A common dramatic device in Lovecraft's work is to associate virtue, intellect, elevated class position, civilization, and rationality with white Anglo-Saxon ethnicity, which he often posed in contrast to the corrupt, intellectually inferior, uncivilized and irrational, which he associated with people he characterized as being of lower class, impure racial "stock" and/or non European ethnicity and dark skin complexion who were often the villains in his writings.
Some of his most hostile racist views can be found in his poetry, particularly in "On the Creation of Niggers," and "New England Fallen" (both 1912). In "On the Creation of Niggers" in particular, Lovecraft takes this to an extreme, explicitly characterizing black people as
sub-human: When, long ago, the gods created Earth;
In Jove's fair image Man was shaped at birth.
The beasts for lesser parts were designed;
Yet were too remote from humankind.
To fill the gap, and join the rest of Man,
Th'Olympian host conceiv'd a clever plan.
A beast they wrought, in semi-human figure,
Filled it with vice, and called the thing a Nigger.
In "The Call of Cthulhu" he writes of a captured group of "mongrel" worshipers of Cthulhu:
the prisoners all proved to be men of a very low, mixed-blooded, and mentally aberrant type. Most were seamen, and a sprinkling of negroes and mulattos, largely West Indians or Brava Portuguese from the Cape Verde Islands, gave a colouring of voodooism to the heterogeneous cult. But before many questions were asked it became manifest that something far deeper and older than negro fetishism was involved. Degraded and ignorant as they were, the creatures held with suprising consistency to the central idea of their loathsome faith.
He also expressed racist and ethnocentric beliefs in his personal correspondence. In a letter of
January 23, 1920, Lovecraft wrote:
For evolved man -- the apex of organic progress on the Earth -- what branch of reflection is more fitting than that which occupies only his higher and exclusively human faculties? The primal savage or ape merely looks about his native forest to find a mate; the exalted Aryan should lift his eyes to the worlds of space and consider his relation to infinity!!!!
In "Herbert West - Reanimator," Lovecraft gives an account of a just-deceased African-American male. He asserts:
He was a loathsome, gorilla-like thing, with abnormally long arms that I could not help calling fore legs, and a face that conjured up thoughts of unspeakable Congo secrets and tom-tom poundings under an eerie moon. The body must have looked even worse in life - but the world holds many ugly things.<ref>H. P. Lovecraft, "Herbert West - Reanimator", Dagon and Other Macabre Tales, p. 146.</ref>
In "The Horror at Red Hook," one character is described as "an Arab with a hatefully negroid mouth". In "Medusa's Coil," ghostwritten by Lovecraft for Zealia Bishop, the story's final surprise--after the revelation that the story's villain is a vampiric medusa--is that she
was faintly, subtly, yet to the eyes of genius unmistakably the scion of Zimbabwe's most primal grovellers.... [T]hough in deceitfully slight proportion, Marceline was a negress."<ref>"Medusa's Coil", Zealia Bishop with H. P. Lovecraft, The Horror in the Museum, p, 200.</ref>
In "The Case of Charles Dexter Ward," there is a somewhat more patronizing description of an African - New English couple:
"The present negro inhabitants were known to him, and he was very courteously shewn about the interior by old Asa and his stout wife Hannah."
In contrast to their apparently alien landlord:
"a small rodent-featured person with a guttural accent"
In the short story "The Rats in the Walls," one of the narator/protagonist's nine cats is named "Nigger-Man".
As I have said, I moved in on July 16, 1923. My household consisted of seven servants and nine cats, of which latter species I am particularly fond. My eldest cat, "Nigger-Man," was seven years old and had come with me from my home in Bolton, Massachusetts ..."<ref>"The Rats in the Walls", H. P. Lovecraft, "Bloodcurdling Tales of Horror and the Macabre", p, 8.</ref>
The narrators in "The Street," "Herbert West: Reanimator," "He," "The Call of Cthulhu," "The Shadow Over Innsmouth," "The Horror at Red Hook," and many other tales express sentiments which could be considered hostile towards
Jews. He married a woman of
Ukrainian Jewish ancestry, Sonia Greene, who later said she had to repeatedly remind Lovecraft of her background when he made anti-Semitic remarks. "Whenever we found ourselves in the racially mixed crowds which characterize New York," Greene wrote after her divorce from Lovecraft, "Howard would become livid with rage. He seemed almost to lose his mind."
To some extent, Lovecraft's ideas regarding race reflect attitudes common in his era;
racial segregation laws were enforced throughout much of the
United States and many states had enacted
eugenics laws and prohibitions against "
miscegenation" which were also common in non-
Roman Catholic areas of
Europe. A popular movement during the 1920s succeeded in drastically restricting
immigration to the United States, culminating in the
Immigration Act of 1924, which featured expert testimony to the
United States Congress on the threat to American society from the assimilation of more "inferior stock" from eastern and southern Europe.
Lovecraft was an avowed Anglophile, and held
English culture to be the comparative pinnacle of civilization, with the descendants of the English in America as something of a second-class offshoot, and everyone else below them (see, for example, his poem "
An American to Mother England"). His love for English history and culture is often repeated in his work (such as King
Kuranes' nostalgia for England in "
The Dream-Quest of Unknown Kadath").
Lovecraft's ideas about eugenics often extended to his white characters. He showed greater sympathy for Caucasian and culturally European groups. The narrator of "
Cool Air" speaks disparagingly of the poor
Hispanics of his neighborhood, but respects the wealthy and aristocratic
Spaniard Dr. Muñoz, for his
Celtiberian origins, and because he is "a man of birth, cultivation, and discrimination." The degenerate descendants of
Dutch immigrants in the
Catskill Mountains, "who correspond exactly to the decadent element of
white trash in the
South" ("Beyond the Wall of Sleep", 1919), are common targets. In "The Temple," Lovecraft's narrator is a highly unsympathetic figure: a
World War I U-boat captain whose faith in his "iron German will" and the superiority of the
Fatherland lead him to machine-gun survivors in lifeboats and, later, kill his own crew, while blinding him to the curse he has brought upon himself. However, according to
Lovecraft: A Biography, by
L. Sprague de Camp, Lovecraft was horrified by reports of anti-Semitic violence in Germany (prior to
World War II, which Lovecraft did not live to see), suggesting that Lovecraft was opposed to violent extermination of those he regarded as "inferiors".
Lovecraft's racism has been a continued focus of scholarly and interpretive interest. S.T. Joshi, one of the foremost Lovecraft scholars, notes that "There is no denying the reality of Lovecraft's racism, nor can it merely be passed off as "typical of his time," for it appears that Lovecraft expressed his views more pronouncedly (although usually not for publication) than many others of his era. It is also foolish to deny that racism enters into his fiction."
http://www.forbisthemighty.com/acidlogic/stjoshi.htm In his book "H. P. Lovecraft: Against The World, Against Life,"
Michel Houellebecq argues that "racial hatred" provided the emotional force and inspiration for much of Lovecraft's greatest works.
Lovecraft racist antagonism is a corollary of his nihilistic notion of biological determinism:
At the Mountains of Madness, in which explorers discover evidence of a completely alien race (the
Elder Things) who created human beings through bioengineering but who were eventually destroyed by their brutish
shoggoth slaves. Even after several members of the party are killed by revived Elder Things, Lovecraft's narrator expresses sympathy for them: "They were the men of another age and another order of being... what had they done that we would not have done in their place? God, what intelligence and persistence! What a facing of the incredible... Radiates, vegetables, monstrosities, star spawn — whatever they had been, they were men!"
These lines of thought in Lovecraft's worldview -- racism and romantic reactionary defense of cultural order in the face of the degenerative modern world -- have led some scholars to see a special affinity to the aristocratic, anti-modernism of Traditionalist
Julius Evola:
Certainly "The Dream Quest of Unknown Kadath" with its grandiose portrayal of the onyx city respires the cool and elegant spirit of Tradition, arraigned against which in several stories is the sink of decadence, Innsmouth, an inbred population made up of the offspring of lustful mariners and sea monsters, the negative force of counter-Tradition. The eternal struggle between the Uranian power of light and the telluric forces of chaos is reflected in Lovecraft's work"http://www.centrostudilaruna.it/schwarzlovecraft.html
But the fixation on Lovecraft’s racism tends to lead to extreme, even fanciful examples of ‘racism’ in Lovecraft’s work.