Black and White: Land, Labor, and Politics in the SouthFeaturing a new foreword by Robin D. G. Kelley, this updated edition of the classic exploration of the economic inequality that fuels systematic racism, from one of the leading Black public intellectuals of the 19th century, is as timely and radical today as it was when it was first published. “The preeminent Black journalist of his age” (Henry Louis Gates, Jr., author of The Black Church) and an early agitator for civil rights, T. Thomas Fortune astutely and compellingly analyzes the relationship between capitalism and racism in the United States. He reveals that the country’s racial hierarchy has been part of our national fabric since the first European set foot here and is rooted in a much larger system of economic exploitation. He argues that in order for the United States to realize its founding ideals and end racial discrimination, this system must be dismantled, reparations made, and labor fairly remunerated. Fortune’s passionate analysis and radical vision of the United States will force you to rethink what America could have been if his arguments had been heeded in the 1880s and what must be done for us to move forward as a unified nation. |
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Page vi
... In the first half of Black and White, he of- fers a passionate account of the ways in which white racism had deformed America from its inception—and had doomed black people to slavery and, after emancipation, to unique forms of violence and ...
... In the first half of Black and White, he of- fers a passionate account of the ways in which white racism had deformed America from its inception—and had doomed black people to slavery and, after emancipation, to unique forms of violence and ...
Page xvii
... , but had not diminished in its intensity. Fortune also offers a series of political proposals for responding to this distinctive history—and continuing reality—of racial oppression. He insists that African Americans were entitled to all ...
... , but had not diminished in its intensity. Fortune also offers a series of political proposals for responding to this distinctive history—and continuing reality—of racial oppression. He insists that African Americans were entitled to all ...
Page xxiii
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Page xxv
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Page xxvi
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Contents
Section 1 | 1 |
Section 2 | 6 |
Section 3 | 13 |
Section 4 | 19 |
Section 5 | 28 |
Section 6 | 38 |
Section 7 | 56 |
Section 8 | 64 |
Section 10 | 80 |
Section 11 | 90 |
Section 12 | 98 |
Section 13 | 109 |
Section 14 | 123 |
Section 15 | 136 |
Section 16 | 149 |
Section 17 | 155 |
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Common terms and phrases
abolitionism acres African Americans alluvial lands Anglo-African Arkansas become Black and White blood Bourbon Democrat capital capitalists chattel slavery Chicot County citizens civilization colored common condition Constitution cotton crime crop cultivation death debt dollars economic emancipation Emancipation Proclamation exploitation farmers Federal Fortune Fortune’s Freedmen hands honest human hundred ideas increase industrial instance institution intelligence interest justice laboring classes legislation live Louisiana man’s manor born mass ment millions Mississippi River monopoly moral murder nation nature negro oppression organized Orleans party pauper plantations planter political poor population produce profit prosperity protection question race racial racism radical railroad Rebellion republican schools slavery social society soil South South Carolina Southern taxes tenant things thousand Timothy Thomas Fortune tion to-day tyranny Union United vast vote W.E.B. Du Bois wages Washington wealth workingmen York