Race and Rumors of Race
The American South in the Early Forties
Series: Ceramic Engineering and Science Proceedings;
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7 882 Ft (7 507 Ft + 5% VAT)
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Product details:
- Edition number New ed
- Publisher Johns Hopkins University Press
- Date of Publication 19 September 1997
- ISBN 9780801857577
- Binding Paperback
- No. of pages280 pages
- Size 215x138x19 mm
- Weight 386 g
- Language English 0
Categories
Long description:
In the early 1940s, rumors of impending and actual race wars circulated furiously among white Southerners. Apparently with the aid of first lady Eleanor Roosevelt, liberals, Yankees, New Dealers, and "bad niggers," once docile African-Americans were stockpiling ice picks in Charleston, ordering carton loads of pistols and rifles from the Sears catalog in Memphis, and plotting insurrection against whites at every turn. Alarmed—and fascinated—by these rumors, the University of North Carolina sociologist Howard W. Odum set out to collect and catalog them. He approached professors at various southern universities and asked them to conduct polls among their students to see if they had heard about the pistols, rifles, ice picks, and "Eleanor Clubs," and received thousands of reports confirming that, indeed, they had. The result of Odum's research is Race and Rumors of Race, which first appeared in 1943. Providing a window into white perceptions of race and racial tension in the South during the Second World War, the book locates the roots of the civil rights movement and helps us to understand the complex forces that shaped postwar American politics.
There have always been men and women of understanding, who sometimes prevailed and often led us by peaceful means to that change that advanced the lot of everyone. If we are to solve the problem of race in the way it should be solved, it is those people who must lead. And they can learn much, if they will, from Professor Odum's survey.
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