When Willie Lynch wrote his letter to white slave owners in America in the 17th century, laying out the blueprint for the American Establishment on how to create racial tensions in order to facilitate the white slave owners’ rule over their African slave, he unwittingly laid the foundation stone for American elitism and racism that has since come to characterize the ruling class’ use of mass media in controlling the population (Heaggans). As Horkheimer and Adorno later showed in their analysis and dissection of the Culture Industry, the controllers of mass media have essentially used the basic framework of Lynch to perpetuate the idea of racism and to use race as a means of dividing and conquering the population, keeping the mass of men and women disunited and disempowered, turned against themselves, focused on their own external differences, and preventing them from uniting and standing up to the powers that be. As history has shown, whenever leaders stand up to end racism or to attack the elitism that perpetuates the system of racism in the U.S, those leaders are assassinated: from John Brown to Martin Luther King, Jr. to Malcolm X, it is the same story again and again. Today, leaders are simply prevented from being formed by a media that follows the playbook of Lynch, implanting in the minds of the African-American community the idea that the women should be independent and the men should be dependent on the government for support—a concept that Kanye West has rightfully come out against along with others like Candace Owens. Yahoo! Entertainment, for instance, has mocked Kanye West, particularly for wearing a MAGA hat in support of President Trump. The research question this paper will answer is: How does Lynch’s Letter to Slave Owners in the South foreshadows the role of the culture industry (i.e., Media)? Using critical theory (Adorno and Horkheimer’s theory to explain the Culture Industry), this question will be answered in the following pages. Nina Simone’s “Strange Fruit” was released in 1965, the same year Malcolm X was assassinated in the Audubon Ballroom after criticizing the leader of the Nation of Islam for failing to live up to the ideals he propagated in his talks. Malcolm X had fortified many black men through his articulate, strong speeches—and his death was a serious blow to the black community, and particularly to Simone. The song “Strange Fruit” had been written by Abel Meeropol, a Jew who had gone to school with James Baldwin in his youth (Blair). A picture of a black man who had been lynched in the Deep South had inspired Meeropol to write the poem “Strange Fruit,” an ironic comment on the hideous incongruity of the practice of lynching (a practice named after the eponymous Lynch, whose letter on how to control slaves opened this essay) with nature. The poem was later turned into a song that artists from Billie Holiday to Nina Simone sung throughout the following decades. Simone’s came at a time when the problem of racism in America was at a fever pitch. Three years following the death of Malcolm X, Martine Luther King, Jr, would meet his end thanks to a bullet. Those leaders of black communities were sent to the next world in the 1960s. An entire generation of blacks was robbed of its unique, one-of-a-kind leaders—leaders who had defined their generation. By the 1970s, mass media and the Culture Industry had put the struggle of Black America back on the back burner. Black activists, if they existed in the media at all, were tied to radical groups like the Black Panthers or the Symbionese Liberation Army, the black group that abducted Patty Hearst and “brainwashed” her into joining the Liberation Army (Scott). Mass media, free of the...
This is evident in the drama that mass media presented with the Michael Jackson and O. J. Simpson stories at the end of the 20th century. As Cashmore notes, “images of blackness are power; the power to frame and affect. The images of Simpson and Jackson presented in the mid-1990s were not just images of black people: they were whites’ images, representations created and recreated anew over a period of several hundred years” (5). O. J. Simpson—accused of murdering his white wife; Michael Jackson, accused of molesting white boys: these were the images of blackness pushed upon the American public by mass media, endlessly, in the 1990s.Our semester plans gives you unlimited, unrestricted access to our entire library of resources —writing tools, guides, example essays, tutorials, class notes, and more.
Get Started Now