Scholar of Urban Riots: Baltimore ‘Is Not the End’ of Violent Protests
The Chronicle of Higher Education | May 15, 2015 A11
By PETER SCHMIDT
Last
month’s rioting in Baltimore came as little surprise to Ashley M. Howard, an
assistant professor of history at Loyola University New Orleans.
As a doctoral candidate at the
University of Illinois at Urbana-Champaign, Ms. Howard researched 1960s racial
unrest in Cincinnati, Milwaukee, and Omaha for her 2012 dissertation, “Prairie
Fires: Urban Rebellions as Black Working Class Politics in Three Midwestern
Cities.” She is now working to expand it into a book that examines how race,
class, and gender factor into whether people participate in urban uprisings.
The Chronicle asked Ms. Howard for her take on what happened in Baltimore. Here
is an edited and condensed version of the conversation.
Q. What do you see as the key differences between the recent civil
unrest in Ferguson, Mo., and Baltimore and the riots of the 1960s in terms of
how and why people acted out and how society responded?
A. The biggest game changer of these
most recent uprisings is the advent of social media. I think this can be a very
powerful tool for participants to frame their grievances, to document what’s
happening, and to really shift the narrative of what’s taking place. What used
to be such an isolated feeling of abuse or marginalization has now become kind
of a shared national experience of despondence.
With the 1960s, you would actually
have local city governments enact media moratoriums, so that, especially in
local markets, they would not disseminate information about the uprisings going
on in their hometown. Local-newspaper coverage would have more on uprisings
occurring in other cities than they would have in their own hometown. It kind
of “othered” these events.
Now, with this discursive ability
of social media, you really get to see people sharing their experiences,
telling alternative visions of what is going on. That has an incredible
democratizing effect.
Q. Are there important lessons we failed to learn in studying the urban
uprisings of the 1960s? A. Certainly. I think one of the most crucial
lessons that we have neglected to learn is that violent protest is on a
continuum of protest. These aren’t aberrant events. They are very much in line,
and part and parcel, with more-standard organized types of nonviolent direct
action.
In the past 50 years, those
uprisings have really been remembered as just black rage — people going out
into the streets, burning and looting — and not actually looking at the
antecedent events that led people to pursue this very desperate type of
protest. In fact, the violent protests and nonviolent protests often interact
symbiotically. When you have people referring to protesters or activists just
as “thugs,” or out there just to get goods, that really diminish the power and
the political agency that these people have had.
Violent protest has been a
longstanding tradition in working-class communities. In many senses, it is
often lionized. When you think of the labor revolts and protests that happened
in the late 1800s, early 1900s, those are seen as kind of these champion
moments of the proletariat and populism rising up. But when African-Americans
become the primary actors, in the 1960s, they become demonized. The uprisings
did not occur in a vacuum. This came after nearly a decade of organizing in
which very slow movement was taking place. There was very much a change in how
people understood their communities and their roles and their rights as
American citizens.
Q. Do you foresee Baltimore returning to calm in the coming months? If
we could magically end police misconduct of the sort alleged there, would we
end the threat of civil unrest in Baltimore and other cities?
A. I think that after Baltimore’s
Mayor Stephanie Rawlings-Blake put forth the curfew, that largely stopped the
threat of unrest. But I don’t think that diminishes the fact that people are
still upset that black men and black women and black children feel constantly
threatened.
This is what’s difficult about
rebellions. There is often no magical formula to predict what’s going to happen
where. In fact, many of the uprisings that occurred in the 1960s nobody saw
coming. You look at Watts, and it didn’t have the urban squalor that people
associate with black urban life. You think of Detroit, which was a model city
in which African-Americans had strong working-class jobs. People were wildly
surprised when uprisings occurred there.
I forecast that this is not the end
of this kind of violent protest. But it is going to be difficult to pinpoint
where this is going to come next. The rebellions that have taken place have
alerted people to this as a potential tactic. Folks across the United States
may still dabble in this kind of action until meaningful changes happen. Police
brutality is not the only issue that concerns
African-Americans today.
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