The word "lynching" has immediate and graphic connotations for virtually
all people who hear and use the word. When Supreme Court justice
Clarence Thomas claimed he was lynched by a Senate investigating
committee, he intentionally and deliberately drew on two key components
of the term -- race and punishment - that stemmed from the long and ugly
history of lynching in America. Yet if we follow the history of the term
itself - which is over two centuries old - we learn that lynching has
had several different meanings over time, with murder endorsed by the
community as one of its most enduring definitions. Tracing the use and
meaning of the word "lynching" from the colonial period to the present,
historian Christopher Waldrep reveals that while the notion of lynching
as a form of extralegal punishment sanctioned by the community did not
alter significantly over time, the meaning of the word itself changed
drastically, paralleling changes in how Americans grappled with law
enforcement, community, and most importantly, race relations.