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Friday, April 7, 2017

The Greaser Act

           

           As previously referenced in my second article post (A Short History of Greaser Subculture), I briefly discussed the formation of the term “greaser.” The term did not relate to the greaser styled hair, surprisingly. “Greaser” was originally used as a derogatory remark against Mexicans. It was used in the southwest region of the US to reference jobs that involved greasing wagon axles or animal hides.

Today, I’m going to dig deeper into the formation, and implication of the Greaser Act. The creation of the Greaser Act was influenced by the Mexican-American War in 1848. Euro-Americans wanted to purify their culture, especially after the acquisition of newly minted US states. The Gold Rush only worsened the discrimination, which caused the public to enact numerous discrimination laws.
The Greaser Act was amended in 1855. Its formal title is “The Vagrancy Act.” Its purpose was “to protect honest people from the excesses of vagabonds… and generally all people of Spanish or Indian blood.” (3) In this context, vagabond referred to those who were labeled a “greaser.” That means, Native Americas could be targeted too (as if they already were not).

Voltaire Network explicitly described the injustices the law protected.
“That law allowed the police to arrest, using force if is necessary, and to deport or send to forced labor any person suspected of being a vagabond…The law authorized local militias to impose terror against the Mexican community, to confiscate their property and to lynch any recalcitrant individuals with impunity.” (3)
Even though the law was eventually repealed, it caused lasting effects on these minority groups.

It is groundbreaking to me to see a childhood relic of mine have such depth. To me, ‘greaser” just meant gelled up hair and the aesthetic of a rebel. Greasers from the titular subculture took something derogatory and gave support to those who felt like outsiders.

And away we go, Rockabeau ;)

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Sources
“Greaser Act”. Wikipedia. Date Accessed 6 April, 2017 https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Greaser_Act
“Greaser (derogatory)”. Wikipedia. Date Accessed 6 April, 2017. https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Greaser_(derogatory)
Creative Commons. Early US Race Laws Designed to Protect White Employment. Voltaire Network. 13 May, 2005. Date Accessed 6 April, 2017. http://www.voltairenet.org/article30264.html

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