Although, language defining the non-white population, which was anyone not from that minority, directly correlated and helped establish identity for the white population. That vernacular had evolved to accommodate the dominating class of the racial hierarchy, therefore allowing the idea of being non-white to be an unfriendly prospect. Fear and desire of being white defined racial differences by constant changes to workingman’s titles, perceptions of beauty and marriage, and the knowledge of a racial predestination that benefited and encouraged the development of racial labor. David R. Roediger’s “The Wages of Whiteness: Race and the Making of the American Working Class” argues language of a workingman as a defining variable in how it has assisted in the changing views of non-white and its contributing affects to defining whiteness. Roediger makes a key correlation between the ideas of working dependently on a master to the failure of being white. Not until the time of the Andrew Jackson presidency in the 1830s did the ideas of working change to include more than just those who owned land for farming, blurring the lines of what it meant to be …show more content…
Such belief was not explicitly documented but it was seen in the ways the early colonists saw the Indians and African natives. Kirsten Fischer’s “Suspect Relations Sex, Race and Resistance in Colonial North Carolina” provides the perspective of how the native women were viewed in the early 17th Century as “oppressive” and “quasi slaves.” (Fischer, 36) The desire to civilize the women was caused by the failures of God’s gender hierarchy that was “imposed on the descendants of Adam and Eve,” leading to the belief maybe the Indians were either removed from the lineage or disrespected God’s request (Fischer, 36). Men were the suppliers of the patriarchy, but the identity of women doing work in the fields led many colonists to believe it was their duty. Jennifer Morgan’s article “European Depictions of Indigenous Women” further pushed the point of how women put on the burden of work. It justified the ability to enslave the animalized races and building connections between “forced labor and race.” (Morgan, 39) Such descriptions of the natives carried the thesis that the European population was destined to being the group that was chosen to lead the world. John Rolfe mentions in his letter to Sir Thomas Dale “I say the holy spirit of God often demaunded of me, why I was created? If