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The Selma of the North
Civil Rights Insurgency in Milwaukee
Language:
English
Published/Copyright:
2010
About this book
Jones tells a powerful and dramatic story that is important for its insights into civil rights history: the debate over nonviolence and armed self-defense, the meaning of Black Power, the relationship between local and national movements, and the dynamic between southern and northern activism.
Reviews
Think you know the full story of the civil rights era? Patrick Jones's masterful study of the movement in Milwaukee will make you think again. Meticulously researched and elegantly written, The Selma of the North provides a devastating rebuttal of many of the conventional narratives of the civil rights movement. Here a vibrant nonviolent movement in the de-industrializing Midwest grows into a Black Power movement led by urban youth and a white Catholic priest who use confrontational direct action to lay bare the fissures of racial inequality in the 'liberal' North.
-- Jeanne Theoharis, Brooklyn College
-- Jeanne Theoharis, Brooklyn College
A well-researched, well-written, and important history. Based on a rich array of sources, this book enhances our understanding of civil rights activism in the postwar urban North and establishes a useful foundation for the comparison of similar developments elsewhere in the country.
-- Joe William Trotter, Jr., Carnegie Mellon University
-- Joe William Trotter, Jr., Carnegie Mellon University
This book fills a serious gap in the literature of the civil rights revolution, joining studies on other cities in laying the groundwork on race and civil rights in the postwar urban North. Jones tells a good story, capturing events that might otherwise be lost to history.
-- Arnold R. Hirsch, University of New Orleans
-- Arnold R. Hirsch, University of New Orleans
The Selma of the North is an insightful and invigorating addition to the growing literature on black freedom struggles outside of the South. Jones's important and informative account writes Milwaukee back into the narrative of the civil rights-Black Power era and in the process expands our understanding of postwar America.
-- Peniel E. Joseph, Brandeis University
-- Peniel E. Joseph, Brandeis University
The Selma of the North is a riveting new story of the civil rights movement in America, a tale on par with Selma, Birmingham, and Montgomery in its power and importance. Jones's magisterial research and magnetic prose illuminate the untold story of the battle for the urban north in the 1960s, a battle that shows how race has always been the Achilles heel of white progressives. This story transcends easy dichotomies of black and white, North and South, radical and reformist. How did a group called 'the Commandos' define nonviolence? How did a white Catholic priest become a 'Black Power' leader? If this is not a saga for the age of Obama, I don't know what is.
-- Timothy B. Tyson, author of Blood Done Sign My Name
-- Timothy B. Tyson, author of Blood Done Sign My Name
A well-researched and fascinating narrative...Jones has produced an outstanding study of the civil rights movement in Milwaukee which should prove a model for investigations of other Northern cities.
-- Ron Briley History News Network
-- Ron Briley History News Network
Anyone living in Milwaukee in the '60s and old enough to be aware will recall a time of sharp tension. A riot erupted in the inner city during the summer of 1967, a year of unrest around the nation, and a white Roman Catholic priest organized black youth to march against the segregation that confined African Americans to Milwaukee's poorest, most run-down quarter. Whites responded with violence. And the police were not amused by challenges to the status quo. The story is recounted with lucid scholarship in The Selma of the North: Civil Rights Insurgency in Milwaukee.
-- David Luhrssen Express Milwaukee
-- David Luhrssen Express Milwaukee
Selma of the North is a solid entry into the expanding bookshelf on civil rights activism in the North, offering what Jones rightly calls "another tile to the mosaic" of studies about the struggle for racial justice in the twentieth century.
-- Amanda I. Seligman H-Net
-- Amanda I. Seligman H-Net
Topics
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Frontmatter
i -
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Contents
vii -
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Abbreviations
ix -
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Map: Milwaukee Civil Rights Landmarks
xi -
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Introduction
1 -
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1 Ethnic Milwaukee and the Black Community
9 -
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2 Early Protest Politics
32 -
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3 The Campaign to End School Segregation
59 -
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4 Father Groppi’s Civil Rights Awakening
80 -
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5 The Youth Council and Commandos
110 -
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6 Police–Community Tensions and the 1967 Riot
143 -
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7 The Struggle for Open Housing
169 -
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8 Black Power Politics
210 -
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9 The Decline of Direct Action
236 -
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Conclusion: “We Are Destined . . .”
252 -
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Notes
261 -
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Sources
303 -
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Acknowledgments
307 -
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Index
311
Publishing information
Pages and Images/Illustrations in book
eBook published on:
October 30, 2010
eBook ISBN:
9780674058934
Pages and Images/Illustrations in book
Main content:
360
eBook ISBN:
9780674058934
Audience(s) for this book
Professional and scholarly;