, and into which any Negro who felt a laugh coming on was forced … to thrust his boisterous head.”

    The intent of suppressing Black laughter, Ellison explained, was pro bono publico, or for the public good.

    Stories of the use of barrels to block offensive Black laughter from public view have been well studied by scholars and are believed to be the origin of the expression “barrel of laughs.”

    While the idea of the barrels may seem utterly ridiculous, Ellison understood them as an absurd strategy of containment for a not-so-absurd fear in post-Reconstruction and Jim Crow white America, when racial segregation was legal.

    Black folks who laugh “turned the world upside down and inside out,” he explained.

    And in so doing, Ellison wrote, Black laughter “in-verted (and thus sub-verted) tradition and thus the preordained and cherished scheme of Southern racial relationships was blasted asunder.”

    In a 1983 letter celebrating Caldwell’s birthday, Ellison thanked the writer – “by giving artistic sanction to a source of comedy which in the interest of self-protection I had been forced to deny myself you had released me from three turbulent years of self-restraint.”

    Flipping the script on who gets to laugh

    The first time Trump found himself the object of Black laughter was during the 2011 White House correspondents’ dinner, where he was publicly and mercilessly roasted by a gleeful Barack Obama. The experience appeared to humiliate and infuriate Trump and is widely seen by political pundits as the catalyst for Trump’s entrance into the 2016 presidential race.

    It is not surprising, then, to see his campaign resurrect the rhetoric that many deem to be racist to erode public confidence in Harris’ fitness for the office.

    During the debate, Trump repeatedly accused Harris of “destroying the fabric of our country” with “insane” policies. Trump had previously called Harris “dumb as a rock” and “a radical left lunatic.”

    In this cartoon published in 1874, two Black legislators are arguing under a sign that reads 'let us have peace.'
    In this Harper’s Weekly cartoon published in 1874, two Black legislators are arguing in front of their white colleagues. Fotosearch/Getty Images

    These hearken to the long and shameful history of racist characterizations of Black Americans as menaces to society. They include depictions of unruly, newly emancipated Black men holding public office in D.W. Griffith’s 1915 “The Birth of a Nation” to Trump’s public call for the death penalty for the Black and Hispanic teens known as the Central Park Five in a full-page New York Times ad in 1989.

    In that case, the teen boys were falsely accused of the brutal assault of a white New York jogger. They served years in prison before being exonerated by DNA and the confession of a convicted rapist and murderer.

    America’s new racial and gender norms

    Trump’s mockery of Harris’ laughter has not been successful in neutralizing her popularity.

    Harris is widely regarded by political commentators as the winner of the debate, and the lasting impression is that of a glowering Trump repeatedly failing to put a stop to Harris’ mirthful expressions of incredulity.

    Almost a century has passed since Ellison’s disruptive laugh occurred in a New York theater in 1936. In that time, both Obama and Harris have reordered traditional gender and racial norms by using Black laughter in the very public theater of U.S. presidential politics.

    The Conversation

    Betsy Huang does not work for, consult, own shares in or receive funding from any company or organization that would benefit from this article, and has disclosed no relevant affiliations beyond their academic appointment.



    © 2024 TheConversation, NZCity


     Other National News
     12 Oct: Some late changes for the Tasman Mako for tomorrow's home NPC quarter-final against Canterbury
     12 Oct: Police are asking for the public's help in the investigation of a man's death in Point England, Auckland
     12 Oct: Tory Whanau says she is worried about about the legacy of her first term as Wellington mayor
     12 Oct: A blow for the Bay of Plenty Steamers ahead of this afternoon's NPC quarterfinal against Hawke's Bay in Tauranga
     12 Oct: New Zealand First supporters are gathering in Hamilton this weekend for the party's annual convention
     12 Oct: Nobel peace prize awarded to Japanese atomic bomb survivors’ group for its efforts to free the world of nuclear weapons
     12 Oct: Wellington bus operators are reiterating calls for safety on public transit, after a reported hate speech incident
     Top Stories

    RUGBY RUGBY
    The America's Cup match race starts overnight off Barcelona and the two teams have been reflecting on the challenge that lies ahead More...


    BUSINESS BUSINESS
    Bookstores are curbing retail trends, with demand on the rise More...



     Today's News

    Rugby:
    The America's Cup match race starts overnight off Barcelona and the two teams have been reflecting on the challenge that lies ahead 15:07

    Education:
    When is the US election and how does it work? Here's what you need to know about the 2024 presidential race 14:17

    Rugby:
    Some late changes for the Tasman Mako for tomorrow's home NPC quarter-final against Canterbury 14:07

    Rugby League:
    Playmaker Kodi Nikorima is putting his hand up to help the eight Kiwis debutants adjust to international footy at the upcoming Pacific Championships 14:07

    Motorsports:
    The final co-drivers' practice has wound up at the Bathurst 1000 with Aussie rookie Cooper Murray gapping his rivals in by almost half a second 13:47

    Sailing:
    Team New Zealand have highlighted the pre-starts as one of the most critical components of their America's Cup campaign against Ineos Britannia, as racing gets underway overnight in Barcelona 13:07

    International:
    Teenagers head to NASA’s prestigious Space Camp in a bid to get more First Nations women into STEM 13:07

    Soccer:
    All Whites captain Chris Wood has commended Tahiti for making them earn their 3-nil victory in their World Cup qualifier in Vanuatu 12:27

    Law and Order:
    Police are asking for the public's help in the investigation of a man's death in Point England, Auckland 12:27

    Golf:
    A poor start to his second round on the latest PGA Tour event for Ryan Fox 11:57


     News Search






    Power Search


    © 2024 New Zealand City Ltd