This idea stemmed from the first encounters between European men and African women. This increased white anxiety about interracial sex, and has been described through Montesquieu's climatic theory in his book The Spirit of the Laws, which explains how people from different climates have different temperaments, "The inhabitants of warm countries are, like old men, timorous the people in cold countries are, like young men, brave." At the time, black women held the " Jezebel" stereotype, which claimed black women often initiated sex outside of marriage and were generally sexually promiscuous. There was a widely held belief that uncontrollable lust threatens the purity of the nation. The remnants of the racial divide became stronger post-slavery as the concept of whiteness developed.
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