The Black Worker
Race, Labor, and Civil Rights Since Emancipation
Format:Paperback
Publisher:University of Illinois Press
Published:2nd Jul '07
Currently unavailable, and unfortunately no date known when it will be back
A multidimensional reader that explores the African American worker's experience since the Civil War
Intends to establish the richness of the African American working-class experience, and the indisputable role of black workers in shaping the politics and history of labour and race in the United States. This title examines workers engaged in a array of jobs, including sharecropping, coal mining, domestic service, longshoring, and more.Long before the modern civil rights movement of the 1950s and 1960s made a frontal assault on the reigning segregationist order, African American workers had to struggle against both their employers and fellow white workers. Because their efforts to secure their workplace rights pitted them against the broader structures of racial oppression, their activism constituted nothing less than a form of civil rights struggle.
Uniting the latest scholarship on race, labor, and civil rights, The Black Worker aims to establish the richness of the African American working-class experience, and the indisputable role of black workers in shaping the politics and history of labor and race in the United States.
To capture the complexity of African Americans’ experiences in the workplace, this reader examines workers engaged in a wide array of jobs, including sharecropping, coal mining, domestic service, longshoring, automobile manufacturing, tobacco processing, railroading, prostitution, lumbering, and municipal employment. The essays’ subjects include black migration, strikebreaking, black conservatism, gender, and the multiple forms of employment discrimination in the South and North. Other contributions deal explicitly with state policy and black workers during the transition from slavery to freedom, World Wars I and II, and the 1960s.
The variety of challenges made by these workers, both quiet and overt, served as clear reminders to the supporters of white supremacy that, despite their best efforts through violence, fraud, and the law, as long as they insisted on racial inequality, the “race question” would never be fully resolved.
Contributors: Eric Arnesen, Beth Tompkins Bates, Cynthia M. Blair, Tera W. Hunter, William Powell Jones, Brian Kelly, Robert Korstad, Nelson Lichtenstein, Joseph A. McCartin, Steven A. Reich, Leslie A. Schwalm, Nan Elizabeth Woodruff
"A well-rounded work recommended for public and undergraduate libraries. "--Multicultural Review
“Eric Arnesen has chosen the perfect time to gather together essays on the African American working class experience. And he’s chosen the very best historians to write them. Always challenging and thoroughly engaging, The Black Worker is a marvelous collection.”--Kevin Boyle, author of Arc of Justice: A Saga of Race, Civil Rights and Murder in the Jazz Age
ISBN: 9780252073809
Dimensions: 229mm x 152mm x 25mm
Weight: 481g
328 pages