In
the last two columns we have considered Barack Obama as novus
homo and orator.
But what about his mixed race?
The racist seeks the cause for the differences between groups of people
in either physiological or genetic determinism. The resulting characteristics
are unalterable and define them as inherently inferior. But are prejudice,
xenophobia and stereotyping ‘racist’ in those terms? If they
are, Romans were certainly racist, as probably all people of all colours,
ages and backgrounds have been and always will be.
A major theme is the contamination that results from contact with foreigners.
Romans living in the East, we are regularly told, stood a fair chance of
being corrupted by foreigners’ low morals and love of luxury. The
historian Livy composes a speech for a commander before a battle in which
he argues ‘Whatever grows in its own soil prospers better; transplanted
to alien soil, it changes and degenerates to conform to the soil that feeds
it.’ Cicero makes the younger Scipio say that maritime cities are
particularly prone to this disease ‘for they receive a mixture of
strange languages and customs and import foreign ways as well as foreign
merchandise’. The elder Cato rants against the Greeks as ‘a
quite worthless and intractable people…when they give us their literature
it will corrupt everything’ and especially against their doctors,
who ‘take fees to murder us with their medicines’. The satirist
Juvenal rails against all Orientals, saying the Orontes (in Syria) has
long been discharging its filth into the Tiber – its language, morals,
music and girls.
On the other hand, Romans (as Horace said) were captivated by Greek culture,
and Greek was at the heart of their education system. Tacitus is scathing
of the way Romans enslaved other, noble cultures; the geographer Strabo
claims that the Scythians had been utterly corrupted by their contact with
Romans. Juvenal is even nastier about Romans than he is about aliens. Meanwhile,
emperors were routinely made outside Rome (Septimius Severus, for example,
was North African).
Romans, in other words, covered the full spectrum from the BNP to the Guardian.
But what one does not find is the idea that genetic characteristics defined
someone as inherently and unalterably inferior. On that score, Obama would
have presented no problems at all.
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