To solve our nation’s problems, we must understand their
causes, and not just the easy, obvious causes that are most convenient to solve.
In 13th, a powerful and persuasive
new documentary from Selma writer-director
Ava DuVernay, there is an explanation for mass incarceration and implicit bias,
the twin ailments afflicting our criminal justice system. But our current
crisis of overcrowded prisons and police brutality has roots that run deep.
DuVernay builds a history of oppression in this country, showing how the evils
of slavery were removed by the Civil War only for the routine dehumanizing of
people of color to remain a constant in our society. She begins with
Reconstruction, as slaves became criminals, locked up or lynched for the
simplest of reasons, if any at all. The myth of black criminality was
pervasive, a worry that freedom unleashed permission for a people to roam the
South unchecked by white power. DuVernay draws a line from the KKK to the
prison industrial complex in a smart, complicated, multi-faceted, well rounded,
dazzlingly intellectual and undeniably emotional sociopolitical argument.
Here DuVernay is working in the
tradition of documentarian Adam Curtis (his masterwork, The Power of Nightmares, a stunning recounting of the parallel rise
of neo-conservatives and Islamic fundamentalism) and historian Howard Zinn (whose People’s History of the United States viewed
the past through how it affected the least among us). Like them, she's synthesizing a vast amount of information, drawing connections, placing old and
familiar stories and ideas next to fresh takes and new juxtapositions. It adds
up to a history of white racial resentment and poisonous stereotyping as the
prime driving forces behind American politics of the last 150 years. What is
Jim Crow but an effort to rebuild a mechanism by which to prevent black people
from entering white society? What is Nixon’s Southern Strategy but coded
messages to whites letting them know the progress of black civil rights will be
slowed? What is the War on Drugs, with its lopsided sentencing, but a method to
punish people of color more harshly? What about the 1994 omnibus crime bill,
privatized prisons, and militarized police forces? The film takes us right to
present day, current discussions inevitably informed by the decades of
buildup.
DuVernay doesn’t argue that explicit, intentional racism is
always the cause of laws’ consequences, but that it’s merely the soup in which
we swim. Black people are viewed as criminal at a rate disproportionate to the
percentage of actual crime. She reminds us of 1915’s Birth of a Nation codifying the image of dangerous black men, and
of the nightly news and tough-on-crime campaign ads far more frequently
parading dark skin in front of the camera as code for crime. She shows us
Martin Luther King Jr, Malcom X, Angela Davis, Fred Hampton, and many more
civil rights leaders and recalls how they were hounded by law enforcement and,
in many cases, cut down in their prime. She unflinchingly shows us photographs
of lynchings, footage of hoses and dogs deployed on peaceful protestors, of
unarmed black men gunned down in the street by fearful and angry police. Our
problems are not new, they are simply old problems found new form. DuVernay
begins by showing us the 13th Amendment, which ended slavery, albeit with the
proviso that it’d still be allowed as punishment for crime. This is a movie
about how, in ways both intentionally and unintentionally, the amendment’s
language has taken on the sneaky force of a powerful loophole.
13th collects
perfectly judged archival footage to mix with a collage of talking heads from
the across the political spectrum. We hear from historians, journalists,
activists, politicians, lobbyists, and more – everyone from Henry Louis Gates
and Michelle Alexander to Newt Gingrich – as their words are interwoven to tell
the complicated story. (A few choice times she skewers a wrongheaded interviewee
with judicious cross-cutting to the truth.) Stirred in with the usual graphs
and text and lyrics of the modern message doc, these witnesses and chroniclers
tell the narrative of our country’s last 150 years as a clear-headed
examination of underlying, recurring problems. This film asks its audience to
consider the core rot in our body politic and how it has continually
transfigured itself every time we think we’ve gotten close to cutting it out.
Systematic prejudice reconstitutes under the cover of new ideas or identities,
continuing to propagate unfathomable and unfair harm, often before we even
recognize its new form. The reinvention of oppression needs to be met with a
radical compassion, recognition of the worth, the humanity, of every person.
This movie is a good start.
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