Stoddard wrote many books, most of them related to race and civilization. He wrote primarily on the alleged dangers posed by "
colored" peoples to white civilization. Many of his books and articles were
racialist and described what he saw as the peril of nonwhite
immigration. He develops this theme in
The Rising Tide of Color Against White World-Supremacy originally published in 1920 with an introduction by
Madison Grant. Stoddard's racist beliefs were especially hostile to
black people. He claimed that they were fundamentally different from other groups, they had no civilizations of their own, and had contributed nothing to the world. Stoddard opposed
miscegenation, and said that "crossings with the negro are uniformly fatal". Stoddard advocated immigration restriction and
birth control legislation to reduce the numbers of the underclass and promoted the reproduction of members of the middle and upper classes. Stoddard was one of several eugenicists who sat on the board of the
American Birth Control League. The Nazi Party's chief racial theorist
Alfred Rosenberg appropriated the racial term
Untermensch from the German version of Stoddard's 1922 book
The Revolt Against Civilization: The Menace of the Under-man. The German title was
Der Kulturumsturz: Die Drohung des Untermenschen (1925).
Debate with W.E.B. Du Bois In 1929, Stoddard debated
African American historian
W.E.B. Du Bois on white supremacy and its assertion of the natural inferiority of colored races. The debate, organized by the Chicago Forum Council, was billed as "One of the greatest debates ever held". Du Bois argued in the affirmative to the question "Shall the Negro be encouraged to seek cultural equality? Has the Negro the same intellectual possibilities as other races?". Du Bois knew the racism would be unintentionally funny onstage; as he wrote to Fred Atkins Moore, the event's organizer, Senator
J. Thomas Heflin "would be a scream" in a debate. Stoddard wrote a memoir,
Into the Darkness: Nazi Germany Today (1940), about his experiences in Germany. Among other events, the book describes interviews with such figures as
Heinrich Himmler,
Robert Ley and
Fritz Sauckel, as well as a brief meeting with
Adolf Hitler.
Postwar After World War II, Stoddard's theories were deemed too closely aligned with those of the Nazis and therefore he suffered a large drop in popularity. His death from
cancer in 1950 went almost entirely unreported despite his previously broad readership and influence. ==Bibliography==