The White Man's Burden
For the film, see White Man's Burden (film). |
The white man's burden - a satiric take |
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This advertisement for soap uses the theme of the White Man's Burden, encouraging white people to teach cleanliness to members of other races. |
The White Man's Burden is a poem by the British poet
Rudyard Kipling. It was originally published in the popular
magazine McClure's in 1899, with the subtitle
The United States and the Philippine Islands. "The White Man's Burden" may be read as supporting the
U.S. colonization of the
Philippines and other former Spanish colonies or, alternatively, as a warning to the
United States of the cost of
imperialism. Although Kipling's poem mixed exhortation to empire with sober warnings of the costs involved, imperialists within the United States latched onto the phrase "white man's burden" as a euphemism for imperialism that seemed to justify the policy as a noble enterprise.
The poem is written in seven
verses, following an ABCBDEFE
rhyme scheme. At face value it appears to be a
rhetorical command to white men to
colonize and rule people of other nations (both the people and the duty may be seen as representing the "burden" of the title), and because of this has become symbolic of
Eurocentrism. A century after its publication, the poem still rouses strong emotions, and can be analyzed from a variety of perspectives.
The first verse of the Kipling poem reads:
Take up the White Man's burden —:
Send forth the best ye breed —Go, bind your sons to exile:
To serve your captives' need;To wait, in heavy harness,:
On fluttered folk and wild —Your new-caught sullen peoples,:
Half devil and half child.A straightforward analysis of the poem may conclude that Kipling presents a
Eurocentric view of the world, in which non-European cultures are seen as
childlike and
demonic. This view proposes that
white people consequently have an obligation to rule over, and encourage the
cultural development of, people from other
ethnic and
cultural backgrounds until they can take their place in the world by fully adopting
Western ways. The term "the white man's burden" can be interpreted simply as
racist, or taken as a
metaphor for a condescending view of non-
Western national culture and economic traditions, identified as a sense of European ascendancy which has been called "
cultural imperialism". A parallel can also be drawn with the
philanthropic view, common in Kipling's formative years, that the rich have a moral duty and obligation to help the poor "better" themselves whether the poor want the help or not.
Within an historical context, the poem makes clear the prevalent attitudes that allowed
colonialism to proceed. Although a belief in the "virtues of empire" was wide-spread at the time, there were also many dissenters; the publication of the poem caused a flurry of arguments from both sides, most notably from
Mark Twain and
Henry James. Much of Kipling's other writing does suggest that he genuinely believed in the "beneficent role" which the introduction of Western ideas could play in lifting non-Western peoples out of "poverty and ignorance". Lines 3-5, and other parts of the poem suggest that it is not just the native people who are
enslaved, but also the "functionaries of empire", who are caught in colonial service. This theme may also be contrasted with the Christian
missionary movement, which was also quite active at the time in Africa, India, and other British and European colonies (e.g. the
Christian and Missionary Alliance).
Kipling, however, also wrote many poems celebrating the
working classes, particularly the common soldier. Six months after "The White Man's Burden" was published, he wrote "The Old Issue", a stinging criticism of the
Second Boer War, and an attack on the unlimited, despotic power of kings.
However, some commentators point to Kipling's history of
satirical writing, and suggest that "The White Man's Burden" is in fact meant to satirically undermine imperialism. Chris Snodgrass, in
A Companion to Victorian Poetry (Blackwell,
Oxford,
2002), describes Kipling's poetry as problematizing
"imperial sensibilities with wry irony and scepticism, viewing all human endeavour as ultimately transitory". Alzina Stone Dale (in
Outline of Sanity, iUniverse, 2005) recognizes that the poem has been used to encourage powerful nations to adopt an
imperial role, and writes of
"bright young men... using Rudyard Kipling's phrase 'the white man's burden' without catching the irony that Kipling intended." |
The white man's burden - The Journal, Detroit |
One criticism of the 2005
Make Poverty History campaign, and specifically the
live8 concerts, was that people who argue that it is a responsibility of richer countries to help less-developed countries have sympathy for the metaphoric idea of a white man's burden.
It has been pointed out that the demands by some sections of Western society for foreign military intervention by richer countries in civil wars of less-developed countries, are often expressed in terms analogous to those of the poem: that the intervention is morally correct and would restore the conditions of law and order which are vital to the economic and cultural growth of a nation.
As
Max Boot writes: "In the early twentieth century, Americans talked of spreading Anglo-Saxon civilization and taking up the 'white man's burden'; today they talk of spreading democracy and defending human rights. Whatever you call it, this represents an idealistic impulse that has always been a big part in America's impetus for going to war." The title of this book,
The Savage Wars of Peace, comes from "The White Man's Burden".
The term "
white guilt" is sometimes used as a modern twist on the historic white man's burden. It is used by some
white people to validate discrimination against other white people, because of their own perceived responsibility or culpability for historical wrongs.
A Companion to Victorian Poetry, Alison Chapman; Blackwell, Oxford, 2002.
Outline of Sanity Alzina Stone Dale; iUniverse, 2005.
*
Colonialism*
Scientific racism*
White Man's Burden, a 1995 film dealing with race.
*
White guilt*
Full text of the poem*
"The White Man's Burden" and Its Critics*
The Black Man's Burden by Edward Morel, 1903
*
'The Brown Man's Burden', a response to Kipling's poem by Henry Labouchère
# "The White Man's Burden."
McClure's Magazine 12 (Feb. 1899).# # warnings#* #* p. 5,
"...imperialist editors came out in favor of retaining the entire archipelago (using) higher-sounding justifications related to the "white man's burden."#*
"An extraordinary sensation has been created by Mr. Rudyard Kipling's new poem, The White Man's Burden, just published in a New York magazine. It is regarded as the strongest argument yet published in favor of expansion."#*
Theodore Roosevelt...thought the verses 'rather poor poetry, but good sense from the expansionist stand-point'. Henry Cabot Lodge told Roosevelt in turn: 'I like it. I think it is better poetry than you say'.# #Live8#*Mick Hume ''
Does Africa need these crusaders bearing the White Man's burden? in
The Times on
June 17, 2005#*
The White Man's Burden: Continent out of focus The Guardian on
July 10,
2005 not on The Guardian's own website so needs validation.#*
Yasmin Alibhai-Brown Bob Geldof and the white man's burden in
The Independent 6 June 2005#Military intervention#*Mark Steyn
Sudan is getting away with murder''
Daily Telegraph 20 July 2004 #*John Laughland
Fill Full The Mouth of Famine July 30,
2004 article on the web site of the Embassy of Sudan in Washington D.C.# p. 340