Authors: John Howard Griffin
The Church and the Black Man
226, 229
Griffin, John Howard (continued)
The Devil Rides Outside
236 (and Supreme court case 221)
Encounters With the Other
236
France 217–219
Humanitarian awards 235
“The Intrinsic
Other
” 236
lectures 216
Negro Griffin 127
Nuni
221, 236
“Racist Sins of Christians” 225, 237
Scattered Shadows: A Memoir of Blindness and Vision
221, 236–37
Street of the Seven Angels
221
A Time to be Human
230, 237
writer recognized 34, 235
Groppi, Father James 205
Halsell, Grace (
Soul Sister)
224
Hamer, Fannie Lou 228
Harding, Vincent and Rosemarie (Southern Christian Leadership Conference) 229, 237
Hattiesburg (see Mississippi)
hospitality, Black 97–99, 109–17
Hughes, Langston xi, 231
humor, 77, 112
gallows 73, 74
improvement
financing 141–42
housing 142–43
integration 226
Jackson, Adelle 5, 6
Jews
xi, xiii
, 73, 77
Johnson, President Lyndon B. (social justice, civil rights and redwoods 196)
Jones, Penn (Jr.) 160–61, 168
justice 223 (and peace 171)
Equal for all 211
Plato on 53
Southern (white man’s) 48–49, 75, 109, 131, 175
Kansas, Wichita 196–97
Kerner Commission 195
King, Coretta Scott 229
King, Martin Luther 121, 142, 144, 181–82, 185–86, 194–95, 201–05, 224–26, 229 (Beloved Community 230) (“Letter From A Birmingham Jail” 226, 238)
Kozol, Jonathan 216, 236
217
Ku Klux Klan 73, 129, 138, 140, 141, 187
Latin 56
Latin Americans 28
Lee, Harper 229
legalized injustice 76
Levitan, George 4, 6, 159, 163
Levy, Gladys and Harold 156
Lewis, Ted 155
lived experience 197 (blackness as 231–32)
loneliness 12, 15–18, 79
Louisiana
New Orleans 145–147 and Claiborne 45
French Quarter 10, 22, 24, 26, 31, 43, 70–71
inequalities 81
Lake Pontchartrain 54
Negro sections 8 (South
Rampart / Dryades St) 8, 9, 14, 20, 31, 35, 40, 43, 50
lynching
Parker case 47–49 63–64 (FBI 48, 63), (Pearl River Grand Jury 48, 64), (Griffin 223)
Mansfield (see Texas)
marijuana 56
Maritain, Jacques
ix
, 51, 96, 137–39, and
Scholasticism and Politics
, 137
Mays, Benjamin 135, 140–43, 189
McGill, Ralph 77. 140–41, 189
media (see press)
Merton, Thomas 225, 237
Mexico (Morelia as rufuge for Griffin’s family) 173, 223 (Mexican)
xi
Miami Republican Convention 1968, 200–201
missionaries (Black) 119–20
Mississippi 49, 54, 59–60, 62-, 81
Biloxi 81, 84–96
Hattiesburg 51–52, 60, 64, 69, 72–79
Libertyville murder of Mr. Lewis Allen 186–87
Poplarsville 63–64
Mobile (see Alabama)
Montgomery (see Alabama)
Moral conversion 42
music 70–71, 145, 173
ballad (Mack Parker) 67
blues 55, 66–67
music (continued)
jazz 7, 67
jukebox 19, 66, 68
Negro (see also Black) white treatment toward 28
Negro cafés 20, 22, 26, 32–35, 38, 40, 100, 152, (drugstore 67)
Negro Civic leaders, 144
Alexander, T. M. (businessman) 134, 145
community indebtedness of 142
freedoms 75, 182
Gayle, Mr. 33
McLendon, F. Earl 143
New Orleans leaders 33–34
Walden, A.T. (Attorney) 144
Williams, Reverend Samuel 144 “Negro-ness” 26, (as racist construction 42)
New Orleans (see Louisiana)
night as comfort
xi
, 231
nightmare (recurring) 117, 138
nonviolent resistance 117, 121, 138, 182 226, 228 and outside agitators 200
Other
215–17, 219, 221, 233–34
patriotism (distortions of) 79
Pittsburgh Post-Gazette
(see press)
prejudice 232–234 (see also discrimination and white supremacy) and art 47
beatings 66
Black discussion of/ attitudes on 9–10, 22, 26, 33, 40–43, 45–46, 63, 67–68, 201–208, 217
buses 21–22, 45–46, 61–63
communism 42, 43, 183, 200–01
courtesy 51, 151 (white 28, 33, 46) (Black 40)
dermatologist’s 9–11
education 41, 93–94, 115–16, 128, 141–143, 217–18
emotional 12–13, 212, 215
employment 39, 41–42 (& education 42, 127) (see also job discrimination)
School Board 144
Griffin’s 211, 232
harassment 35–38 (by police 45, by bus driver 45–46)
hate stare 51–53, 66–68, 117, 118, 120, 122, 126, 216. 231 218
prejudice (continued)
“observing self ” of author 34, 67, 69, 215
passing over 9, 13, 123–26
skin color 10, 33–34, 179–180, 216, 225
southern 217
walking 39, 44–46, 151
white women 21–22, 52, 60, 69, 124–25, 150
press and
The Atlanta Journal-Constitution
140, 189
Black Like Me
reception 224, 229
Black Press (not read by whites) 190
Black Star
139
Coates, Paul (T.V. interview) 160
East, P.D. (white, liberal, newspaperman) 72–81 (and harassment 74–77, 187–189
Fort Worth Star-Telegram
154, 166–68, 170
Garroway, Dave 161–62, 223
Golden, Harry 163
Hall, Benn
Sepia
’s PR person 163
Jackson, Adelle Mrs, (
Sepia
’s editorial director) 5–6
Levitan, George (
Sepia
owner) 4–6, 159, 163
Lewis, Ted (interview) 155
Look
(Ralph McGill - civil rights won misrepresentation 189)
The Louisiana Weekly
, Negro newspaper 48–49
The Magnolia Jungle
(P.D. East autobiography) 74, 77
Newsweek
235
The Petal Paper
74–77 (and citizens’ councils) 76
Pittsburgh Post-Gazette
235–36
progressive newspaper men 140
Radio-Television Française
165–66
Ramparts
(radical Catholic magazine) 225
Reader’s Digest
34
Rutledge, Dan, photographer
q.v
.
Sepia
international Negro magazine 4–6, 155, 223, 235–36
Sign
(mainstream Catholic monthly) 225
press (continued)
Southern attitudes 74–77
Sprigle, Ray 235–36
Terkel, Studs
ix-x
, 231, 239
Time Magazine
161, 163, 235
Wallace, Mike 155, 163–65, 224
progressive intellectuals
economists 142
professors 206
social sciences 42
students 40, 189, 206, 216, 228
Puerto Rican 11
racial epithets 33, 38, 46, 64, 67, 74, 77, 174
racism, (see also discrimination, prejudice and white supremacy)
Burke, Edmund on, 217
institutionalized 42, 217, 228,
in North 224–25
on racial hatred 216
reports and statistics on 159
racists (religiocity of) 42, 138 (sexual perversions of 103–106)
reverse racism as false analogy 227
Rutledge, Don (photographer) 134, 144, 145, 238 (photo section 149–156)
salaciousness and
“democratic” 28
rape 94, 103–05
salacious restroom notices 82–83 “verbal pornography” 87–95
Savage Inequalities
(Jonathan Kozol) 216, 236
segregation 25, 44–45, 52–53, 171, 224 1954
Decision 75
buses 54
Selma (see Alabama)
sensuality (as escape 19)
male perspective (and sex) 15, 114 “racial purity” 104 (and “race-mixing” 42–43) (see also salaciousness)
sex
as escape from racism 19, 47, 70
false accusations toward anti-racists (woman “rap” against priests and indecent exposure) 183–185
Smith, Lillian 183 (
Strange Fruit
) 111
“southern traitors” 77 219
“southern traitors” 77
Student Nonviolent Coordinating Committee 227
terrorism 49
Terkel, Studs (see press)
Texas
Dallas 6, 168–69, 217
Fort Worth 4, 166–68
Mansfield 148, 154, 161, 165, 167, 170, 221, 223
Midlothian 168 “thinking white” 232
Thompson, Fr. August 225
Thoreau, Henry David 226
threats against Griffin and family 169–71 (telephone) 161, 223
Traitor, southern 76–77
Turner, Decherd (see universities)
Tuskegee Institute 127, 128, 131
universities
Atlanta 143 (and Pres. Rufus E. Clement) 144
Black 206 (and Black Press 190) Dillard 40, 45 (and Dean Sam Gandy 78–82)
Morehouse 140
Radcliffe (Justice Curtis Bok speech 171–172)
Spelman 143, 145
Southern Methodist University (Perkins School of Theology) 169 (Decherd Turner 168–70)
Tuskegee 127–28 (and Carver, George Washington 127)
Vutha, John (Grand Chief of the Solomons) 219–20
Wallace, Mike (see press)
Washington D.C., March 189, 201
white supremacy 46–47, 140, 192- and alcohol 128–130
arms 199–200
anthropology 115
Black solidarity and friendship as buffer against 18, 53, 63, 59
Black unity 33
democracy 49
genocide 196, 200, (and sterilization 207)
history of in
Epilogue
“What’s Happened Since
Black Like Me
” 179–208
white supremacy (continued)
hostility toward anti-racist whites 74–77, 167–73, 182–84
interracial communication 190–95
media 94
mob rule 49
paternalism 131
Nazis 179, 219
police raids 199–200
racial violence 105–06
racist poison 125
religion 42, 74–75, 138, 224
sawmill worker 109
sexual attitudes 91–92, 103–06 (warnings 65–66)
sexual morality constructions 115
stereotypes (forced 180–81)
(cultural 232)
“trash element” 116
truth and comfort 7
violence as false accusation 195
White Citizen’s Councils 76, 138, 140, 141
white contempt 128–29
white lag in understanding 205–06
white misrepresentations of civil rights 189
white “outsider” 84–85
white proprietors 19, (cabs 65) white solicitation 103 (and democratic treatment 28) white youth 118, 119
writing (paralysis 69)
wife (see Elizabeth Holland Griffin)
Williams, Sterling 10, 23–31, 46–50, 147, 152–53 and
Negro women 39, 53, 236, 111 (widow 26–27)
Williams, Dr. Samuel 144
Wilkins, Roy (see Civil Rights Movement leaders)
YMCA 31–33, 35, 39, 44, 134
Young, Whitney (see Civil Rights Movement leaders)
The Wings Press cloth edition of
Black Like Me
, by John Howard Griffin, is printed on 70 pound non-acidic Arbor paper, containing fifty percent post-consumer recycled fiber, by Edwards Brothers, Inc. of Ann Arbor, Michigan. Text and interior titles were set in a contemporary version of Classic Bodoni, originally designed by the 18th century Italian typographer and punchcutter, Giambattista Bodoni, press director for the Duke of Parma. This edition of
Black Like Me
was designed by Bryce Milligan.
Wings Press was founded in 1975 by J. Whitebird and Joseph F. Lomax as “an informal association of artists and cultural mythol- ogists dedicated to the preservation of the literature of the nation of Texas.” The publisher/ editor since 1995, Bryce Milligan, is honored to carry on and expand that mission to include the finest in American writing
.
Special ebook added content:
2006 brochure from
Lewis & Clark College,
Special Collections,
celebrating the 45th anniversary
of the publication of
Black Like Me
.
Exhibit curated by Jerry Harp
A Tribute to John Howard Griffin
For the 45th Anniversary of
Black Like Me
An Exhibit at the Aubrey Watzek Library
Lewis & Clark College
Portland, Oregon
January - April 2006