
Seiler applied the “Page 99 Test” to his new book, White Care: The Impact of Race on American Infrastructure, and reported the following:
From page 99:Learn more about White Care at the University of Chicago Press website.… [P]rimary and secondary school grounds would come to feature an ever more encompassing built environment, adding “assembly rooms, gymnasiums, swimming pools, playgrounds, athletic fields, laboratories, shops, kitchens, clinics, cafeterias, and lounges.” Such an abundant surround testified, as Briggs wrote, to “constantly increasing public support, evidence of an enthusiasm that amounts to a fetish.” Indeed, funding for primary and secondary educational facilities, personnel, and curricula would see a nearly hundredfold increase over the century. The school was the key site at which the state displayed its commitment to “cohesion and equality of resources for children considered ethnically white.” This elevation of schools to the status of infrastructure was underwritten by scientists’ judgments of what white children required for their development and could become for the species and the nation. Conversely, the belief that the education of children racialized as nonwhite would pay few to no such dividends would thwart the public schooling of Americans of color—and later, of white Americans too.Wow, Ford Madox Ford was spot-on in my case. Reading page 99 of White Care: The Impact of Race on American Infrastructure, one can grab hold of the book’s central argument: in the United States, theories of race have driven the political will to provide—and withhold and neglect—public infrastructure.
In the pages surrounding the quotation above I’m writing about something pretty freaky and obscure, but absolutely central to the building and expansion of public schools and playgrounds in the early twentieth century: the theory of recapitulation. Put forth by evolutionary scientists and progressive thinkers in the late 1800s, this theory held that as each individual organism develops, it repeats all the phases of its species’ evolutionary journey. This meant that homo sapiens’ development amounted to a process of losing the traces of our fish, amphibian, mammalian, and primate ancestry. As scientists, political speech, and popular culture judged racialized whiteness to be the pinnacle of human evolution, it was posited that humans racialized as white would also advance beyond the so-called “savage races” in intelligence and capacity for self-government.
Recapitulation profoundly affected how American thinkers viewed childhood, suffusing the professionalized sciences of child psychology, education, and “play theory,” all of which emerged around the turn of the century. My book emphasizes that it also put its imprint on the built environment, as experts prevailed on the state to provide infrastructures through which children could be shepherded to the fulfillment of their potential. The public school and the playground were the most crucial of these spaces, for they were where the (implicitly white) child could be drawn through the phases of development, “repeat[ing] the history of his own race-life from savagery unto civilization.” Hence the need for “monkey bars,” “jungle gyms,” and the experiential, active pedagogy advocated by John Dewey and other reformers.
--Marshal Zeringue









