Review Article
The Trial of Ruby McCollum the Consequences of Trauma: Segregation Stress Syndrome
Ruth Thompson-Miller*Department of Sociology, Anthropology, and Social Work, University of Dayton, Ohio, USA
- Corresponding Author:
- Ruth Thompson-Miller
RN, PhD, FAAN, Department of Sociology
Anthropology, and Social Work
University of Dayton, 300 College Park
Dayton, OH 45469-1442, USA
Tel: 937-229-2083
E-mail: rthompsonmiller1@udayton.edu
Received Date: June 30, 2017; Accepted Date: July 21, 2017; Published Date: July 24, 2017
Citation: Miller RH (2017) The Trial of Ruby McCollum the Consequences of Trauma: Segregation Stress Syndrome. J Community Med Health Educ 7:538. doi:10.4172/2161-0711.1000538
Copyright: © 2017 Miller RT. This is an open-access article distributed under the terms of the Creative Commons Attribution License, which permits unrestricted use, distribution, and reproduction in any medium, provided the original author and source are credited.
Abstract
In this chapter, I use trial transcripts, books, documentaries, and newspaper articles to examine the case of Ruby McCollum (a wealthy African American woman who spent two years in prison and 20 years in a mental institution for killing her rapist-Doctor Adams). Ruby McCollum is one of an incalculable number of African American women who were systematically raped during the totalitarian era of Jim Crow. Ruby McCollum’s story reveals vivid details about her experience with rape, physical and mental abuse, being drugged, and conceiving two children from her rapist. The Jim Crow south-similar to slavery was based on systemic racism that includes a broad range of attitudes, emotions, habits, actions, and racist ideologies supported by white-dominated social institutions and which Feagin calls the white racial frame. The white racial frame includes the attitudes and actions, stereotypes, prejudices, images, emotions, and narratives that contribute to a persisting system of systemic racism. This includes white men acting upon racist ideologies and stereotypes about the bodies and behaviors of Black women (i.e. promiscuous, hypersexual, jezebels, and morally deficit) as their justification for rape. Then, protected by the laws, practices, and policies of the state, these white men didn’t fear prosecution for the collective rapes. These men, working from the white racial frame, felt justified in their action knowing that their ‘morality’ wouldn’t be questioned. The white men were rarely prosecuted; African American women, their husbands, and their families had no recourse but to accept the benign neglect of the state to not prosecute. In this article, I will discuss systemic racism, the white racial frame, collective rape, and segregation stress syndrome, which is a collective form of PTSD.