Mongrel Nation
The America Begotten by Thomas Jefferson and Sally Hemings |
| Clarence E. Walker |
| 144 pages, 5 1/2x 81/4 |
| Cloth ISBN 0-8139-2777-0 $22.95 |
| Jeffersonian
America |
 |
Listen to a KPFA radio interview
with author Clarence Walker
The debate over the affair between Thomas Jefferson and Sally
Hemings rarely rises above the question of "Did they or didn’t
they?" But lost in the argument over the existence of such
a relationship are equally urgent questions about a history that
is more complex, both sexually and culturally, than most of us
realize. Mongrel Nation seeks to uncover this complexity,
as well as the reasons it is so often obscured.
Clarence Walker contends that the relationship between Jefferson
and Hemings must be seen not in isolation but in the broader context
of interracial affairs within the plantation complex. Viewed from
this perspective, the relationship was not unusual or aberrant
but was fairly typical. For many, this is a disturbing realization,
because it forces us to abandon the idea of American exceptionalism
and reexamine slavery in America as part of a long, global history
of slaveholders frequently crossing the color line.
More than many other societies—and despite our obvious
mixed-race population—our nation has displayed particular
reluctance to acknowledge this dynamic. In a country where, as
early as 1662, interracial sex was already punishable by law,
an understanding of the Hemings-Jefferson relationship has consistently
met with resistance. From Jefferson’s time to our own, the
general public denied—or remained oblivious to—the
possibility of the affair. Historians, too, dismissed the idea,
even when confronted with compelling arguments by fellow scholars.
It took the DNA findings of 1998 to persuade many (although, to
this day, doubters remain).
The refusal to admit the likelihood of this union between master
and slave stems, of course, from Jefferson’s symbolic significance
as a Founding Father. The president’s apologists, both before
and after the DNA findings, have constructed an iconic Jefferson
that tells us more about their own beliefs—and the often
alarming demands of those beliefs—than it does about the
interaction between slave owners and slaves. Much more than a
search for the facts about two individuals, the debate over Jefferson
and Hemings is emblematic of tensions in our society between competing
conceptions both of race and of our nation.
Clarence E. Walker is Professor of History
at the University of California, Davis, and the author of We
Can’t Go Home Again: An Argument about Afrocentrism.