In the American South at the turn of the twentieth century, the
legal segregation of the races and psychological sciences focused
on selfhood emerged simultaneously. The two developments presented
conflicting views of human nature. American psychiatry and
psychology were optimistic about personality growth guided by the
new mental sciences. Segregation, in contrast, placed racial traits
said to be natural and fixed at the forefront of identity. In a
society built on racial differences, raising questions about human
potential, as psychology did, was unsettling.
As Anne Rose lays out with sophistication and nuance, the
introduction of psychological thinking into the Jim Crow South
produced neither a clear victory for racial equality nor a
single-minded defense of traditional ways. Instead, professionals
of both races treated the mind-set of segregation as a hazardous
subject.
Psychology and Selfhood in the Segregated South
examines the tensions stirred by mental science and restrained by
southern custom.
Rose highlights the role of southern black intellectuals who
embraced psychological theories as an instrument of reform; their
white counterparts, who proved wary of examining the mind; and
northerners eager to change the South by means of science. She
argues that although psychology and psychiatry took root as
academic disciplines, all these practitioners were reluctant to
turn the sciences of the mind to the subject of race relations.