Abstract |
This manuscript presents material from diverse sources, enhancing our
understanding of race discrimination against Mississippi Delta sharecroppers. Applying
Professor Derrick Bell, Jr.’s “interest convergence” principle to slaves and
sharecroppers, for hundreds of years, enslaved people were kidnapped from their native
homes and sold to wealthy slave owners. They were forced to do exceptionally
physically demanding work in America and other countries and live in inhumane
conditions. Once the international slave trade ended and slavery in America ended,
sharecroppers were still exploited just as slaves had been. Even after planting and
picking cotton became mechanized, the sharecropping system remained popular in the
Mississippi Delta for many years. Plantation owners continued to earn massive profits
from sharecroppers’ cheap labor. White interests wanted sharecroppers to make just
enough to subsist to prevent them from improving their condition by purchasing and
growing their crops. Under Professor Derrick Bell, Jr.’s interest convergence principle,
Mississippi Delta sharecroppers did not achieve racial equality following slavery
because the interests of whites did not converge with the interests of blacks. |