Sweet Land of Liberty
The Forgotten Struggle for Civil Rights in the North
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- نقد و بررسی
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نقد و بررسی
Starred review from September 22, 2008
According to Sugrue (The Origins of the Urban Crises
), most histories of the civil rights movement “focus on the South and the epic battles between nonviolent protestors and the defenders of Jim Crow during the 1950s and 1960s.” The author's groundbreaking account covers a wider time frame and turns the focus northward to “the states with the largest black populations outside the south.” Sugrue highlights seminal people, books and organizations in his tightly focused study that restores many largely forgotten Northern activists as integral participants in the civil rights movement—such as Philadelphia pastor Leon Sullivan; Roxanne Jones of the “welfare rights movement” and first black woman elected to the Pennsylvania State Senate; and James Forman, advocate for reparations. The National Negro Congress, the Revolutionary Action Movement and the National Black Political Convention share history with the NAACP and the Urban League, as Sugrue traces the phoenixlike risings from the ashes of old organizations into new. Dense with “boycotts, pickets, agitation, riots, lobbying, litigation, and legislation,” the book is heavily detailed but consistently readable with unparalleled scope and fresh focus.
Starred review from November 1, 2008
The commonplace focus on the Civil Rights Movement as a morality play set in the 1950s and 1960s South neglects the North as a crucial battleground in the struggle for racial equality, argues Bancroft Prize-winning University of Pennsylvania historian Sugrue ("The Origins of the Urban Crisis"). In his three-part, 14-chapter narrative, he shows that black exclusion, poverty, and racial violence permeated America on both sides of the Mason-Dixon Line. Focusing on an array of individual activists and grassroots organizations that collectively advanced equality in the states having the largest black populations outside the South from the 1920s through the Great Migration and on, Sugrue produces a political history with strong socioeconomic themes, weaving together local, national, and international developments. And he carries his analysis into the so-called post-civil rights era since the 1980s. Diagramming the dimensions of the continuing black crisis, he plumbs fragile gains and deepening racial divides. This splendid read brims with insights broadening and deepening understanding of the black-white mold of modern America. Highly recommended and essential for collections on U.S. history, social movements, race relations, or civil rights.Thomas J. Davis, Arizona State Univ., Tempe, AZ
Copyright 2008 Library Journal, LLC Used with permission.
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