2. Many of the worst stereotypes, come
from slavery.
They were meant to demean and dehumanize Black men and reinforce inferiority in
order to justify slavery and its abuses.
3. The Tom
Uncle Tom’s Cabin, the 1852 anti-slavery novel by Harriet Beecher Stowe, was the second-
best selling book of the 19th Century, behind the Bible. It featured the character Uncle Tom,
the dutiful, long-suffering, faithful servant.
4. Uncle Tom’s Cabin, 1927
He’s God-fearing and self-sacrificing—a loyal and trusted servant.
5. Uncle Remus
Uncle Remus was the kindly, docile fictional narrator of folk tales for kids. Remember
Br’er Rabbit? Here he is in the 1946 Disney film Song of the South.
6. Bill “Bojangles Robinson
An elegant Tom, Mr. Bojangles with Shirely Temple. Sometimes
called the first onscreen interracial couple.
7. The face of the
rice box; Aunt
Jemima’s male
counterpart
8. Rewarded for playing a Tom
Driving Miss Daisy, 1989 best picture. Morgan Freeman receives Golden Globe
for playing Hoke.
9. The Newer Tom: The Good Negro
In 1967’s Guess Who’s Coming to Dinner, Sidney Poitier plays Mr. Perfect: a smart,
widowed, idealistic physician, who meets his white finance’s parents.
10. Bill Cosby, America’s Dad
Cliff Huxtable, the lovable pediatrician on The Cosby Show—the perfect husband
and father of the 80s.
11. Barack Obama
The Harvard-educated, bi-racial professor; perfect father and husband: some say, the
only black man America could accept as president because he’s so perfect!
12. The Newest Tom: The Magical Negro
Has special, “magical” powers, to selflessly help the white
man. Will Smith as Matt Damon’s caddy in The Legend of
Bagger Vance, 2000
14. Another new Tom: The Sellout
Andre Lyon, with sellout accessory, the white wife.
15. Uncle Tom’s revenge
Samuel L. Jackson as Stephen, the head house Negro in charge in Django Unchained, 2013
16. The Coon
He is the black
buffoon, naïve,
childish, silly and
used for comic
relief. Amos and
Andy, first voiced
on radio by white
actors in the 20s,
then black actors
on TV.
17. Why “coon?”
• The word may have originated from “baracoon,” the Spanish or
Portuguese word for slave pens or barracks slaves were put in
before being sold. Maybe from “raccoon,” which have a tendency
to steal. Sometimes called “sambo,” after the character “Little
Black Sambo.”
18. The Little Rascals
or Our Gang
Buckwheat, Farina
and Stymie, the
lovable pickaninnies
of the 20s and 30s.
19. Stepin Fetchit
Lazy, slow-witted, trifling, on-screen, but a rich, playboy baddie off.
First black actor to become a millionaire during 20s, 30s.
21. Rewarded for “cooning”
Cuba Gooding Jr. won the best supporting actor
Academy Award in 1996 for Jerry Maguire – “show
me the money!!!!”
22. The Buck
Brutal, violent, dangerous, barbaric, hypersexual, the buck reinforced the
idea that like animals, black men could work the fields all day, be forced to
reproduce and be whipped, punished and controlled. This is Ken Norton in
Mandingo, 1975.
23. The slur black buck,
and its distorted
image, were used
during
Reconstruction to
frighten whites and
suppress black
rights – like voting.
24. The first on-screen Buck: Birth of a
Nation, 1915
This white actor in blackface, plays Gus, a vicious former slave who
attempts to rape a white woman. Rather than submit, she kills herself.
26. The Buck Is Back: 70s Blaxpoitation
Dressed in leather, not intimidated by whites, Shaft
(1971) is a bad mother…and a sign of the more radical
times.
41. Stereotypes of black males lead to:
• General antagonism toward black males;
• Exaggerated views of, expectations of, and tolerance
for race-based socio-economic disparities;
• Exaggerated views related to criminality and violence;
• Lack of identification with or empathy for black males;
• Reduced attention to structural and other big-picture
factors;
• Public support for punitive approaches to problems
• Worse-- lowered expectations and the perception of
limited options for black men themselves
42. So why do we glorify and celebrate the
image of the violent black thug?