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White Violence and Black Response: From Reconstruction to Montgomery
Herbert Shapiro
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In White Violence and Black Response: From Reconstruction to Montgomery, Herbert Shapiro explores the depths of violence generated by white racism and the irony of the American association with violence as a behavior of black people. Citing the nation's political leadership, educational institutions, and news media as institutions that fail to educate Americans about the oppressive social conditions that have root in these criminal acts, Shapiro is able to expose the ways in which white supremacy operates within American institutions and the responses by black people in this powerful read.
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Title Page
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Copyright Page
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Dedication
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Table of Contents
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PREFACE
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INTRODUCTION
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PART I: The Post-Emancipation Decades
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ONE: The Imposition of White Rule
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TWO: Lynching and Black Perspectives
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THREE: In the Context of Empire
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PART II: From 1900 to the “Red Summer"
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FOUR: The Violence of the Progressive Era
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FIVE: The Focusing of Debate
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PART III: Peace without Justice: The 1920s
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SEVEN: Garvey and Randolph
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EIGHT: Struggle on a Higher Level
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PART IV: Crisis and New Unity: The 1930s
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TEN: In the Midst of the New Deal
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ELEVEN: The NAACP and Radical Voices
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PART V: World War II and the First Postwar Years: The Racial Struggle at Home
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TWELVE: Wartime Violence
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THIRTEEN: Victory without Peace
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FOURTEEN: Peekskill
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PART VI: The 1950s: From Willie McGee to the Montgomery Struggle
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FIFTEEN: Executions, Little Rock, Genocide
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SIXTEEN: The Emergence of Dr. King
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SEVENTEEN: Robert F. Williams and the Black Muslims
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NOTES
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BIBLIOGRAPHY
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INDEX
Citable Link
Published: 1988
Publisher: University of Massachusetts Press
- 9780870235788 (paperback)