Pickaninny
From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
Pickaninny (also picaninny or piccaninny) is a term – generally considered derogatory – that in English usage refers to black children, or a caricature of them which is widely considered racist. It is a pidgin word form, which may be derived from the Portuguese pequenino ("little little [one]").
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[edit] Usage
In the Southern United States, pickaninny was long used to refer to the children of African slaves or (later) of African American citizens. While this use of the term was popularized in reference to the character of Topsy in the 1852 book Uncle Tom's Cabin, the term was used as early as 1831 in an anti-slavery tract "The History of Mary Prince, a West Indian Slave, related by herself" published in Edinburgh, Scotland. The term was still in some popular use in the US as late as the 1930s; while it has largely fallen out of use and is now considered offensive, the term is still part of the American lexicon.
Although the term was used generally, it came to refer to the associated stereotype among white Americans of African American children. "Picaninnies had bulging eyes, unkempt hair, red lips and wide mouths into which they stuffed huge slices of watermelon."[1] The Picaninny was distinguished by its young age, male or female. "They were also half dressed and animalistic. The picaninny was seen as one of a multitude of black children – disregarded and disposable."[2] That the pickaninny was often naked or half-naked has been interpreted by some to imply that black parents neglected the well-being of their children.
[edit] Examples
In the middle section of Margaret Mitchell's best-selling 1936 epic Gone with the Wind, one of the novel's sympathetic characters, Melanie Wilkes, objects to her husband's intended move to New York because it will mean that their children will be educated alongside Yankee children and pickaninnies.
Flannery O'Connor's 1955 short story collection A Good Man is Hard to Find contains the following: "Oh look at the cute little pickaninny!" she said and pointed to a Negro child standing in the door of a shack. "Wouldn't that make a picture, now?" she asked and they all turned and looked at the little Negro out of the back window. He waved.
The term was controversially quoted ("wide-eyed grinning picaninnies") by the British Conservative politician Enoch Powell, reading from a letter in his "Rivers of Blood" speech on 20 April 1968.
In 1987, Governor Evan Mecham of Arizona defended the use of the word, claiming "As I was a boy growing up, blacks themselves referred to their children as pickaninnies. That was never intended to be an ethnic slur to anybody."[3]
The word was used by Australian country music legend Slim Dusty in the lyrics of his 1987 "nursery-rhyme-style" song "Boomerang": "Every picaninny knows, that's where the roly-poly goes". The lyrics may also be an allusion to the Piccaninny crater in Western Australia.
Prior to becoming the Mayor of London, Boris Johnson apologized for any offence caused by an article in which he sarcastically suggested that "the Queen has come to love the Commonwealth, partly because it supplies her with regular cheering crowds of flag-waving piccaninnies".[4][5]
[edit] Related terms
Cognates of the term appear in other languages and cultures, presumably also derived from the Portuguese word, and it is not controversial or derogatory in these contexts. It is in widespread use in Melanesian pidgin and creole languages such as Tok Pisin of Papua New Guinea, as the word for "child" (or just young, as in the phrase pikinini pik, meaning piglet). In certain dialects of Caribbean English, the words pickney and pickney-negger are used to refer to children. Also in Sierra Leone Krio the term pikín refers to child or children. In Nigerian and Cameroonian Pidgin English, the term used is picken. In Chilapalapa, a pidgin language used in Southern Africa, the term used is pikanin. In Surinamese Sranan Tongo the term pikin may refer to children as well as to small or little.
[edit] See also
[edit] References
- ^ Jim Crow, The Museum of Racist Memorabilia. Ferris State University "The Picaninny Caricature". [1]
- ^ Facts, Figures and History: The Evolution of Lynching by Meredith Malburne (http://www.georgetown.edu/users/mmm43/ffh.htm)
- ^ Watkins, Ronald J. (1990). High Crimes and Misdemeanors : The Term and Trials of Former Governor Evan Mecham. William Morrow & Co., p. 72. ISBN 978-0-688-09051-7.
- ^ Evening Standard: Boris says sorry over 'blacks have lower IQs' article in the Spectator from 02 April 2008
- ^ Telegraph: Original article by Boris Johnson from 10 January 2002